Barry Faulkner Either Coach Dave Perkins’ memory...
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Barry Faulkner
Either Coach Dave Perkins’ memory has slipped, or Costa Mesa High
football fans should be extremely enthused about the school’s chances
in the CIF Southern Section Division VII Playoffs, which open Friday
against visiting Gabrielino at 7:30 p.m. at Orange Coast College.
Perkins, who coached Corona High to the CIF Division V crown in
1989, said he has never had a better feeling about a team heading
into the postseason than the one he has about his Golden West League
champion Mustangs.
“If our defense continues to play the way it has and our running
game keeps performing, I don’t see why we can’t go a long way in the
playoffs,” Perkins said. “We’ve been moving the ball on everyone,
even teams that put 10 in the box.”
Gabrielino (5-4-1) will likely take that defensive approach, since
the Eagles have shown a penchant for attacking opposing offenses,
Perkins said.
The Mustangs (8-2) have been on the attack ever since opening the
season 1-2, winning seven straight, including the school’s first
perfect league season, to claim only the second outright league title
in the program’s 43 varsity seasons.
The Mustangs, in their seventh postseason in the last 10 years,
have won only one first-round game (1997) since 1993, when they went
to the Division VIII title game after claiming the outright Pacific
Coast League crown.
The Mustangs have lost their last three first-round contests.
Gabrielino, in only its seventh varsity season, is making its
sixth straight postseason appearance. But Coach Vince Lopez’s squad,
third in the Mission Valley League, made first-round exits each of
the last four years in Division VII. The Eagles went to the Division
X quarterfinals in 1997.
Costa Mesa has some history with Gabrielino, having played the
Eagles their first two varsity seasons. The Mustangs thumped the
senior-less newcomer, 42-6, in 1996, then earned a 38-0 nonleague win
the following season.
Gabrielino is paced by running back Adrian Magallon, who shifted
from quarterback to running back early in the season, as well as
quarterback Paul Zuniga.
“They run more than pass and they look to be very aggressive on
defense from a lot of different looks,” Perkins said.
The Mustangs have several looks of their on offense, but the focus
is consistently on running back Keola Asuega. The 6-foot-1, 200-pound
senior has amassed 1,873 yards and 19 touchdowns on 232 carries this
fall. His 3,782 career rushing yards leave him 551 from breaking the
school and Newport-Mesa record set by Binh Tran (1991-93). Asuega’s
47 career TDs are the most in Newport-Mesa history.
“He’s finally healthy,” Perkins noted of Asuega, who had foot
problems as a sophomore and junior and battled a hamstring early this
season. “He seems to be in a pretty good rhythm and he gets better
the more carries he gets in a game.”
Asuega has 19 games with at least 100 rushing yards, including
eight this season. He has surpassed the 200-yard mark five times this
fall, including the last three games and four of the last five. In
six league games, he produced 1,247 rushing yards and 15 TDs.
With Asuega carrying the load behind an offensive line of tackles
James Paulsen and Rodrigo Gutierrez, guards Andrew Carich, David
Vernatico and Brett Via, as well as center Luke Sapolu, Costa Mesa
has earned nearly 86% of its 3,292 yards on the ground.
Friday’s winner will advance to face either top-seeded Santa Fe or
West Covina in next week’s quarterfinals.
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