Thundering Herd gallops over Glenn
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Bryce Alderton
Friday’s first-round CIF Southern Section Division III girls soccer
playoff game between Costa Mesa High and visiting John Glenn
(Norwalk) was a training ground of sorts.
Mesa (19-1-2) picked up where it left off, going undefeated and
winning the Golden West League, while the Eagles made their first
playoff appearance in school history, and it showed. The Mustangs
were quicker, more polished with passes and ran circles against John
Glenn, scoring an 8-0 victory, their second in school history.
The Mustangs continue in the hunt on Tuesday with a game at Santa
Monica (13-5-2), starting at 3 p.m.
Mesa senior Sharon Day, an All-CIF returner and four-year phenom,
continued her torrid scoring with four goals, three in the first
half, and now has 28 goals on the season. Mesa outshot John Glenn,
16-1, in the first half and, 26-1, for the game.
“They came out with intensity and set up right off the bat,” said
Mesa Coach Dan Johnston, as he sat in a wheelchair with right leg in
a cast and raised, following surgery to repair a torn Achilles tendon
suffered Feb. 10. “If you get it across the net often enough, things
will fall in, and it happened enough today.”
Three Mesa goals were set up by Day throw-ins that often landed
within the six-yard box. Day’s throw-in set up Jenny Spark’s assist
to Day’s sister, Jasmin, for Mesa’s first goal five minutes into the
game. Sparks finished with two assists, crossing to Day for Mesa’s
fourth goal moments before halftime.
Mesa’s hustle resulted in a 16-1 advantage in corner kicks,
keeping Eagle goalkeeper Gabby Vilchis busy. She made nine saves.
Sparks, Rachel Hughes (one goal, one assist), Nilani Duarte (one
goal, one assist) and Vera Gale (one goal), along with Stacy
Krikorian, Rachel Ronquillo, Valerie Gomez and Toshia Bryant all ran
under lob passes in the Eagle zone to set up Mesa’s offense, which
Johnston tweaked once he realized his players had a decided edge in
quickness.
“We beat their trap with our halfbacks,” Johnston said. “We
started to kick with halfback overlaps and were confusing them a bit.
(The Eagles) were looking around.”
John Glenn coach Louie Morillo said Mesa was the best team his
players have faced all season, but took the game as a learning
experience.
“(Mesa) is extremely fast and has height,” Morillo said. “They had
three or four headers and that’s what it takes, a little bit of
height and a lot of heart. We have to learn to crawl before we can
walk.”
The Eagles (9-10-2) were an at-large selection from the Suburban
League.
Johnston praised the efforts of Nellie Barrios and Kara Jenkins,
while senior defender Devin Denman booted many balls that came her
way.
Kindra Bailey made one save while manning the goal in the first
half. Kaitlyn Gentling returned from injury to play for the first
time in two weeks.
Johnston substituted often in the second half, giving players time
to catch their breath. Several members have been battling the flu in
recent weeks, he said.
But Mesa showed no signs of slowing down, and have now outscored
opponents, 106-13, this season.
“We were pumped up and ready to go real quick,” Sharon Day said.
“(Johnston) told us to pass it around and take shots and that’s what
we did.”
Day remained humble, citing the team’s ultimate goal of winning
CIF. Mesa won its first-ever playoff game last season, a 3-1 decision
over Pacifica, before falling to Louisville, 2-1, in the second round.
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