Trials and trails
Barry Faulkner
The Estancia High boys cross country team would have preferred the
more hilly course available at Irvine Park for Friday’s Pacific Coast
League Finals.
Hills are mere speed bumps, after all, compared to the adversity Coach
Charlie Appell’s Eagles have faced this fall.
Outvoted by other league coaches who liked the flatter, faster course --
all the better to end the regular season with rewarding personal records
-- the Eagles took it in stride and won the meet anyway.
The victory, their third straight at league finals, allowed them to earn
a share of the league championship, their fifth this decade, with
dual-meet champion Corona del Mar. It was the same CdM squad, loping
leisurely through its first PCL season, which had earlier ended the
Eagles’ 15-meet home winning streak, when three Estancia runners
inexplicably bonked (the endurance athlete’s term for running completely
out of gas) attempting to negotiate a hill they routinely conquer in
training runs.
The Eagles bonked, sprained ankles, lost one key returner to his
part-time job, jarred hip muscles, nursed season-long shin splits, and
routinely missed Saturday workouts due to job commitments. They
generally tried the patience of their gravel-voiced head man, who in 10
years with the program has been forced to soften his old-school
expectations to maintain sanity, not to mention the team’s competitive
edge.
“I get frustrated, but I have learned to grin and bear it,” said Appell,
whose children Carrie (Class of ‘95), Johann (‘96), Michael (‘97) and
Stephan (‘99) put in more miles than the family vehicles, while
representing Estancia. All four continued their running careers in
college.
“I owe a lot to Joan Carlisle,” Appell said of his colleague, officially
listed as the girls coach. Carlisle handles any administrative work and
offers the program’s athletes (boys and girls) endless patience,
compassion and encouragement.
“If I get a little overbearing at times, she’s the one the kids can talk
to,” Appell said. “She does a lot of work, so all I have to do is coach.”
Despite the constant trials, Appell’s love for Estancia will likely keep
him at the school well into the next millennium.
“I could coach for another 10 years, or until I can leave feeling
comfortable that I’ve put the program in someone else’s hands,” said
Appell, who can frequently be spotted cheering on Estancia teams in other
sports throughout the school year.
With CdM, as well as emerging power Northwood (under the expert guidance
of former Irvine High Coach Randy Rossi), as newly installed PCL rivals,
league title contention could become more tenuous in the future.
“We went from the frying pan to the fire,” Appell said of the newly
configured PCL, which sent Laguna Hills and Aliso Niguel to the Sea View
League.
But Appell’s optimism is fueled by a strong crop of freshmen runners, who
won two of three invitationals that separated runners by class this
season.
Freshman Humberto Rojas finished third at league finals (15:40),
sophomore Luis Segoviano was sixth (16:13) and sophomore Mike Casillas
was seventh (16:17). Seniors Danny Vargas (16:17) and Abe Inouye (16:17)
were eighth and 10th, respectively.
And, he also points out, there is something special about athletes who
continue to turn travail into triumph.
“Our kids do the work and they believe they can do well,” said Appell,
perhaps the ultimate believer.
q
Reliance upon records from those who vote in CIF Southern Section Top 10
football polls (my fellow sportswriters), has, I believe, done a huge
disservice to Corona del Mar and Estancia this fall.
Costa Mesa (7-2 with only one win against a team likely to make the
playoffs, as well as a 34-14 loss to the Eagles) is a lofty No. 4 in this
week’s final regular-season Division IX poll. The Mustangs are ranked one
spot above Western, which beat them, 35-34, Sept. 30. I voted them No. 10
in my poll.
Meanwhile, Estancia (6-3) and CdM (3-6, but assured no worse than a share
of the PCL title) remain unranked, a predicament which figures to damage
their positioning in the 16-team playoff draw announced Sunday.
I voted CdM (a 9-0 winner over Estancia just 11 days ago and o7
favoredf7 to defeat Mesa Friday) No. 8 and Estancia No. 9.
Fullerton (5-4 but without a win against a playoff-bound opponent) is
currently No. 10.
Should Estancia be forced to battle for an at-large berth (which could
happen with a loss to University), it would be a shame to lose out to
Fullerton on the basis of poll voters’ ignorance.
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