Prep column: Where Eagles bail
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Barry Faulkner
Discussion of sports in the aftermath of Sept. 11 has often
included a qualifying statement about the insignificance of it all in the
grand scheme of things. And, who could argue.
In this grand scheme, and against a backdrop of a grieving nation,
does the fact that Estancia High canceled Saturday’s football game at
Aliso Niguel matter in the least?
One could argue, however, the grand scheme of things is precisely why
the Eagles, specifically first-year coach Jay Noonan, should not have
pulled the plug.
For a moment, allow me to divert the context of this debate away from
the one that raged nationally last week as to whether it was or was not
appropriate for professional and college teams to play games through
Sunday.
For, I believe, that context supplied merely a convenient out for
Noonan, who based his decision on other rationale, namely the inability
to compete at full strength.
Noonan said the Eagles 40-man roster would have been significantly
depleted for a Saturday game, due to job and family commitments by more
than a dozen of his players.
These Saturday scheduling conflicts would not have been an issue had
the game been played Friday night, as scheduled, before the Orange County
superintendents directed schools not to hold athletic contests on the
national day of prayer and remembrance.
Injuries that would have forced four additional Estancia players to
the sideline were also a factor.
But it’s hard to imagine the Eagles could not have put at least two
dozen players on a bus Saturday afternoon and fulfilled their scheduled
commitment. The fact that this limited contingent might have included
several backups was not sufficient cause not to compete.
Not competing, in fact, sent the wrong message to the Estancia
players, who, responding to the enthusiastic leadership Noonan had
displayed since taking the job, have shown admirable determination to
prove they in fact can compete against schools with more experience and
talent.
The cover of the Estancia program for the Sept. 6 season-opening home
game against Magnolia featured the catch phrase “strength and honor.”
By canceling Saturday’s game, the Eagles displayed a shortage of both.
Estancia was far from the only football program that didn’t play last
week. By my best count, 20 Orange County schools did not play scheduled
varsity games.
Football coaches at four Newport-Mesa high schools said players and
coaches alike were understandably dispirited during practice preparation,
following the terrorist attacks on New York City and Washington D.C.
Corona del Mar Coach Dick Freeman said one of the most disconcerting
aspects of practicing last week was the absence of airplane traffic over
the campus practice field, located along the John Wayne Airport flight
path.
“We’re used to having to stop talking about every four minutes,
because you can’t hear anything over the jets,” Freeman said. “The quiet
last week was really strange.”
Both football games I attended Saturday featured a moment of silence
and the players from Costa Mesa and Westminster high schools met at
midfield for pregame handshakes after the playing of the National Anthem.
Centennial High, from the Canadian province of British Columbia, has
secured air travel for Friday’s 7 p.m. game against Costa Mesa at Newport
Harbor High.
But, the Centaurs, originally scheduled to arrive Wednesday morning,
which would have enabled them to practice locally that afternoon, will
not arrive until Wednesday night, according to Mesa Coach Dave Perkins.
They Canadian visitors will follow through on plans to spend Thursday
at Disneyland, then try to squeeze final preparation into a light
practice Friday morning, Perkins said.
For those confused, the XL in Battle of the Bay XL represents the
Roman numeral equivalent of 40. This year’s game features the No. 1
scoring defense in Orange County (Newport Harbor, yielding 3.5 points per
game) against a CdM offense that ranks No. 2 in the county in total
points scored (76).
The site of this year’s game, Orange Coast College, has a 7,600
seating capacity, more than a 50% increase over that of Newport Harbor’s
Davidson Field, where the game has been held before overflow crowds for
more than a decade.
Sage Hill, which has dotted its junior varsity football schedule with
two varsity opponents this fall, will visit Saddleback Valley Christian
Friday at 3:15 p.m. for the first varsity game in the Newport Coast-based
private school’s history.
The Lightning, coached by Newport Beach Police Officer Tom Monarch,
will also be making their 2001 debut, since last week’s JV game against
Francis Parker from San Diego was canceled.
Monarch’s coaching staff includes quarterbacks coach Brad Gossen, who
succeeded Drew Bledsoe as the starting signal caller at Washington State.
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