Mira Costa of Manhattan Beach beat the host Sailors, 24-10, Friday, handing them their second straight loss in as many weeks.
The function after the game wasn’t going into the wee hours as planned.
Newport Harbor (3-2) quickly has to correct its issues, starting with the offense. The robust Sunset League begins next week. Seventeen points is all the Sailors have to show in the past two games.
The road to joining seven other Orange County coaches to have won 200 games is getting longer for Brinkley.
A visibly upset Brinkley dismissed what’s ahead for Newport Harbor, which shared the league title last year with four other teams. In the next three weeks, the Sailors play host to teams ranked in the CIF Southern Section Pac-5 Division top 10 poll.
“I’m not worried about the league,” said Brinkley, whose next three games are against No. 6 Los Alamitos (5-0), No. 1 Edison (5-0) and No. 7 Fountain Valley (5-0). “I’m worried about losing this football game. Our kids expect to win and they play hard. We weren’t good enough [Friday].”
The Sailors haven’t been the previous two weeks.
Mira Costa (3-2) was the second straight team to expose Newport Harbor’s inability to throw the ball downfield. As Dana Hills accomplished last week in a 41-7 victory against the Sailors, the defense focused on stopping the run, especially Cedric Whitaker.
The Mustangs, ranked No. 2 in the Western Division, limited the flashy running back. At halftime, Whitaker ran six times for three yards. He finished with 55 yards on 12 carries.
Newport Harbor opened the second half down, 14-0. Make it two straight weeks the Sailors have trailed at halftime. The offense’s answer to open the third quarter was a 33-yard field goal by Dillan Freiberg.
Not enough firepower as the Sailors dropped back-to-back nonleague games before league for the second time since 2005.
“They were more physical than us,” Brinkley said.