Boys soccer: Estancia destroys Santa Ynez, 7-0.
Joseph Boo
COSTA MESA - Talk about a bad road trip.
Santa Ynez High’s boy soccer team drove down from its home four hours
away, got drop-kicked by Estancia, 7-0, and immediately started its long
journey back.
That meant the No. 2 seed and Pacific Coast League champion Eagles earned
a trip to the CIF Southern Section Division IV semifinals Tuesday against
St. Francis, a 4-0 winner Santa Paula, with the site to be determined.
The host Eagles (18-1-1) took full advantage of a fortunate coin flip
that prevented them from taking a four-hour trip to Santa Ynez. A good
home crowd turned out and the Estancia sideline was packed with fans from
goal line to goal line.
Despite the 7-0 victory, only the coach of a team that outscored
opponents this year, 113-11, can find a lot of things to quibble about,
and that’s what Estancia Coach Steve Crenshaw did.
“We were pretty sloppy in the first half,” he said. “We were not sharp. I
thought we were tired. It’s something I don’t want to see again.”
For the first 38 minutes, Estancia outshot the Los Padres League champion
Pirates (16-3-3), 10-3, but Santa Ynez’ tough and physical defense kept
the Eagles scoreless.
Two minutes before halftime, Estancia finally got on the scoreboard when
senior midfielder Irving Islas set up outside the penalty box and fired a
rocket in the upper left corner.
Three minutes into the second half, Esaul Mendoza scored a fluke goal
that was a heartbreaker for Santa Ynez. Mendoza trapped a lob pass in the
penalty box and feebly kicked the ball backward. He walked away looking
at the ground dejectedly, missing the sight of the Pirates’ goalie
allowing the ball to inexplicably go through his hands and into the goal.
Mendoza turned around, saw the gift, and started celebrating.
Of Estancia’s seven goals, Mendoza got three. He now has 42 goals this
year, a team-high.
His second goal, 30 seconds later, was more traditional. Mendoza used his
speed to get behind Santa Ynez’ defense and kicked the ball through a
small opening on the left side of the goal.
Estancia’s Cesar Terrones scored his 31st goal of the year in the 55th
minute with a flying header off a corner kick, and just like that, the
Eagles turned a close 1-0 game into a 5-0 blowout.
“We settled down in the second half,” Crenshaw said. “Once we score,
we’re like sharks, and everybody has to get in on it. Esaul Mendoza,
Cesar Terrones, you can’t hold them down. They’ll score eventually.”
The Pirates responded against Estancia’s high-powered offense with brute
force, and they racked up four yellows and one red card. Estancia had
three yellow cards of its own. Santa Ynez’ red card and player ejection
came in the 60th minute, setting up an Estancia free kick just outside
the Pirates’ penalty box. And Islas responded by rifling the ball over
the goalie for his second score of the day.
Mendoza got his third goal five minutes later when he chased down a lob
pass, collided with Santa Ynez’ goalie and knocked the ball inadvertently
into the net. Juan Zarate capped off Estancia’s scoring on the 77th
minute by chipping a pass from Freddy Murillo into an empty net.
With that, the carnage was over, and Santa Ynez left the field in a
stupor. The Pirates’ scouting report on Estancia consisted of scores
printed in newspapers and a secondhand account from Monrovia Coach Mike
Headley, whose team lost to Estancia in the first round, 8-0.
“Any time somebody doesn’t know anything about us, they’re in for a
shock,” Crenshaw said. “If they can’t sustain their intensity for the
entire game, we’re going to get our shots. And once that starts, they
can’t deal with it.”
So Mission League champion St. Francis will have four days to get
acquainted with the Eagles before both teams meet with a berth in the CIF
championship finals at stake.
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