Prep football: Battle for the Bell
Barry Faulkner
COSTA MESA - The annual crosstown high school football showdown
between Costa Mesa and Estancia has become commonly known as the Battle
for the Bell.
However, combatants in this year’s edition, a Pacific Coast League
clash that kicks off Friday at 7 p.m. at Orange Coast College, have taken
to simply calling it Week 8, as if any other description is just window
dressing.
“We’re competing for the Bell (perpetual trophy), the city
championship and bragging rights for the rest of our lives,” first-year
Estancia coach Jay Noonan said.
“Our kids are pretty excited about it,” said first-year Costa Mesa
coach Dave Perkins, who, like six of his players, spent the last three
years on the other side of the rivalry in Estancia red and gold. “A few
kids are particularly excited.”
Mustang seniors Bobby Arroyo, Freddy Rodriguez, Jesse Cardenas and
A.J. Perkins, as well as junior twin brothers Brian and Alan Rayner, all
know what victory on the varsity level feels like in this game, having
experienced it the last two falls at Estancia.
Dave Perkins said he brought pictures of the Bell trophy out to
practice this week to provide a refresher to his other players, including
seniors who watched from the stands as freshmen the last time Mesa rang
the bell at midfield and partook in the postgame celebratory feast at
Newport Rib Company after a 52-0 conquest in 1999.
The transfers, which included the late Matt Colby, have stirred the
pregame pot this fall, though the communal grieving process both teams
shared when Colby died a day after taking himself out of a Sept. 28
nonleague game and collapsing on the sideline, has given both rosters
some perspective on the rivalry.
“This thing could become ‘Peyton Place’ with all the subplots and
personal battles,” Dave Perkins said. “I know there will be some phone
calls this week, with kids giving each other a hard time.
“But I don’t look at it as any kind of revenge thing. I’m not going
after anybody over there. I don’t have any of those thoughts or notions.”
Noonan, meanwhile, was quite comfortable capsulizing the resentment
some in the Estancia camp feel toward their former teammates-turned
rivals.
“The kids that transferred made those decisions themselves,” Noonan
said. “They decided to become Mustangs and they have to live with that
the rest of their lives. They decided to abandon their friends and, to
me, they took the easy way out. I’d compare their experience to going to
a used car lot, where the salesman sells you a bill of goods and the car
you thought was a Rolls Royce, turns out to be a lemon.”
And while Mesa (5-2, 1-1 in league) comes in with a record of high
performance, compared to the Eagles (0-6, 0-2), Noonan believes the
heavily favored Mustangs are ripe for the taking.
“We have one common opponent, Northwood, and I have no doubt we played
a tougher nonleague schedule,” Noonan said. “Mesa lost, 31-6, to
Northwood and we lost, 49-6. But I thought our offense was a little
better against Northwood than theirs was.
“(Friday’s outcome) is going to come down to mistakes. If we don’t
shoot ourselves in the foot, we beat Mesa.”
Such an outcome would rank among the ultimate upsets in the series, in
which Estancia holds a 20-13-1 edge.
Last year’s game was an all-time classic, as Estancia rallied from a
20-0 deficit late in the second quarter to claim a 34-27 triumph.
Noonan said his plan of attack will be built around defensive
pressure.
“We’ll do what we normally do on offense,” Noonan said. “And,
defensively, we’re going to blitz them up and down the field and try to
make (their passing game) beat us.”
This aggressive approach won’t catch the Mustangs off guard.
“They’re going to bring everybody and come after us,” Dave Perkins
said. “They brought the house every play against Corona del Mar and, for
a while, it disrupted (the Sea Kings). We’ll have to be ready to block
seven, eight or nine guys, but Laguna Beach had nine or 10 guys in the
box and we were still able to take care of business. Hopefully, we’ll be
able to do that again Friday night.”
Costa Mesa appears to hold the majority of the weapons, including an
offense that comes in averaging nearly 34 points per game.
Junior fullback Keola Asuega has rushed for 692 yards and 11
touchdowns, while senior wingback Nick Cabico has 526 rushing yards and
has scored seven TDs, including two on five receptions for 86 yards.
Sophomore Omar Ruiz (180 yards and four TDs) and Rodriguez (234 yards
and four TDs) are additional rushing threats, behind an offensive line
that averages 251 pounds from tackle to tackle.
A.J. Perkins has thrown for 474 yards and seven TDs, completing 43 of
100 with only two interceptions.
Defensively, the Mustangs feature Arroyo, a first-team All-PCL
linebacker who leads the team in tackles. Senior tackle Doug Amburgey, as
well as Cabico at free safety, have also been stellar for tonight’s
hosts, who have a plus-14 turnover ratio.
Estancia, which has been outscored this season, 203-71, will counter
offensively with a veer option triggered by junior Lewis Bradshaw.
Bradshaw has scored the Eagles only two TDs in league, both on the
ground. He has thrown for 552 yards and two TDs this season, completing
46 of 96 with two interceptions.
Senior Junior Tanielu is the Eagles’ leading rusher with 308 yards and
three TDs on 59 carries.
An eye-popping 28 fumbles, 12 of which have been lost, have helped
stagnate offensive production, though the Eagles have a manageable
minus-one turnover ratio. Still, the Eagles’ 607 team rushing yards this
fall have been surpassed by 36 Orange County running backs, including
Asuega.
Speedy receivers Nate Harriman and Jermaine Snell, who transferred
from Texas and Fountain Valley, respectively, will attempt to make a big
impact in their first Battle for the Bell.
Harriman has 15 catches for 305 yards and one TD.
Senior inside linebacker Joey Mueller has stood out for the Eagles on
defense, where Bradshaw shifts from outside linebacker to free safety
this week.
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