Eagles rally past Mesa
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Barry Faulkner
In a crosstown rivalry game in which neither side was willing to
back down, it was who stepped up that decided the Golden West League
boys basketball meeting between host Estancia High and Costa Mesa
Wednesday night.
Sophomore Carlos Pinto, 0 for 8 from the field and scoreless
through three quarters, shrugged off any self doubt to score eight
crucial points in the final period to help the Eagles rally for a
40-35 triumph.
In addition, senior Zack Novak personified Estancia’s willingness
to embrace the mounting pressure, excitedly pleading and winning his
case to shoot two technical foul shots that wound up icing the
victory with 32 seconds left.
“I think there’s an opening for me in Las Vegas as a magician,”
Estancia Coach Chris Sorce quipped afterward, citing his team’s
recovery from a spirited Mustang performance that made a Mesa upset
the expected result for 15 minutes of action spanning the second and
fourth quarters.
“I asked my assistants at halftime if they had any miracle cures,”
Sorce said of trying to regroup after Mesa seized a 22-15 lead by
scoring the final 14 points before intermission. “We just weren’t
being aggressive and that’s not us.”
Sorce would agree much of his team’s late first-half funk came
courtesy of Mesa’s active one-three-one zone defense, that virtually
negated any Estancia inside game.
Estancia frontcourt players combined for one field goal in the
first 16 minutes, as the Eagles finished the first half 3 of 18 from
the field (16.7%).
The visitors (5-12, 0-3 in league), rallied from a 7-0 deficit to
within 12-6 at the end of the first quarter then, after a Matt
Cachola three-pointer put the Eagles up, 15-8, with 6:51 left before
half, made themselves at home before a spirited crowd that nearly
filled both bleachers and scattered throughout the open end of the
gym.
Four different Mustangs, paced by senior four-year varsity
performer Danny Krikorian, contributed to the scoring run to close
the half. Krikorian, who matched Cachola for game-high scoring honors
with 14 points, hit the first of his two three-pointers and netted
four free throws during the blitz, which freshman Brian Molina capped
with a three from the top of the key with 36 seconds left in the
half.
Krikorian opened the third-quarter scoring with a three-pointer to
extend the lead to 25-15, before Tyler Hoffman halted an Estancia
scoreless streak of 8:48 by connecting from beyond the arc to give
the home crowd hope.
After a Mesa free throw, Cachola had four points in a 7-0 Eagle
run that pulled the hosts (13-5, 3-1) to within 26-25.
A Jeff Waldron layin off a Molina assist and a three-pointer by
Ziad Pepic helped Mesa take a 31-25 edge into the fourth quarter. But
Pinto wasn’t about to let his team absorb a second straight home
league loss.
“It was my time to step up,” Pinto said of the final eight
minutes, which he opened with a nine-foot jumper and a three from the
left corner to trim the deficit to 31-30.
Pinto then fed Jordan Stroman for an eight-foot turnaround to give
the Eagles the lead with 5:54 left.
Krikorian and Waldron answered with two free throws apiece to put
Mesa up, 35-32, but Novak pared it to one with a pair of foul shots
with 2:46 left.
It stayed that way for 70 seconds, when Pinto beat the shot-clock
buzzer by draining a three-pointer from the right wing for a 37-35
edge with 1:36 left.
After both teams traded possessions, Mesa missed a layup and a
follow shot after a steal, then officials stopped play on Estancia’s
ensuing possession with 32 ticks remaining.
At issue was the failure of the shot-clock operator to start the
35-second clock, an error Serven had tried to point out the
possession before, just as his team stole the ball. An emotional
Serven shouted protests to the referees trying to bring attention to
the error, but also directed his rant at the adult female clock
operator. After voicing derisive comments a third time toward the
clock operator, an official issued Serven a technical foul.
“That was bad officiating, giving me a technical in a two-point
game when it was (the clock operator’s) mistake,” Serven said later.
While Sorce planned for Cachola, the current leader in the team’s
ongoing free-throw contest, to go to the line, Novak had another
idea.
“Zack came over to me raising his hand, telling me he wanted to
shoot, because he was hot and hadn’t missed a free throw all night
(in four previous tries),” Sorce said. “I thought it over for a
second, then told Zack he was our guy. I told him to prove us right
and he did.”
After Novak converted from the stripe to double the lead to 39-35,
Mesa fouled to send Estancia to the line with 30 seconds left. The
Mustangs rebounded a miss, but were unable to convert offensively and
a Cachola free throw with 24 seconds left finalized the scoring.
Costa Mesa, which was 10 of 35 from the floor through three
quarters, did not make a field goal in nine attempts in the fourth
and was scoreless the final 3:28.
“You can’t win scoring three points in the fourth quarter,” Serven
lamented.
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