Prep football: Starting from scratch
Barry Faulkner
COSTA MESA - For the first time in his coaching career, Estancia
High head man Jay Noonan operates at the center of his football program’s
universe. And, just more than two months after taking his first head
coaching job, the longtime assistant and former USC walk-on appears to
have generated a big bang of enthusiasm that is tangible on the Eagles’
practice field.
With Noonan surveying his 40-player roster, primarily from the center
of the practice flurry, Eagle players fly between offensive and defensive
drills eager to impress.
That there are more than two dozen varsity athletes at all is
impressive to some, after a stand-in staff guided a limited formation of
Eagles through what amounted to a ceremonial spring practice. This took
place before Noonan was named to replace Dave Perkins, who is now guiding
the crosstown rival Costa Mesa Mustangs.
There was, Noonan later learned, even some discussion among
administrators about the possibility of not having a football team at all
this season.
Any such scenario, however, disappeared amid the maelstrom generated
by Noonan, who routinely projects conviction worthy of a pregame pep
talk.
“There was a problem with the kids’ confidence when I got here,” said
Noonan, whose most recent coaching assignment was tutoring the running
backs at Capistrano Valley High. “I think what we did, as coaches, was
inject confidence. One of the players, at our very first meeting, made a
comment that any new coach is going to promise things. But, we’ve tried
to make sure we haven’t promised anything we couldn’t deliver. We said
we’d get the facilities fixed up and we’ve done that. We said we’d
establish a summer program and work on strength and conditioning and I
believe we’ve done that. I think that has shown the kids there is a
commitment to them and that’s helped their confidence.
“They’ve been told they won’t be very good and they’ve been told the
odds against success are insurmountable. But our coaching staff has said
‘Fine, let’s use that for motivation. Let everyone believe we’re not very
good, while we work hard, play together and believe in ourselves.’ I
believe our kids believe in themselves.”
What has also helped foster that belief is an unexpected stream of
nine transfers, as well as the addition of seven newcomers already
attending the school.
Ironically, the Eagles have collected more transfer players than the
parade of talent that left for Costa Mesa, though the latter group
included five starters from the 7-4 playoff team, three of whom were
All-Pacific Coast League honorees.
The new names and faces should come in plenty handy, since there are
no returning starters, including two who remain at Estancia, but have
elected not to play.
The program’s mass defection, including 27 players from last year’s
39-player freshman squad, left little more than a clean slate for Noonan
and his assistants. It’s a little tough to evaluate personnel from last
year’s video library, when virtually no one on this year’s roster left
the sideline last season.
The lack of sophomores is another trend Noonan will hope to squelch.
Of the 76 players represented in the three freshman team pictures to
appear in the program the last three years, only 20 are members of this
year’s varsity. That’s nearly five dozen dropouts, an attrition rate
capable of making Eagle football players an endangered species.
Noonan, however, plans to preserve and protect. To that end, he
restored and prominently displayed the school record boards that, he
said, had been forsaken before his arrival. The surprisingly good turnout
will also allow him to field a junior varsity team, a crucial
developmental tool for any successful program. But, as Noonan becomes
more familiar with his new program’s history, he’ll discover only three
playoffs wins in 36 seasons, none since 1980.
Maintaining last year’s trend of success -- it was the Eagles’ first
trip to the CIF Southern Section playoffs since 1995 -- is a tall order
this fall, despite a crop of speedy skill-position athletes that may wind
up generating interest form college recruiters.
Junior Lewis Bradshaw, who played at Newport Harbor last year, the
Harriman brothers, Nate and Sean, from McKinney Texas, as well as
Fountain Valley transfer Jermaine Snell and former Connecticut resident
Marco Montez, should all find productive homes on Placentia Avenue.
Bradshaw will start at quarterback and defensive end, while Nate
Harriman and Snell, both seniors, are expected to start at receiver,
while also manning defensive roles at outside linebacker and cornerback,
respectively.
Montes, a stout 5-foot-9, 260-pound senior, is a projected starter at
inside linebacker.
Sean Harriman, a sophomore, figures to contribute on both sides of the
ball, as does senior Junior Tanielu, among the rare breed of returners.
Tanielu, slated to start at running back and inside linebacker, joins
seniors Ryan Grimes, Mitch Valdes and Raymond Romua as the only returners
to have posted offensive statistics last fall. But the sum of those
contributions amounts to six rushing attempts for 42 yards and one
reception for 6 yards.
Noonan, via Offensive Coordinator David LaMarre, will implement a
split-back veer offense, with some West Coast passing schemes thrown in.
Noonan said it’s a scheme borrowed from De La Salle High of Concord,
which is currently on a 113-game winning streak.
This year’s offense has a tough act to follow, after the 2000 unit
produced 4,071 yards and scored a school single-season record 312 points.
The defensive scheme, under the guidance of coordinator Scott Wilkie,
is an attacking four-four built around the blitz.
Noonan also promises some gadget plays, primarily on special teams.
“I believe in the Bill Walsh philosophy that you should always throw a
trick play in, before your opponent does,” Noonan said.
Another reason for optimism is a preleague schedule lacking an obvious
juggernaut. Beginning with Magnolia, Sept. 6 at Newport Harbor, the
Eagles will play five nonleague foes who failed to make the playoffs last
season. Estancia’s 10 regular season games also feature only one team,
reigning PCL champion University, that won a playoff game last year.
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