Working overtime in football a matter for debate
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RICK DEVEREUX
Ties are for hockey, soccer and shoelaces. In no way, shape or form
should ties be associated with football, unless you’re talking about
an accessory to the slick suits worn by first-round NFL draft
selections.
But the Sea View League opener between Newport Harbor High and
Foothill ended in a 10-10 tie. The league is one that does not play
overtime.
I think the outcome left the fans wanting some sort of resolution,
and the players from both teams walked off the field with their heads
down, as if they had lost.
But Newport Harbor Coach Jeff Brinkley said an overtime loss could
hurt a team’s chance of making the playoffs.
“Quite often a team from our league is an at-large [playoff]
team,” he said. “If you drop a loss on somebody, it may put [that
team] in a position with not as good of a record as someone in
another league.”
Members of the Golden West League, like Estancia and Costa Mesa,
use the same overtime format as college football. After a coin flip
-- the winner of which can opt to begin on defense or offense, or
select the end of the field where the overtime is played -- each team
gets the ball on the 25-yard line, with the chance to make a first
down. The result of the overtime counts as a win or a loss on the
school’s final record.
“We didn’t come here to kiss our sister,” Estancia Coach Craig
Fertig said. “If the game ends in a tie, why even be out there? It’s
a great rule and I think pro football should go to it.”
Fertig’s enthusiasm for overtime is not shared by his crosstown
counterpart.
“I think it’s a mistake [counting the overtime as a win or loss],”
Costa Mesa Coach Tom Baldwin said. “You take a chance of eliminating
a team from getting into the playoffs.”
Sage Hill, which plays in the Academy League, uses the same format
as the Golden West League.
“A football game that’s fought that hard for three hours, deserves
a victory,” Sage Hill Coach Tom Monarch said. “To fight that hard and
get a tie is foreign to me.”
The Pacific Coast League, including Corona del Mar, uses overtime,
but with a twist.
“The game officially ends as tie and it goes into the record as a
tie,” CdM Coach Dick Freeman said. “The overtime is for playoff
preference, so it isn’t decided by a coin flip.”
So, the team that wins in overtime holds the edge over the loser,
should a tiebreaker be needed to determine final league standings, as
only the top three teams are assured a CIF Southern Section playoff
berth.
In other leagues, such as the Sea View League, determining playoff
positioning can differ. Typically, the first tiebreaker for teams
with identical records is head-to-head competition. If that doesn’t
work, a flip of a coin is usually the next step.
Last year, the CdM-Tesoro game ended in a 21-21 tie, but the
Titans intercepted a pass in overtime after scoring on their
possession to win the overtime session.
The tie did not affect the Sea Kings’ playoff chances, since they
finished fourth, a half-game behind University, which defeated CdM.
And, though the league overtime rule left CdM with a 5-4-1 overall
record, instead of 5-5, it was still denied an at-large berth.
“I do like [our overtime format],” Freeman said. “It’s the best
for both teams. [The playoffs are not decided] by the most points
scored or a coin flip.”
Baldwin said he would be in favor of the Golden West League
adopting the PCL format, where the outcome of an overtime is used
only for playoff implications.
“The PCL probably has a good idea of not flipping a coin to see
who goes into the playoffs,” he said. “We could end up with three
teams being 4-2 [in league play] and only two go to the playoffs.
Where it is now, the flip of a coin decides. A better way is to play
out the games.”
But even coaches within the Sea View disagree on the value of a
tie.
“I like overtime,” Foothill Coach Doug Case said. “Even though we
are 0-1 in the overtime, I think the kids deserve to play the game
out [to a decision].”
The Knights lost to Wilson of Hacienda Heights, 24-21, in double
overtime in the opening round of the CIF Division VI playoffs last
season.
Newport Harbor, which was ranked No. 1 in Division VI for much of
the season, fell to No. 3 after the tie, even though the Sailors
remain unbeaten at 5-0-1.
Still, Brinkley believes a tie gives Sea View League teams a
better chance to get into the playoffs.
“In this division, there is only one league that gets a fourth
team in the playoffs,” Brinkley said. “A tie gives you a better
record.”
There are five leagues in Division VI, Division VII, Division IX
and Division XIII, the divisions of the Sea View, Golden West,
Pacific Coast and Academy leagues, respectively. The top three from
each league make the playoffs, with one at-large team filling out the
16-team bracket.
Divisions I and II each have four leagues, which produce 12
guaranteed playoff participants and four at-large entries.
*
Many Newport-Mesa teams are ranked in their respective division’s
CIF top-10 polls.
The CdM girls cross country team is No. 5 in Division III and the
CdM boys are No. 8.
The Sea Kings remain No. 5 in Division I boys water polo, followed
by Newport harbor at No. 6. Costa Mesa is No. 10 in Division II.
The CdM girls volleyball team is No. 1 in Division III-A. Newport
Harbor is No. 7 in Division II-AA and Sage Hill is No. 9 in Division
IV-A.
The Sage Hill girls tennis team is No. 3 in Division V and the CdM
girls are No. 3 in Division I.
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