Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

City Section playoffs appear wide open

- By Eric Sondheimer

It had never happened in City Section football history until Thursday night.

The No. 1 and No. 2 seeds in the Open Division, San Pedro and Venice, were eliminated in overtime by No. 8 Eagle Rock and No. 7 Lake Balboa Birmingham in opening-round playoff games.

“I think San Pedro and Venice were odds-on favorites to meet in the finals and to have the No. 7 and No. 8 seeds win and take them to overtime is pretty remarkable,” Eagle Rock coach Andy Moran said.

The No. 3 seed, Wilmington Banning, barely survived 25-24 over Roosevelt. No. 4 Garfield defeated No. 5 Franklin 50-29.

Parity has definitely arrived in the Open Division, which makes Friday’s semifinals another night of uncertaint­y. Birmingham will play at Banning and Eagle Rock will be at Garfield. The winners will play Nov. 26 for the title at L.A. Valley College.

“I think this is competitiv­e equity and parity at its finest,” Garfield coach Lorenzo Hernandez said.

The City Section joined the Southern Section in waiting until after the regular season was completed to put together its playoff divisions while using CalPreps.com’s power rankings as a guide for seedings. At least in the Open Divisions, it has worked to near perfection.

Kickers coming through: Former soccer players turned kickers are producing in the playoffs. Birmingham’s Jacy Oliva had field goals of 39 and 26 yards in a 28-27 double-overtime win over Venice, including tying the score in regulation with 9.6 seconds left.

In a 38-28 win over Redlands

Citrus Valley, Ryon Sayeri of West Hills Chaminade kicked a 49-yard field goal. He’s 11 of 13 on field-goal attempts this season and 45 of 45 on conversion kicks.

Breakthrou­gh win: Mission Viejo ended Corona Centennial’s 14 consecutiv­e seasons of reaching the Southern Section playoff semifinals with a 31-28 quarterfin­al win in the Division 1 playoffs. Quarterbac­k Kadin Semonza passed for 294 yards and two touchdowns and caught a touchdown pass.

Mission Viejo came in with a 9-1 record but had been largely forgotten after falling short in its biggest test, a 35-30 loss to Long Beach Poly on Sept. 2. The Diablos apparently improved and now get to host Bellflower St. John Bosco in Friday’s semifinals. Mission Viejo coach Chad Johnson used to be the Braves’ offensive coordinato­r.

Inglewood wins: In Division 2, there are three Mission League teams still alive — Chaminade, Chatsworth Sierra Canyon and La Puente Bishop Amat. The fourth team is unbeaten Inglewood (12-0), which isn’t going away. The Sentinels rallied for a 13-7 road victory over Rancho Cucamonga. They will host Chaminade in the semifinals.

Sophomore quarterbac­k Husan Longstreet threw two touchdown passes to Terrell Bradshaw to help Inglewood come back from a 7-0 halftime deficit.

Stanley goes wild: In City Section Division I, teams are having a hard time dealing with Utah-bound speedster Dijon Stanley of Granada Hills. Running out of the double-wing formation, all Stanley needs is a small opening and he’s gone. He rushed for 256 yards and five touchdowns in a 64-28 win over South Gate.

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