Sailors open playoffs at home
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Barry Faulkner
It didn’t take long for fortune to flip for the Newport Harbor
High football program.
Less than 12 hours after sustaining a 45-21 drubbing at the hands
of Sea View League champion Foothill Thursday night, Coach Jeff
Brinkley’s Sailors were uplifted by the flight of a coin that left
them atop a three-way tie for second place. The news got even better
Sunday as the league’s No. 2 entry in the CIF Southern Section
Division VI Playoffs received a first-round home game against
Valencia.
Newport Harbor (7-3) will host the Tigers (6-4) Friday at 7 p.m.
in a contest that figures to be far different from the first-round
waltzes the Sailors have enjoyed the last three seasons.
“It’s going to be a challenge for us,” said Brinkley, whose 1991
Sailors lost in the quarterfinals to Valencia, which is still guided
by the same head coach. Thoroughly respected Mike Marrujo is in his
22nd season with the Placentia-based school. “As coaches, we’re well
aware of the job (Marrujo) has done there and the kind of solid
program he’s had for years.”
Brinkley said the Tigers’ 21-16 nonleague win over an Irvine team
that knocked off the Tars, 28-21, should be enough to convey to his
players just how big a challenge Valencia will present .
The Sailors have been nearly impervious to first-round failure
during Brinkley’s now-17-year tenure, winning 11 of 12 playoff openers, including six straight. Newport’s last first-round exit came
in 1993, a 26-10 road loss to Glendora.
“We have generally played well in the playoffs,” said Brinkley,
who is understating things just a bit. The Tars have won 25 playoff
games and section titles in 1994 and ’99 under Brinkley. They have
made the division final five of the last 11 seasons and advanced to
the semifinals twice more during that span.
The last three first-round wins have come in blowout fashion, as
the Sailors have topped Ocean View (2001), Westminster (2000) and El
Dorado (1999) by a combined margin of 112-7.
But with three regular-season losses, the most since it missed the
playoffs in 1998, Newport enters this postseason with more
uncertainty and less expectations that usual.
“This is going to be a tough game, so I’m really pleased to be
playing at home this week,” Brinkley said Sunday after pairings were
announced at the section office. “You hope you don’t have a game like
(Foothill), but were still in the playoffs and, hopefully, our kids
can make the most of that opportunity.”
Brinkley said the league coin flip, which left Laguna Hills in
third and forced Irvine to bid for the division’s lone at-large
berth, which the Vaqueros earned Sunday, helped ease the pain of
being bested by Foothill.
“It was good that we had something positive happen within a
24-hour period,” Brinkley said of the coin flip.
“You hope you never have a game like (Foothill), but at least
we’re still in a position to be playing in the playoffs. We didn’t
play our best and we needed to play our best to beat (the Knights,
who are the No. 3 seed in Division VI). But give them credit for
playing well.”
If the Sailors play well enough to win Friday, they would hit the
road to face the winner of Saturday’s first-round clash between No.
4-seeded Tustin (5-5) and John Glenn (4-5-1).
Los Altos (8-2), which won a three-way coin flip with fellow
Miramonte League tri-champions Bonita (5-4) and Charter Oak (8-2), is
the No. 1 seed in Division VI.
Empire League champion Orange Lutheran (8-2) is the No. 2 seed.
The Lancers, who defeated Valencia, 28-21, open against Irvine.
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