Estancia finally catches a break
Barry Faulkner
As a nation takes time on Veteran’s Day to remember, Estancia High
football coach Jay Noonan made a decision he hopes will help his
players forget.
So, on the heels of surrendering the most points in the 276-game
history of the program in a 58-7 nonleague loss to Pacifica, and in
the midst of an eight-game losing streak, the Eagles will skip
practice today to rest their collective body mind and soul.
“We want them to heal up a little bit,” said Noonan, who utilized
Friday, after last week’s Thursday game, to introduce his players to
some things they’ll work on this week in preparation for Friday’s
league and season finale against Ocean View.
The physical toll taken by a 42-0 loss to Orange Nov. 1 forced
several Eagles out of the lineup against Pacifica, which proceeded to
dominate in every facet on its way to its ninth straight postseason
appearance.
The Mariners pounded out 439 rushing yards, the most by an
Estancia foe in 63 games, dating back to a 487-yard output by Laguna
Hills in 1996.
The 58 points scored upped the Estancia opponents’ total this
season to 321, just one shy of last year’s nine-game total and only
15 shy of tying a school single-season worst, established by the 1986
team that finished 0-10.
The Eagles broke a three-game scoreless streak when Brad Young
connected with Lewis Bradshaw for a 13-yard touchdown pass midway
through the third quarter.
But Estancia’s 54 points this season rank last in Orange County
(tied with a Tesoro squad that has no seniors).
Against Pacifica, the Eagles did without, or received limited duty
from, starters Gary Jones (high fever), Mike Cahill (hip pointer),
Cullen Crom (thigh bruise) and Landon Pulizzi (strained neck).
Noonan said senior Joseph Hernandez, who has started at center all
season, filled in admirably on the defensive line. Noonan also
credited senior end Erik Andersen with a fine defensive effort and
said junior quarterback Brad Young had his most impressive
performance of the season.
“It may not have been statistically Young’s best game, but he
showed the most poise he has all season,” Noonan said. “He stepped up
in the pocket, made good reads and delivered the ball.”
Young completed nine passes for 115 yards, utilizing five
different receivers.
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