Barry Faulkner The Newport Harbor High football...
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Barry Faulkner
The Newport Harbor High football team has parlayed the short walk
from its locker room to its campus stadium into a pair of lengthy
winning streaks.
The Sailors, who have won eight in a row at home and also their
last eight playoff games at Davidson Field, will put both streaks on
the line Friday a 7 p.m., when they host Valencia in the first round
of the CIF Southern Section Division VI Playoffs.
“It’s a tough game to play at home, but it would be even tougher
on the road,” said Newport Harbor Coach Jeff Brinkley, whose team is
1-3 on the road this season and lost in last year’s Division VI
semifinals at La Mirada.
The last postseason loss at home for the Sailors (7-3) was in the
1997 Division V semifinals against eventual champion Santa Margarita.
Valencia (6-4, including a win later forfeited to Villa Park for
the use of an ineligible player), has some streaks of its own. The
Tigers, runner-up to Orange Lutheran in the Orange League, are making
their seventh straight trip to the playoffs. They have won three
straight first-round games and finished the regular season with three
straight wins, after a 28-21 loss to Orange Lutheran, the No. 2 seed.
Valencia defeated Irvine, 21-16, in Week 5, two weeks before the
Vaqueros knocked off Newport, 28-20.
Coach Mike Marrujo, in his 22nd season at Valencia, was at the
helm when the Tigers eliminated the Sailors, 28-0, in a quarterfinal
game at Newport Harbor in 1991.
Since that setback, which capped a string of four quarterfinal
losses for the Sailors over five seasons, the Tars have won 12 of 13
playoff games in their own stadium.
Playoff success has also become part of the program for the
Sailors, who are 25-10 in the postseason under Brinkley, now in his
17th season at Newport Harbor’s helm. That record includes an 11-1
mark in first-round games, as well as trips to five finals and seven
semis the last 10 years.
“The playoffs are a fresh start for everyone,” Brinkley said. “As
much as we focus on one game at a time during the season, it’s even
more important now, because, if you stumble once, your done.”
Brinkley believes the playoffs can also be about creating
momentum, as much as continuing that built in the regular season.
“Teams can get hot in the playoffs,” Brinkley said. “We were a
good example of that in 1992. We got hot in the playoffs and, all of
a sudden, we were in the finals.”
Valencia has not been to the finals since 1992, when it claimed
its second straight Division VI crown. During the seven-year stretch
from 1986-92, Marrujo’s Tigers played in five section title games,
winning three.
The Sailors hold slight statistical advantages over the Tigers,
most notably in the passing department.
Newport Harbor senior quarterback Michael McDonald has thrown for
1,581 yards and 12 TDs. He has completed 106 of 194 (53%) with only
four interceptions.
Valencia quarterback Steve Lajkowicz, a 6-foot-4, 195-pound
junior, has completed 82 of 162 (51%) for 1,207 yards and 10
touchdowns, with six interceptions.
Newport’s running game is paced by senior tailback Dartangan
Johnson, who has 1,215 yards and 18 TDs this fall on 196 carries.
Johnson is the school career rushing leader with 3,220 yards and
he has eight straight games of at least 100 yards, 17 for his career,
also a Sailors’ school record.
Rylon Thomas, a 5-8, 165-pound sophomore, is Valencia’s leading
rusher with 1,088 yards and six touchdowns on 200 attempts.
Dan Desacola, a 5-9 senior, has a team-high 47 receptions for 704
yards and eight touchdowns for the Tigers, while sophomore Spencer
Link (37 receptions for 595 yards and eight TDs) is the Sailors’
leading pass catcher.
Newport averages 348 yards per game to the Tigers’ 301 and Newport
has outscored Valencia, 272-221, this season. Newport Harbor has
allowed 158 points, while Valencia has yielded just 119.
Friday’s winner will advance to the quarterfinals to meet either
No. 4-seeded Tustin or John Glenn, who play Saturday night at Tustin.
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