lOCAL PREP FOOTBALL TEAMS BRACE FOR SEASON
Mike Sciacca
Eric Johnson all by bypassed his lunch hour on team photo day
Thursday to make sure that uniform pants and jersey numbers were
correctly assigned to his players.
As Johnson quickened his pace from room to room, he shouted
instructions to his players that following an hour break for lunch, that
they were to assemble on the Fountain Valley High football practice
fields for a photo session that would take a little more than one hour to
complete.
As mundane as the photo setting would be on a hot and muggy
afternoon, it is a mundane - albeit, necessary one - for any high school
football coach.
Johnson, however, would have liked nothing better than to forego
the cameras and go straight to opening kickoff on Sept. 10, the night the
Barons host Dana Hills in Johnson’s first game as Fountain Valley’s head
coach.
He takes over for George Berg, who retired from the position
following last season.
‘There’s so much going on right now, but I’m looking forward to
the start of the season,’ Johnson said as he played mediator between
Fountain Valley’s uniform manager and a trio of players, who were seeking
to get the numbers they wanted. ‘We just want to play some football.’
With the first week of practice nearing an end, Johnson is finally
getting a first-hand look at his initial squad, which should contend for
the Sunset League title.
‘We’ll know more about where we stand in the next week,’ he said.
‘Right now, it’s too early to tell anything.’
Over at the Edison camp, Coach Dave White and his Chargers have
one week left to prepare for their season lid-lifter, which takes place
on the island of Oahu. At 5 p.m. on Sept. 2, Edison will take on Punahou
at Aloha Stadium.
The Chargers will be out to end a streak in which they didn’t post
a victory in the final seven weeks of the 1998 season, in which they
finished 3-7 overall.
‘We should be a much-improved team in ‘99,’ White said on
Thursday, three days prior to Edison’s departure for Hawaii. ‘Last year,
we were young and inexperienced, and this year, we’re still young, but
now we have a little experience. Hopefully, that will help us turn things
around. This team is hungry.’
With youth continuing to be served at Edison, depth - or lack of
it - is the concern for Coach Tony Ciarelli at Huntington Beach.
The Oilers were 6-4-1 and reached the postseason playoffs for the
first time in five years a year ago, but many of the key players from
that ’98 squad were lost to graduation. Ciarelli says his three-man
quarterback rotation will be led by junior Casey Ryder, with a pair of
sophomores - ‘yes, sophomores,’ Ciarelli says - vying for playing time.
‘We need to stay healthy in order to be successful,’ Ciarelli
said, ‘because we don’t have much depth. We’ll have a lot of players
playing both ways, which is demanding. We’ll need to be well-conditioned
come game time.’
The Oilers should be - Ciarelli, along with his wife, Stephanie,
run the strength-training program at the school.
Both Edison and Huntington Beach finished their photo day on
Wednesday.
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