Prep football: Noonan takes Estancia helm
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Barry Faulkner
COSTA MESA - As junior varsity coach at Danville-based Monte Vista
High in the mid-1990s, Jay Noonan became one of only five coaches since
1987, at any level, to lead a team to victory over national powerhouse De
La Salle of Concord.
Announced Wednesday as the new Estancia High football coach, Noonan
believes he can buck similar long odds by turning the Eagles into a
consistent playoff team in the Pacific Coast League.
“I’m aware of the state of the (Eagles’) program and it doesn’t daunt
me,” said Noonan, a former criminal lawyer who has taught high school the
past four years. “I’m excited and I think there is opportunity at
Estancia. From everything I’ve heard, these are good kids who like to
work hard and I’m looking forward to working with them.”
Despite a dearth of seniors -- including a handful of would-be
returning starters who skipped the recently completed spring drills -- as
well as a lack of success by lower-level teams the last few years,
Noonan, 41, believes the Eagles will soon become competitive.
“I have three goals,” said Noonan, a varsity assistant or lower-level
head coach at five high schools the last 12 years. “I want us to have a
winning record, make the playoffs and beat Costa Mesa.”
Noonan replaces Dave Perkins, who resigned last month after three
seasons to become head coach at crosstown rival Costa Mesa. The Eagles
were 7-4 and made the CIF Southern Section Division IX playoffs last
year. They were 14-17 in Perkins’ three seasons.
Noonan was one of three finalists for the Estancia job when Perkins
was hired and Boys Athletic Director Tim Parsel said he was the first
candidate to contact the school after Perkins moved on.
A San Clemente resident, Noonan will try to instill his enthusiasm
into the players, whom he will meet for the first time today at 2 p.m. on
campus.
“You can never replace a first impression,” said Noonan, who will
teach full time at Estancia, though his specific assignment is yet to be
determined. “I would hope to impress upon them that when faced with
choices in life, I’d want them to decide based on what they want to do,
not what they have to do. Young people should control their own destiny,
but I’d hate to think that in 10 or 15 years, they’d look back and regret
not (playing football). That would be tragic.”
Looking back at Noonan, he was a reserve at Bellarmine College Prep
High in San Jose in the late 1970s. He was a freshman walk-on for USC’s
national championship team in 1978, then shifted to coaching, working as
an aid to then-Trojan assistant Gil Haskell.
After graduating from USC and obtaining a law degree, he joined his
father’s criminal defense firm in Pleasanton.
He began his coaching career in the late 1980s at Granada High in
Livermore, where he spent five years. He then spent two years at Monte
Vista, the second as varsity defensive coordinator.
He was offensive coordinator in his only season at Mount Diablo High
in Concord, before moving to Orange County to spend two seasons (1997-98)
as defensive coordinator at Katella High. Included in that stint was the
Knights’ 27-19 nonleague victory over Estancia in ’97.
He was the varsity running backs coach the last two years under Jeff
Veeder at Capistrano Valley, where he pulled rare double duty as head
coach of the freshman team.
Noonan said his goal is to have five assistant coaches in place by
June 25, when he plans to start the summer session. Parsel said some of
those assistants may land teaching assignments at the school.
He was hesitant to divulge specific offensive and defensive systems,
until he has a chance to better assess his personnel.
“I can tell you have to be able to run the ball in high school
football, but I’m also a big Bill Walsh fan, so I like the West Coast
offense’s short passing game,” Noonan said.
“And on defense, we’ll run multiple fronts and try to put a lot of
pressure on our opponent.”
Before moving to San Clemente, Noonan lived on Balboa Island for four
years and he anticipates a long stay at Estancia.
“Estancia has always given me a very homey impression,” he said. “I
have no intention of using Estancia as a stepping stone. I think this is
a genuine opportunity to do something that can have an impact in the
community. I’m going to work very hard to put this program where I think
it should be, which is competing every year for a spot in the playoffs.”
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