OCC faces falling Comets
Barry Faulkner
Palomar Community College football, a perennially powerful program
that produced a 54-11 record the previous six seasons, is smarting
from a 1-6 campaign that includes six straight losses.
But the Comets should not be expecting any sympathy from
struggling visitor Orange Coast, which travels to San Marcos’ Mission
Hills High for today’s 1 p.m. Mission Conference American Division
game.
“They’re a lot like us,” said OCC Coach Mike Taylor, whose Pirates
are 1-6, 1-1 in the division. “[The Comets] have played well at
times. They’re not as good up front as they’ve been.”
Palomar, 0-2 against division foes, usually plays well against
OCC, having won seven of the last eight meetings, including a
three-game winning streak. In that winning skein, the Comets have
outscored the Pirates, 108-11.
Palomar, built to prominence by San Diego State Coach Tom Craft
and now guided by third-year head man Joe Early, has had trouble
outscoring anyone lately. During their six-game skid, which includes
last week’s 41-31 loss to Golden West, the Comets have surrendered
32.5 points per game, while scoring just 17.3 per contest.
OCC, meanwhile, has scored more than 17 just once this season -- a
36-19 loss to Los Angeles Southwest in Week 2 -- and it’s 101 points
this season rank last in the 12-team conference.
Even when the Pirates have moved the ball, they have had trouble
finishing drives with points. They have made just 3 of 9 field-goal
attempts and of the 19 times they have advanced to at least the
opponent’s 21-yard line, they have failed to score eight times.
The Pirates are led offensively by sophomore quarterback Kyle
Basanez. He has completed 82 of 172 for 1,154 yards and five
touchdowns, with four interceptions.
Freshman tailback Matt Padilla (328 yards on 69 carries) is OCC’s
leading rusher, while freshman Eric Lauderdale has a team-high 21
receptions for 230 yards.
Palomar’s offensive catalyst is 5-foot-5, 170-pound sophomore
Speedy Anthony, who ranks No. 2 in the conference in all-purpose
rushing (148.1 yards per game, including rushing and returns,
trailing only Santa Ana sophomore and Newport Harbor High product
Dartangan Johnson).
Anthony has gained 335 yards on 75 rushing attempts and has logged
227 and 369 yards returning punts and kickoffs, respectively.
“He’s their go-to guy,” Taylor said of Anthony.
Tony Paoli, a sophomore transfer from UNLV, is the Comets’
starting quarterback. He has thrown for 739 yards and five
touchdowns, but has thrown eight interceptions in 136 attempts.
Palomar’s leading receiver is sophomore tight end John Mulchrone
(32 catches for 263 yards and three TDs).
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