Nilani Duarte
Steve Virgen
Tucked away in Nilani Duarte’s room is a box packed with articles
from the 2002-03 Costa Mesa High girls soccer season. Amid the
newspaper clippings there are a couple of patches: first-team All-CIF
Southern Section Division III, first-team All-Golden West League.
The honor badges are stored away, but the status remains highly
prevalent for Duarte. She accomplished her goals as a sophomore. Now
she has the challenge of repeating such high accolades. And, she must
do it while filling the position vacated by Sharon Day, the CIF
Division III Offensive Player of the Year last season.
“I feel like I have to do it again,” Duarte said of achieving
first-team all-league and All-CIF honors. “I want to do it again. It
has motivated me.”
With that in mind, Duarte played one of her best games of the
season, scoring two goals and delivering an assist in leading the
Costa Mesa girls soccer team to a 3-0 Golden West League victory over
Santa Ana Dec. 18.
Throughout the week, Duarte, the Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week,
had been battling the flu. She was not 100% against Corona del Mar
Dec. 16 and did not start as the Mustangs lost, 2-0. She still felt
sick two days later against the Saints, but this time she told Coach
Dan Johnston she was feeling well enough to play.
Duarte’s father, Jose, advised his daughter to sit out the
Mustangs’ league opener, but Duarte wanted to play.
“I was thinking about sitting out that game, but I really didn’t
want to,” said Duarte, a team captain. “I didn’t want to let my team
down.”
Duarte shook off her illness and scored the Mustangs’ first two
goals. She finished off a cross from Kara Jenkins to get Mesa started
and then found the net after taking a pass from Kyla Flores. She
capped the Mustangs’ victory with a header near midfield that dropped
in front of a charging Rachel Ronquillo, who went on to score.
Playing the midfield, Duarte led Mesa’s attack and frustrated the
Saints, who might have had an opportunity to win, considering the
Mustangs were short-handed. Aside from Duarte’s illness, the Mustangs
were without Jasmin Day, who had the flu, and Jenny Sparks, who is
out with a knee injury. Both were second-team All-CIF Division III
selections last year, and the Mustangs also lost Valerie Gomez, a
second-team all-league honoree who broke her ankle Dec. 9.
But the Saints had to contend with Duarte and had no answer.
“The referee came up to me afterward and said [Duarte] played as
close to a perfect game of anyone he has seen,” said Johnston, who
also noted Duarte was key in helping lead the Mustangs to a share of
the CIF Division III title last year. “She was huge. She accounted
for a lot of our possessions. She was usually our first player off
the back line to support Sharon. She was critical in our scoring.”
Johnston said Duarte has been just as important this season. In
preparation for her new role this year, Johnston had few words of
advice for Duarte. That’s because she really doesn’t need that.
“She’s the kind of kid who rises to the competition,” Johnston
said. “She’s very competitive. She’s in a tough spot following
Sharon. Those are tough shoes to fill and she’s doing a very good job
... She has the best first touch on the team. She’s very reliable.”
Duarte is reliable because she is a skillful player, Johnston
said. She has been playing soccer since she was 5 and has been
supported by her father who coached her for the first eight years in
the sport. He still coaches within the Newport Beach Slammers Club,
and usually has advice for Duarte.
“My father is crazy for soccer; he is a fanatic,” Duarte said.
“I’m not joking. I’m crazy about [soccer], but not as crazy as him.
He just takes it overboard. [But] it helps me. He’s always watching
soccer and he said it helps to watch. I think it helps that he’s like
that.”
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