A good ol’ afternoon sweat
Bryce Alderton
When Dave Perkins played football he vowed he would never make his
players wake up at 7 a.m. for conditioning drills and he has
maintained that philosophy since he began coaching 19 years ago.
“I hated waking at 7 a.m.,” said Perkins, the Costa Mesa High
football head coach. “This way it gives the kids whatever summer they
have left to go to the beach, buy school clothes or do whatever and
then come out to practice. I’ve been coaching for 19 years, the kids
like it and the coaches like it.”
In the afternoon the work begins.
Football players begin their third day of conditioning drills
today at Costa Mesa High before practice in full pads begin Monday.
The Mustangs began conditioning Wednesday, with drills starting at
2:30 p.m. and lasting until 6 p.m. Players lift weights for the first
hour and 15 minutes before stepping on the field to work on special
teams plays such as punt and kick returns.
Then the running begins as players run two 100-yard dashes
followed by four 80-yard dashes, six 60-yard dashes, eight 40-yard
dashes, 10 20-yard dashes and 10 10-yard dashes.
Linemen have to run the two 100-yard dashes in 18 seconds or under
while backs have to run the same distance in 13 seconds or under. The
time drops by two seconds for each decline in yardage (16 seconds or
under for linemen running the four 80-yard dashes).
Running drills last about 35 minutes, according to Perkins.
“It’s a lot of yards, a lot of running,” he said.
A new face with a football pedigree graces the Costa Mesa High
field these days.
Junior defensive and offensive lineman Luke Sapolu, a 6-foot,
230-pound transfer from Canyon Springs High in Moreno Valley, comes
to the Mustangs this season, which excites Perkins.
“I’m real happy he’s here,” Perkins said. “He’s a good football
player who brings a good attitude and a good pedigree. His technique
is very good.”
Luke’s father, Jesse, played in the NFL as an offensive lineman
for the San Francisco 49ers.
Perkins heard a sophomore wide receiver transfer from Redlands
High may come out this week but as of Thursday afternoon the player
hadn’t registered, Perkins said.
“He hasn’t checked in yet and I haven’t seen him, I don’t even
know his name,” Perkins said.
Cheryl Hack, a junior, who played on the Mustangs’ soccer team
last season, has participated in conditioning drills this week,
hoping to make the team as a kicker. She has never tried out for
football at Costa Mesa.
“Her lifelong dream is to be a kicker,” Perkins said. “She’s a big
New York Jets fan and ran into their kicker one year and got fired up
about it. She works hard.”
Last year Carla Andrade, then a junior, was a junior varsity
running back for Mesa. She got two carries in a varsity game.
Perkins will keep a similar schedule when players start practicing
in full pads come Monday. He will break up the time into three
sessions -- special teams, offense and defense.
The only difference in conditioning drills and early summer
workouts has been the intensity.
“The running and weightlifting have increased a little bit from
what we’ve been doing over the summer,” Perkins said. “The kids came
in pretty good shape so I’m encouraged about that.”
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