Mustangs 35-0 in Golden West
Chris Yemma
Some say it’s the demographics and others say it’s the tradition, but
regardless of what people think, the dominance is still present.
The Costa Mesa High girls soccer team just about owns the Golden
West League, with not one loss in it since entering almost three full
seasons ago. That’s 35 straight league wins to zero losses.
League opponents have all sorts of theories to why the Mustangs
have such a grasp on the league, but one thing is for certain: it
boils down to the basics with Costa Mesa.
After a 6-1 routing of host Orange Tuesday, the Mustangs wrapped
up their third consecutive league title, and barring a loss to
Estancia Thursday, in undefeated fashion.
“It’s all about team coordination,” Costa Mesa Coach Dan Johnston
said. “Our passing game is what we work on the most. We have good
individual players, but we coordinate them all together.”
In his 13th season as the Mustangs’ coach, Johnston has shuffled
through many teams, but the one he has this year might sit near the
top. Of course, to qualify as one of his very best, a CIF Southern
Section Division III title would probably need to be in the works.
Prior to a second-round loss to Norco in the CIF playoffs last
season, Costa Mesa (16-2, 11-0 in league) had shared a CIF crown and
earned an individual one in the previous two seasons. If the Mustangs
win this year, that would be three out of four years.
And after all the major media organizations labeled a certain team
from New England a dynasty after three out of four championships,
couldn’t the same case be made for a local high school team?
But Mesa has to win this season’s title first.
“If Costa Mesa plays as well as they can play, they are going to
be very hard to beat [in CIF],” Orange Coach Mitchell Ryan said. “I
think they have a good shot this year.”
The Mustangs, ranked No. 3 in Division III, would appear to have
swept up all the girls soccer talent in Costa Mesa after controlling
the league for three years, but there is another school that feeds
from the same pool.
But Estancia has gone through numerous coaching changes in the
last few years, while Costa Mesa has had Johnston as a fixture to
build and finesse the team.
“I don’t know why Estancia’s not better,” Ryan said. “I guess at
Mesa, you’ve got the tradition and you’ve got very good coaching.
It’s all established.”
Indeed, what it could very well come down to, is the coaching.
Johnston’s coaching strategy involves utilizing the whole team. From
constant substitutions, to precision passing and ball control,
Johnston has focused Mesa on the idea of the team concept. And the
concept is evident when the Mustangs take the field.
“We have some excellent players that’ll stack up with anybody, but
the team coordination makes the difference,” Johnston said. “The team
play allows us to shine.”
Once again, in Tuesday’s win over Orange, the team play was
present. Four different players scored for the Mustangs, including
Jasmin Day (3), Nilani Duarte, Caitlin Duffy and Rachel Ronquillo,
while numerous assists were dished.
And, of course, Johnston went deep down the bench and subbed in a
multitude of players.
“I was very impressed with the depth of their team,” Ryan said.
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