Rivalry revived
Barry Faulkner
COSTA MESA - It’s been six years since Corona del Mar High last
played Estancia in football. But with two schools which have battled 26
times under four previous league affiliations, it’s doubtful the Eagles
or the Sea Kings have lost that loveless feeling toward their
Newport-Mesa District rivals.
The two teams will reintroduce themselves Friday at 7 p.m. at Orange
Coast College in their first clash as Pacific Coast League combatants.
But there’s more on the line than bragging rights, as the winner will
claim sole possession of the league lead.
With a win, Estancia (5-2, 2-0 in league and ranked No. 9 in CIF Southern
Section Division IX) would clinch at least a share of its first league
crown since winning the Sea View in 1989. The Eagles have just two league
titles in their previous 34 seasons.
“It’s a real big game and I’ve thought all season it was going to be a
real big game,” Estancia Coach Dave Perkins said.
CdM (1-6, 1-0) would leapfrog ahead of the Eagles to the top of the
league standings with a victory, putting Coach Dick Freeman’s Sea Kings
in position to seize their first league championship since 1987.
“If we win this one, we’re the front-runner,” Freeman said. “But there’s
a lot of equality in this league and we’ll still have two very good teams
to play (University and Costa Mesa).”
Both teams have battled inconsistency and featured the running game. But
Estancia, with an impressive win over preseason league favorite Costa
Mesa, as well as a 20-7 triumph over a Westminster squad which topped
CdM, 21-14, earns the favorite’s tag.
The Eagles are fueled by senior two-way standout Marshall Hendricks, who
has rushed for 1,084 yards and collected seven interceptions.
“He’s as fast as anyone we’ve played and speed has given us problems,”
Freeman said of Hendricks. “We have to make it tougher for him to get
outside.”
Estancia fullbacks Matt Mueller and Fahad Jahid have also combined or 541
rushing yards and six touchdowns.
The Sea Kings running game has been paced by senior tailback Grant
Estabrook (590 yards on 159 carries), but senior Blake Hacker, who missed
several games with an ankle injury, could also be a factor. Hacker led
the Sea Kings with 58 yards on six carries in last week’s 24-7 nonleague
loss to Woodbridge, including an impressive 47-yard touchdown run.
Both teams are still searching for efficiency in their passing attack.
The Eagles’ two junior quarterbacks have just 21 combined completions (in
69 attempts). The Eagles have just one touchdown pass.
CdM, which lost starting quarterback Matt Moore for the season in Week 3,
has seen continued improvement from junior Evan Burden. Burden is 21 of
44 for 269 yards and two TDs in four starts.
“If you let them get their running game going, it opens up their
play-action passes and (Burden) isn’t going to miss open receivers,”
Perkins said.
The Eagles, however, have handled the pass, netting 15 interceptions to
fuel their plus-13 turnover ratio.
In addition to the opportunistic secondary of cornerbacks Hendricks and
John Alderete, as well as safety Freddy Rodriguez, the Eagles are keyed
defensively by end Kyle Westman and linebackers Mueller, Jahid and Cesar
Romero.
The Sea Kings’ defense has seldom featured the same lineup, due to
injuries. Senior middle linebacker Brandon Johnson sat out last week, but
is expected to return to help anchor the unit which also features senior
safety Adam Cooper and senior end Jay Bottom.
The Sea Kings have a minus-one turnover ratio and have had five
touchdowns nullified by penalties.
CdM leads the series, 14-9-3.
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