Prep column: Sticker shock
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Barry Faulkner
In the pressurized vacuum of college football coaching, a
scholarship is a terrible thing to waste. So, when coaches dangle the
keys to a free education in front of a prospective recruit, the threat of
winding up with a lemon often dictates they require some standard
equipment.
The luxury class of recruits comes at least 6-foot-5, 225 pounds, with
bulging biceps, sub-4.5 speed in the 40-yard dash, a 400-pound bench
press and, theoretically, enough on-field accolades to satiate the most
avid Internet recruiting geek.
Guys like Florida State Coach Bobby Bowden wear a path in these kids’
living room carpet.
That some of these rides often come with a penchant for the fast lane,
is merely an occupational hazard. As long as a blue-chipper has enough
accessories to validate his worth to the coaches, the media and, perhaps
most importantly, the alumni, a program, and its staff, can garner
substantial offseason mileage from landing these guys.
Florida State quarterback Chris Weinke, the most recent Heisman Trophy
winner, is a recruiter’s dream.
But Josh Heupel, the 6-2, 214-pound senior, was salvaged off the
community college scrap heap before quarterbacking Oklahoma to the
national championship, beating Weinke’s Seminoles in the national title
game.
The resumes of formerly employed big-time coaches are filled with
top-10 recruiting classes, judged using criteria that measures all things
tangible.
But football games are not won on the track, in the weight room, or at
the tailor shop.
Football games are won by players, who often don’t fit these
prepackaged demands.
Newport Harbor High senior Chris Manderino is one of these guys.
Newport Harbor Coach Jeff Brinkley, in his third decade as a high
school head coach, knows this. Manderino, his teammates and even some
opposing coaches know it too.
But no Division I college coach has been able to push aside the
stopwatch long enough to consider the intangibles that made Manderino, I
believe, one of the five best high school football players in Orange
County. This is the same county that produced more than three dozen
Division I scholarship recipients, according to signing-day reports last
week.
Meanwhile, the 6-1, 205-pound Manderino, who rushed for 2,141 yards,
scored 31 touchdowns, lit up opposing ballcarriers at outside linebacker
last fall and contributed to 24 victories the last two seasons as a
varsity starter, sits pondering whether he’ll walk on at UC Berkeley or
USC.
No scholarship, no respect, no problem.
“I’m a little surprised,” Manderino said of the absence of scholarship
offers, which he limited somewhat by an uncompromising desire to attend a
Pac-10 school. “I thought I was at least as good, or better, than some of
the guys who got scholarships.”
Instead, recruiters, unimpressed by his mediocre 4.8 speed, looked
past the rest of the package, confounding Brinkley in the process.
“I just think (Manderino) is a player,” Brinkley said. “I think our
program has a pretty good track record with Pete Hogan starting as a
sophomore at Colorado State and making second-team all-conference, Brant
Hill starting as a redshirt freshman defensive end at Nevada and Brett
Baker being the poster boy (single-season tackles record as a junior
safety) at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. I try to be honest with recruiters,
because I want to maintain a good reputation with them. I don’t try to
sell kids I don’t think will play, but I’ve gone to bat for Chris. I’ve
told coaches I have no doubt he’d be starting somewhere on the field by
the time he was a junior. He could play outside linebacker (where Cal
projects him), or strong safety (USC’s projection), and I’m not so sure
he couldn’t be a quality fullback who could catch the ball out of the
backfield. His grades are OK, he has adequate size and he’s a hard worker
who knows how to win. The only (negative) I can see is the speed factor,
but I think speed is way overrated.”
Brinkley calls Manderino the single most overlooked player he’s ever
coached.
Manderino said he has not allowed himself to become discouraged and is
thankful to have an opportunity to eventually earn a scholarship. Cal
head coach Tom Holmoe has, in fact, assured Manderino a scholarship would
be forthcoming, should he work his way up their depth chart.
Manderino, in fact, plans to use this slight as motivation to become
an even better college player than most envision he will be.
Call it fuel injection.
Another Newport Harbor High football standout, Brian Gaeta, recently
underwent surgery to repair a patellar tendon and planned to have the
other one fixed, as well.
While this is bad news to Sailors’ boys volleyball coach Dan Glenn,
who will be without the 6-foot-2 junior outside hitter for the upcoming
season, Gaeta said he expects to be fully recovered in time to lead the
Tars’ football squad as a returning starter at receiver and cornerback
next fall.
The Newport-Mesa schools’ football schedules for next season are all
but finalized and there have been a few changes.
The most interesting addition is from Costa Mesa, where Coach Jerry
Howell’s Mustangs will host Centennial High of Coquitlam, British
Columbia (near Vancouver) in Week 3 next season.
The Centaurs are in a “rebuilding mode” according to a school official
reached Tuesday, who reported they did make their provincial
quarterfinals last season. The school’s enrollment is 2,100, grades 9-12.
Centennial replaces Bolsa Grande, while the Westminster game was moved
from Week 3 to Week 2. The Mustangs will also play Whittier Christian, a
replacement for Brethren Christian, in Week 5.
Newport Harbor has replaced last year’s Week 5 foe, Claremont, with
Millikan. The Sailors are still looking for an opponent in Week 10 and
Westchester is among the candidates.
Corona del Mar will play Troy in Week 2, instead of Pomona, while
Estancia reports no changes from last year’s slate.
The CIF Southern Section is on a mission to emphasize sportsmanship
and I’ve seen plenty the last couple weeks.
The good-spirited interaction between student rooting sections at
Thursday’s CdM-Mesa boys basketball game was about as good as it gets.
From what I observed, both rooting sections were passionate, while
maintaining perspective and a sense of humor.
Though I won’t go into specifics, I thought the sportsmanship in the
stands was more admirable than that displayed by the players on the
court.
The biggest act of sportsmanship I’ve seen this year, however, came
from University High boys basketball coach Mike Dinneen. After one of his
players was whistled with a technical foul for arguing a call from the
bench, Dinneen insisted the young man personally apologize to the
official in the locker room, after the game. “And be sincere,” Dinneen
advised, before his player knocked on the door of the room the officials
were changing in.
CdM student rooters, who have shown in past years they are not above
flaunting their socioeconomic superiority, had the tables turned by Costa
Mesa fans Thursday.
As time wound down on the Mustangs’ 58-39 victory, which clinched a
share of the school’s first boys basketball league crown, some Mesa
rooters shouted, “Warm up the Porsche! Warm up the Porsche!”
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