Eagles seeking shelter
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Barry Faulkner
The storm that is the Estancia High football team’s current
five-game losing streak has hardly been a torrential downpour.
Instead, it has more resembled sporadic trickling through a leaky
roof, with Coach Jay Noonan and his staff hustling to determine where
to set the buckets.
“We’ve got to find a way to work through the kinks, and we’re
always trying to figure out where the next kink is going to pop up,”
Noonan said after more turnovers, costly penalties and other assorted
breakdowns helped Santa Ana claim a 38-0 Golden West League victory
over the Eagles Friday at the Santa Ana Bowl.
The Saints’ supremacy on the scoreboard belied some of the
statistics, including a huge advantage in time of possession for the
Eagles (30:37 to 17:23) and a scant Santa Ana edge in total offense
(226-198). Even a 3-1 turnover deficit by the Eagles, which pushes
their season turnover ratio to a dismal minus-14, does not fully
explain the 38-point loss, to which 11 Estancia penalties for 87
yards contributed greatly.
But Noonan said his team did not take advantage of numerous
opportunities presented it by the Saints.
“We did not master the obvious,” Noonan said. “(The Saints,
winners of five in a row) gave us everything we wanted (with their
defensive alignment) and it was right in front of us. But we didn’t
do a good job of reading it and countering with the things we had
planned. We just didn’t master the situation. As coaches, we just
have to continue to put our kids in position to make plays”
A penalty negated Bobby Estrada’s apparent 77-yard interception
return for a touchdown and an errant punt snap set Santa Ana up for a
13-yard touchdown “drive.”
Sophomore punter Geo Macias helped avert disaster on another
wayward punt snap by retrieving the ball, averted the defense and
punted the ball with his left foot. The play impressed Noonan all the
more, because Macias, also a soccer goalie, is right-footed.
“He made an incredible play kicking the ball on the run with his
left foot,” Noonan said.
Despite the errors, Noonan, remains optimistic and focused on the
future.
“Sooner or later, we’re going to put together some sort of
breakout game,” said Noonan, who sees no better time for such a
performance than Friday’s Battle for the Bell against crosstown and
Golden West League rival Costa Mesa.
“It doesn’t hurt, in terms of motivation, that we’re playing Costa
Mesa this week,” Noonan said of the 36th Battle for the Bell,
scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at Newport Harbor High.
“I don’t care if it’s bulletin board material or not, I think
we’re a better team (than Mesa). If we play at our best and they play
at their best, we win the game.”
Strong statements coming from the leader of a program that has
lost 15 of its last 16, particularly since the Mustangs, ranked No. 9
in CIF Southern Section Division VII, improved to 4-2 Friday with a
crucial 27-21 league win over Orange. It was Mesa’s third straight
victory.
“I’m supposed to be among a handful of people who believes
(Estancia will win),” Noonan said. “It would be ridiculous for me to
assume we could not beat this (Mesa) team. With due respect to Mesa,
it’s not De La Salle or Mater Dei.”
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