Daily Pilot Player of the Week, Marshall Hendricks: The Marshall
Plan
Barry Faulkner
When Marshall Hendricks transferred to Estancia from Edison midterm
last year, he said he immediately felt welcome.
Some eight months later, he has found a new place to experience the
comforts of home -- the end zone.
The 6-foot-1, 180-pound junior, who played basketball and ran track for
the Eagles as a sophomore, exploded for 309 all-purpose yards and scored
four touchdowns in his Estancia football debut.
His effort, which included two interceptions and 26 points, the latter
matching the single-game output of Jeff Perry in 1996 which is believed
to be a school record, helped Estancia hammer Magnolia, 35-0, ending a
six-game losing streak. It also earned Hendricks Daily Pilot Football
Player of the Week recognition.
Hendricks was expected to spend the first few series on the sideline, as
punishment for missing a practice when family travel plans left him
stranded out of town. But when teammate Andy Romo broke his helmet on the
opening kickoff, Hendricks got the call and wasted little time seeking
refuge in the shadow of the goal post.
On the third play, Hendricks broke 52 yards for a touchdown and the
Eagles never looked back. He added a 4-yard scoring run and two-point
conversion later in the first period, then returned an interception 75
yards to paydirt with 1:28 left in the half.
A 43-yard TD sprint in the third quarter added to his 218 rushing yards,
on just 14 carries, and put him on the path toward some lofty goals he
has set for himself this season.
“I want to get seven interceptions and score 37 touchdowns,” Hendricks
said. “I want to be all-county and all-league and I want our team to make
the playoffs.”
Supreme quickness, vision and determination should help Hendricks
approach those lofty standards, a notion Esancia Coach Dave Perkins does
not doubt.
Perkins has compared his wingback-cornerback favorably to Manu Tanielu,
the Newport-Mesa District and Daily Pilot Pacific Coast League MVP as a
senior last fall.
“He may be better than Manu,” Perkins said during spring practice, before
the former Edison receiver had adjusted to his backfield role in Perkins’
wing T.
Hendricks is also hoping a strong senior season can lead to a college
scholarship. He is receiving recruiting interest from several schools and
Perkins said Cal and Oregon have been most vigilent in wooing the future
collegiate defensive back or receiver.
“There’s more than casual interest and that (Magnolia) game wasn’t a bad
video to send to recruiters,” Perkins said.
Hendricks said he is completely comfortable in whatever role Perkins
places him. He cites field vision as his leading attribute as a
ballcarrier.
And though he would prefer to “stay away from the big boys,” on offense,
he has shown he is not afraid to instigate collisions on defense.
“I will lay a helmet on somebody,” he said. “It’s not so much about
having the body as it is having the heart.”
Though confident in his abilities, Hendricks is also quick to share
credit with his offensive line. And though new to the team, he is not shy
about assuming a leadership role.
“I try to be a leader on and off the field,” he said. “I told the guys
not to get too pumped up with one win, because that’s how many they won
last year. We need to keep doing what we’re doing.”
For his part, Hendricks plans to continue supplying highlights on both
sides of the ball.
“(Friday) was just the beginning,” he said. “There’ll be more touchdowns,
more interceptions, more happiness.”
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