Prep football: Perkins moves across town to Costa Mesa
Barry Faulkner
COSTA MESA - Dave Perkins, who guided the Estancia High football
team to only its second playoff berth in the last 11 seasons last fall,
has been named coach at crosstown rival Costa Mesa.
Perkins, 14-17 in three years at Estancia, bringing his prep
head-coaching record to 97-96-1 in 18 seasons at six schools, replaces
Jerry Howell, who resigned March 30 after six seasons.
“We’re going to be the hardest-working team in Orange County and we’ll
also have the most fun of anybody in Orange County,” Perkins, 49, said of
the Mustangs, whom his Eagles defeated the last two years in the annual
Battle for the Bell.
Costa Mesa saw its school-record string of four straight playoff
appearances interrupted last season, but is expected to contend for a
Pacific Coast League title next fall. The Mustangs will return around 10
players with starting experience, including second-team All-PCL running
back Nick Cabico. In addition, Mesa’s freshman team won the 2000 league
title and the 1999 freshman team contended for the PCL crown.
“If we did anything but make the playoffs, it would be a disappointing
season,” Perkins said of the 2001 campaign. “Meeting any goals beyond
that will depend on how quickly things will gel with a new offense,
defense and coaching staff.”
Perkins, chosen from a three-candidate pool within the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District (former Costa Mesa head coach Tom Baldwin, who
was both an offensive and defensive coordinator under Howell, as well as
Mesa assistant coach Kent Paul, were also interviewed), said he plans to
bring his entire Estancia coaching staff with him to Costa Mesa.
Bob Brockie will continue to coordinate the double flex defensive
scheme, while Perkins will coordinate the offense, a combination of the
wing T and the Fly.
Estancia assistants Bill Lux, a former standout quarterback at Costa
Mesa, as well as Jeremy Osso and Jesse Nuno, have all committed to
shifting to Mesa, beginning with spring practice. Osso and Nuno are
former Estancia players.
Perkins said Saturday he had not spoken to any of last year’s Mesa
assistants, but he would invite any of them to join his staff.
“I’m not looking for coordinators, but I’d be happy to have more
qualified assistants who could help out in other areas,” Perkins said.
Perkins plans to begin spring drills at Costa Mesa the week of May 21,
though he will not assemble a team on the field until he has coordinated
the transition with his staff.
“It’s going to be difficult, but I had practice at it, having done the
same thing when I came to Estancia,” Perkins said. “I know some of the
names of the Costa Mesa kids from playing against them the last couple
years. I know they have quite a few talented kids over there, which will
give us an opportunity to be very successful. I want to make sure I have
my staff in place and we’re all on the same page before we start
practice.”
Perkins said it was difficult to leave behind his players at Estancia,
but he believes Costa Mesa is a better situation.
“Basically, there’s a strong commitment to athletics at Costa Mesa,”
he said. “It seems like the Principal, Diana Carey, wants to have
top-notch programs and I know Kirk (Bauermeister, the boys athletic
director) has the same commitment.
“I think Estancia is really trying hard to gain ground and to get
better, but I think it falls short in a couple areas.”
“I wouldn’t say the athletes at Costa Mesa are better, but there is
more of them. There are a lot of good athletes at Estancia, but Costa
Mesa has more participating in their athletic programs. I’m looking
forward to not having 22 guys banging each other up (in practice) and not
having everyone go both ways.”
Perkins said he was unsuccessful in gaining more on-campus help at
Estancia.
“It was hard at Estancia, because I was pretty much a one-man show.
There was one on-campus coach hired to help me, but he only coached one
year.”
Perkins said it remains unclear whether his son, A.J. Perkins, a
backup quarterback who also saw time in the secondary last fall as a
junior, will transfer to Mesa for his senior year. A.J. played varsity
baseball the last two seasons and his dad was an Estancia assistant to
Doug Deats this season.
The elder Perkins denied accusations that he had spoken with other
Estancia players about following him to Mesa.
“People can believe what they want, but I haven’t even recruited my
own son,” Perkins said. “We will talk as a family and (A.J.) will decide
what is best for him. And I haven’t talked to any other kids at Estancia
(about transferring). First of all, I didn’t have the job and secondly,
it’s not my place to do that. It’s for parents to decide where they think
the best place for their kids is.”
A few Estancia players have reportedly talked about transferring, as
rumors swirled that Perkins would be moving across town. But, according
to Estancia Boys Athletic Director Tim Parsel, any Estancia
student-athlete who did not notify district officials by April 15 of
plans to transfer, would have to move to the Costa Mesa attendance area
to be eligible to play for the Mustangs.
Perkins taught physical education at Estancia, but will teach what he
called an opportunities class (overseeing students with attendance
problems) at Mesa. He acknowledges shifting loyalty to the other side of
the crosstown rivalry will present its own challenges.
“I’m hoping there’s not a lynch mob waiting for me when I meet with my
new players for the first time,” he said jokingly. “I might be walking
into the lions den, but hopefully, the kids will be open to change.”
Perkins, a Newport Harbor High graduate (Class of 1970), who coached
the Sailors sophomore team and spent three seasons as a Harbor varsity
assistant, became a varsity head coach at La Sierra in 1983. After five seasons there, he spent two years at Corona High, winning a CIF Southern
Section Division V championship in 1989. From there, he had a pair of
two-year stints at Redlands and Upland, before coaching five seasons at
San Bernardino.
He has taken seven teams to the CIF playoffs and is 8-6 in the
postseason. In addition to his section crown at Corona, he won a league
title his final season at San Bernardino.
“Dave has a track record of success wherever he has been and he has
great credentials,” Bauermeister said. “He’s an enthusiastic guy, a good
football coach, and he knows this community.”
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