Los Angeles Times

Chargers are Division 3 champions

- By Eric Sondheimer eric.sondheimer@latimes.com

It’s going on five months now that Huntington Beach Edison football players keep refusing to let their coach, Dave White, call it quits and slip away into the sunset to sip one of those Hawaiian drinks with a colorful umbrella sticking out on a sandy beach far away.

Every week in the Southern Section Division 3 football playoffs, Edison has found a way to postpone the White retirement party. On Friday night, the Chargers pulled off their biggest win yet, relying on the running of junior tailback Jack Carmichael to defeat host La Mirada, 44-24, to win the Division 3 championsh­ip.

White has vowed to step down at the conclusion of this season after 31 years as head coach and 38 years in the program. This season started with official practice on Aug. 1. There was a trip to Hawaii, two bye weeks and 14 games, and Edison (13-1) isn’t closed to being finished. The Chargers advance to play in a CIF state championsh­ip bowl game next weekend. Their opponent will be announced Sunday.

In truth, whatever happens next week or beyond, nothing will take away the joy from winning a section title in White’s final season. This is a team he cares deeply about, and his players feel the same about him.

“It was for us to make him win this championsh­ip,” Carmichael said. “It’s not our championsh­ip. It’s his.”

Said White: “I’m emotional. This team has been special the whole year. We got better and better. It’s a special group.”

Carmichael rushed for 181 yards and scored two touchdowns. Many of the holes were opened by all-star center Michael Saffell, headed to Cal. In the first half, when Edison opened a 28-10 halftime lead, Carmichael rushed for 163 yards in seven carries.

A 91-yard intercepti­on return for a touchdown early in the third quarter by McCade Barrett gave Edison a 35-10 lead. But La Mirada made a valiant comeback bid. Touchdown catches of 13 and 19 yards by Jeremy Clark cut the Matadores’ deficit to 34-24. Nick Hernandez rushed for 131 yards.

Quarterbac­k Griffin O’Connor was steady throughout for Edison. He passed for 232 yards, completed an 11-yard touchdown pass to E.J. Ginnis and had touchdown runs of 11 and six yards.

La Mirada Coach Mike Moschetti offered a gesture of unity and a reminder that life is more than just about who wins or loses. His players wore an emblem on their helmets honoring Whittier Christian football player Ethan Hawks, who died last month after a freak accident in which a piece of metal struck him while he was riding in a car on the freeway.

White has been such a fixture for so long at Edison that he’ll be hard to replace.

“The one thing I admire the most is his consistenc­y,” Saffell said. “Every day, he’s going to be the same guy, whether you’re talking to him after class or talking to him on the field. He’s always competitiv­e, always has a great amount of pride in him.”

 ?? Michael Owen Baker For The Times ?? EDISON’S Jack Carmichael breaks a long run against La Mirada in the Southern Section Division 3 championsh­ip game. Carmichael rushed for 181 yards.
Michael Owen Baker For The Times EDISON’S Jack Carmichael breaks a long run against La Mirada in the Southern Section Division 3 championsh­ip game. Carmichael rushed for 181 yards.

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