Softening the blow
Barry Faulkner
COSTA MESA - While Estancia High football coach Dave Perkins has
plenty of empathy for Anaheim, which takes a 24-game losing streak into
Friday’s 7 p.m. nonleague game at Orange Coast College, apathy is
something he hopes his players leave on the sideline.
“These are the games you hate,” said Perkins, whose 17-year head coaching
career has put him at both ends of the mismatch spectrum.
“I’ve been in the middle of a 29-game losing streak (he inherited a
17-game skein at La Sierra, went 0-10 his first season, then had to
forfeit two victories earned on the field to start his second campaign),
so I know what that’s like. And (Estancia was) 1-9 last season, when
Laguna Hills scored 62 points on us our last game.”
Perkins has vowed never to embarrass a downtrodden opponent and his
Eagles (3-0 and ranked No. 9 in CIF Southern Section Division IX) just
may force him to take measures to ensure the Colonists escape with their
collective psyche intact.
Perkins, however, is on the lookout for Estancia complacency, which
reared its ugly head before last week’s come-from-behind 21-18 triumph
over Garden Grove.
“We weren’t practicing well (Sept. 22), so I sent the kids home and we
lost a day of practice,” Perkins said. “The kids came back focused the
next day, and I expect the same (in preparation for Anaheim).
“We have to continue to work hard and get better. And we certainly don’t
want to be Anaheim’s first victim.”
Coach Allen Carter’s Colonists were the Eagles’ lone victim last season,
thanks to a 20-14 decision that overturned a pair of Anaheim leads.
The Eagles had not trailed this season, until Garden Grove gained an
18-14 advantage in the third quarter last week. The deficit lasted just
155 seconds, however, and Estancia moved closer to attaining its
preleague goal.
“We talked a lot in the off-season about having success in the preseason,
because we thought it was important,” Perkins said.
That success has a great deal to do with senior Marshall Hendricks, who
has sparkled on both sides of the ball. The 6-foot-1, 180-pound tailback
has rushed for 487 yards and five touchdowns on 51 carries en route to
658 all-purpose yards. He also shares the Orange County lead with four
interceptions, including a 75-yard touchdown return against Magnolia.
The Eagles’ wing T offense also relies on the fullback duo of junior
Fahad Jahid and senior Matt Mueller. The tandem has combined for 333
yards and four touchdowns, operating behind a veteran line led by senior
Kyle Westman, who shifts from tackle to guard this week.
Linemen Cesar Romero, Josh Veach, Robert Aguilera and Tim Valdez, as well
as tight end Griffin Crogan and wingback Sean Freeman, have also earned
praise from Perkins for their blocking.
Defensively, the Eagles have surrendered just 25 points, bettered by only
five county teams. They also have eight interceptions to fuel their
plus-10 turnover ratio (11-1).
Mueller, Jahid, Romero, Freeman and Andy Romo comprise a linebacking
corps complemented by Veach, Westman and David Rodriguez up front.
Senior John Alderete and sophomore Freddy Rodriguez join Hendricks in the
secondary, which frequently helps comprise an eight-man zone coverage.
Anaheim, with just three offensive touchdowns this fall, will attack the
Estancia defense with a unit triggered by junior quarterback Ryan
Patterson. Patterson has 24 completions for 266 yards and three TDs in 53
attempts and has thrown four interceptions.
His favorite target has been 5-9 senior Juan Jimenez (12 catches for 134
yards).
Senior David Lopez is the leading ballcarrier, having gained 156 yards on
50 attempts.
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