Eagles in transition
Patrick Laverty
Russell King has been a basketball player and a coach at Estancia
High, but now he has taken on an entirely new role.
The 1992 Estancia graduate is now the leader of the Eagles’
basketball program, hired to take over for Chris Sorce this fall
after Sorce built Estancia into a 17-game winner last season.
Out of coaching for the last two years after rising through the
ranks as a freshman and junior varsity coach and then a varsity
assistant at Estancia, King knows there will be some bumps in the
road. But he hopes to mature at the same rate as his young, but
talented team, which also returns the leading scorer from last year’s
squad.
“It’s going to be quite a jump,” King said. “There’s a big
learning curve for me, especially being out of coaching the last two
years.”
But the best cure for inexperience is experience and King and the
Eagles will get a lot of that prior to the opening of Golden West
League play, beginning Dec. 3 with a home game against La Quinta and
continuing through the tournament season.
King will hone his game management skills in those early-season
games and work on his halftime speeches, while a strong group of
sophomores, including Mike McDaniels, Shaun Markley and Dallas Kopp
gain experience through playing time on the court.
Those youngsters will be balanced by junior Carlos Pinto, a
varsity starter since he was a freshman and the team’s leading scorer
last season (13.9 points per game), 6-foot-5 senior Scott Sankey (5
ppg) and guards Hugo Escobedo, a junior, and Jose Viramontes, a
senior.
The combination of youth and experience is one King hopes to blend
into a unit that can challenge league favorites Ocean View.
“After Ocean View it’s wide open,” King said. “We’ve got a good
nonleague schedule and if we get some good competition and we can
make some progress, we can give Ocean View a good game. Maybe we can
even beat them.”
Before the Eagles get ahead of themselves, they have to adjust to
King’s coaching style and his game plan. In early practices, King has
emphasized the transition break in an attempt to get easy baskets. So
far, King said, the adjustment has been a smooth one.
“There’s obviously some changes as far as putting in some new
material,” King said. “They’ve done a good job adapting. They’re all
good kids and they’re working their tails off.”
While King is confident any collection of players he puts on the
court can all score, there is little doubt Pinto will be the No. 1
option.
“He can score inside and he can score outside,” King said. “We’re
going to run the motion offense so we’ll have multiple options, but
he’s the go-to guy.”
Pinto scored in double figures in 23 of Estancia’s 27 games last
season, including a season-high 35 early in the year against Whitney,
a game in which he made five three-pointers.
McDaniels and Markley will also provide some marksmanship from
beyond the arc, while Sankey and Kopp, 6-4, will man the lane.
Escobedo is a returner at point guard and also has a good jump shot,
while Viramontes and Ray Verette can be a defensive stoppers.
Defense may just be the key for the Eagles this season. With
Sankey, Kopp and the 6-4 Pinto, Estancia has lanky players that
should help in its pressure defense.
“We want to be able to mix it up,” King said. “We want to be able
to throw different looks at teams. We have tall, lanky kids with long
arms, we can use that to pressure the ball and set traps.”
But King also expects some mistakes, particularly early, because
of the youth and the transition between coaches. He is hopeful that
once Estancia gets through December, experience will be able to
eliminate those mistakes.
“That’s the best way to learn is to get that experience,” King
said. “It doesn’t help to sit on the bench.”
The only person who will learn that way is King himself.
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