Football gives Rankin Ivy upgrade
As recently as Thanksgiving, Newport Harbor High senior Andy Rankin’s
collegiate checklist included neither football, nor the Ivy League.
But, thanks to his continued willingness to hit the books, as well as
a penchant for hitting opposing ball carriers, the Newport Harbor High
linebacker will soon accept an opportunity to combine the two.
It’s a somewhat surprising development for the 6-foot-3, 216-pound
All-Newport-Mesa District outside linebacker, who counts himself among
those most perplexed by this fortuitous chain of events.
“I never really thought I would be playing college football,” said
Rankin, who began his prep football career as the starting quarterback on
the Sailors’ freshman team.
He spent his sophomore and junior seasons transitioning from
quarterback to tight end, as well as learning how to combat blockers as
an undersized outside linebacker.
“My sophomore and junior years, I didn’t really play that much,” he
recalled. “I finally worked my way into the mix my senior year, but I was
never one of the big guys on our team.”
Rankin, who did produce in a backup defensive role as a junior,
packed on 30 pounds in his final prep offseason and wound up amassing 65
tackles, third-best on the team, behind probable All-CIF honorees Alan
Saenz and Chris Manderino.
And while his academic resume alone, was not enough to gain
consideration from Ivy League recruiters, football coaches from Brown,
Darmouth and Columbia, were impressed enough by his work on the field
that his solid classroom credentials became sufficient for admission.
Rankin returned from a recruiting trip to Brown Sunday and plans
visits to Dartmouth and Columbia the next two weekends.
“After talking with the coaches, they all want me,” Rankin said. “So,
now, it’s just a matter of picking which one I want.”
Rankin said he has discussed Brown with former Newport Harbor teammate
Robert Cole, a 2000 Harbor graduate who will compete for time on the
offensive line for the Bears next fall.
He also has family ties to Dartmouth, where two of his father’s
cousins played football.
Though Columbia is third on his list, he is intrigued by the
possibility of living near the New York City-based campus.
“At this point,” he said, “I can’t make a bad decision. They’re all
great places to get an education and I’m very excited.”
When it comes to basketball excitement, few teams can match the Costa
Mesa High boys bomb squad for entertainment value this season.
Despite how Coach Bob Serven lists them in the program, 6-foot-7
senior Mike Payne is probably the only member of their primary seven-man
rotation taller than 6-0.
But, they have compensated with a perimeter offense that has produced
172 three-pointers in 17 games. The 10.1 average would rank among the
NCAA team leaders in this category. And, remember, the college game uses
the same 19-foot-9 stripe used by the preps.
Further, Mesa has produced 516 of its 1,000 points from threedom.
Records in this category are sketchy, so attempts to determine whether
the Mustangs are approaching any Southern Section standards, have come up
short thus far.
Senior Steve Whittaker leads the Mesa bombers with 59 three balls,
including at least one in all 17 games. Chad Vakili (38) and David Conte
(32) are the other leading long-range threats.
The process which will align schools in Orange County leagues for
athletic competition beginning the fall of 2002, officially began
Thursday.
More substantive meetings of county principals are scheduled Friday,
Feb. 7 and Feb. 15.
Beckman, a new school based in Tustin, has been targeted, by some, for
inclusion in the Pacific Coast League. But, there remains confusion about
when the school will open.
Two Tustin Unified employees at Thursday’s meeting differed on its
scheduled opening date (2003 and 2004) an another said the matter has yet
to be decided.
Even if it opened in 2003, it would likely only have one senior class
during the four-year releaguing cycle, rendering its varsity impact
minimal on schools it is leagued with this time around.
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