Wearing the target
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Patrick Laverty
Costa Mesa High enters the 2003 football season like it has only one
other time in the 44-year history of the varsity football program.
The Mustangs have a target on their backs.
After only their second outright league title in school history,
Costa Mesa will be the hunted this season.
“Everybody’s out to get you,” Perkins said. “Beating the league
champ can make someone’s season.”
They swept through the Golden West League undefeated in their
first year in the circuit and now it’s up to the other six schools in
the league to get revenge.
But it won’t be easy.
The Mustangs return 34 players from last year’s team, including
seven starters on offense and eight on defense. They’ve also added
two transfers, one who will start at quarterback and another at
tailback and defensive end. It’s unlikely that any of those players
want to let Costa Mesa become a one-year wonder.
Not that many believe that will happen. The Mustangs, who lost in
the first round of the CIF Southern Section Division VII playoffs for
the sixth time in nine years last season, enter 2003 ranked No. 5 in
the preseason CIF Division VII poll.
“I think we earned the right to be there,” Perkins said.
“Obviously, we have to do a lot of good things to stay there. But I
think this team could do a lot of good things. I think if we play
well, we’re going to be in the hunt, once again, for a league
championship and the playoffs. Once you get into the playoffs, it’s
just how it goes. It’s luck of the draw and, if you play well, things
will go well.”
One of the Mustangs’ main goals is to get past the first round of
the playoffs this season, but first they must make the playoffs and
do so with the expectation that they will get there.
Coming off last season’s 8-3 finish, Costa Mesa’s best record
since 1999, the Mustangs have the talent to improve that mark. Nine
returning starters were named first- or second-team all-league last
season. Seniors Junior Epenesa and Luke Sapolu are receiving interest
from colleges, as are juniors Jeff Waldron and Rodrigo Gutierrez.
Junior Bruce Wilkerson, who started half the season at Loara last
year, has transferred to Costa Mesa and will start at quarterback.
Senior Qualic Vargas moved to Costa Mesa from Kansas and should prove
to be an immediate impact player.
“You’ve got to like our team,” Perkins said. “We feel real good.
The kids really understand what we’re trying to do on offense and
defense, that’s a big plus.”
On offense, Perkins is hoping for a more balanced attack than the
unit that completed just 42 passes in 11 games last season. Wilkerson
will be counted on to provide that balance, throwing primarily to a
receiving corps that is the most inexperienced unit on the team.
“Our passing game is based on a lot of reads, pre-snap and then
when the ball is snapped,” Perkins said. “[Wilkerson] struggled a bit
early, then it kind of clicked for him in the summer. Now, he’s doing
a pretty good job.”
If the Mustangs succeed in establishing a viable passing game, it
should only help what is an already strong running unit, which will
feature Vargas and senior Omar Ruiz behind a big and experienced
offensive line. The line should also benefit from the coaching of
former San Francisco 49er Jesse Sapolu, who knows a thing or two
about defending a championship having won four Super Bowls in his NFL
career.
“Experience plus Jesse Sapolu, that isn’t a bad combination,”
Perkins said about his offensive line.
Defensively, the combination isn’t bad either. The Mustangs have
an all-league returner at defensive end, inside linebacker and both
cornerback positions, further solidifying the Mustangs as the team to
beat in the Golden West League.
The only other team from the league ranked in the preseason poll
is Orange, the second-place finisher last season, which was ranked
No. 10. But Perkins sees the competition as strong throughout the
league. Westminster always plays the Mustangs tough, he said. He
expects Saddleback to improve with running back Ramiro Chavez
returning. Quarterback Alex Hickerson, a second-team all-league
selection, returns for Ocean View. And crosstown rival Estancia has a
new coaching staff, which Perkins expects to round that team into
shape.
But as good as any of those teams might be, things seem to be
falling in Costa Mesa’s favor right now. The confidence level of the
team coming off a league championship season is sky-high and Perkins
is happy with how the team has prepared for this year.
“I think we’re a real solid football team,” Perkins said. “The
staff has been together for a long time. We’re all on the same page.
We have a good rapport with the kids. The kids like what we’re doing.
It’s real good chemistry right now.”
If there has been one inhibitor over the years it has been the
first round of the playoffs. The Mustangs lost to Gabrielino, 15-14,
in the first round last season.
“Our big thorn in our side has been getting past the first round,”
Perkins said. “We’ve been in the playoffs [eight] of the last 10
years. In 93, they went to the finals. Since then, it has been one
and out, [with the exception of a first-round victory in 1997]. That
has been a thorn in our side. If we’re lucky enough to get to the
playoffs, that’s definitely going to be a goal. A goal of getting to
the playoffs and then getting to the second round.”
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