Mesa a lock?
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BARRY FAULKNER
The Costa Mesa High football team has endured spring practice, summer
passing league and weight training, preseason drills and the
three-game preleague schedule.
Now, comes the seven-week “break” before the CIF Southern Section
Division VII playoffs.
Oh sure, the defending Golden West League champions, who turned
last year’s Golden West debut into a six-game victory tour, could
face a challenge from Westminster, Orange and possibly Saddleback.
But, barring a supreme effort by the Lions, Panthers and Roadrunners,
and/or a little game-night sleepwalking by the Mustangs, Coach Dave
Perkins’ squad figures to thunder into the postseason with an
inflated 9-1 record, inflated egos, and a history of quickly
deflating such euphoria with a first-round playoff exit.
After two wins in its first three games, capped by a dominating
41-13 triumph at Laguna Beach Friday, Perkins has declared his team a
smooth-running unit on both sides of the ball. What would be only the
third outright league crown in the program’s 44 varsity seasons is
virtually expected.
That’s the good news.
The bad news: Te Mustangs (2-1), ranked No. 3 in CIF Division VII,
may be no more prepared for the higher level of competition they’ll
meet in the playoffs than they were at Monday’s practice. Last
year’s seven straight wins to end the regular season merely set the
Mustangs up for a 15-14, first-round home loss to Gabrielino. It was
the fourth straight first-round exit for Costa Mesa, which has now
lost 6 of 7 playoff openers since advancing to the CIF Division VIII
final in 1993.
Estancia, meanwhile, is hoping its emergence from the darkness of
a combined 1-18 record in 2001-02, including 11 straight league
losses, will include a run at one of the league’s three guaranteed
playoff berths. But while the Craig Fertig-led Eagles (2-1) are still
a feel-good story this fall, they will be hard-pressed to emerge from
a second division that figures to also include Santa Ana and Ocean
View.
So, as league action kicks off Friday with Saddleback vs. Costa
Mesa, Estancia vs. Ocean View and Santa Ana vs. Orange, here’s a look
at how the league might eventually stack up:
* Costa Mesa - The complacency red flags should fly highest for
Saddleback and Estancia. Saddleback, though 1-2, has played the best
preleague schedule among league schools and Mesa is feeling good
about its big win at Laguna.
Estancia, bent on regaining the perpetual Bell trophy it last
claimed under Perkins’ leadership in 2000, falls between Orange (Oct.
23) and Westminster (Nov. 7) on the schedule.
* Orange - Coach Greg Gibson, a former Orange Coast College
defensive lineman, has instilled some toughness in a program that was
2-18 in 2000 and ‘01, but prolific Durrell Moss is not among the
Panthers’ 13 returning starters. Orange (2-1) has scored a
league-best 95 points thus far.
* Westminster - Coach Ted McMillen’s Lions (2-1), the league
champions in 2001, have outscored foes, 73-29, this fall. But their
two victories are against winless opponents.
* Saddleback - Coach Jerry Witte, in his 30th year, has even more
respect from his peers than experience and he annually gets the most
out of a program that peaked with a CIF championship in 1985. The
Roadrunners’ 1-2 record is a little deceiving, since the losses are
to unbeatens Tesoro, ranked No. 8 in CIF Division IX, and Canyon of
Canyon Country, No. 2 in CIF Division II.
* Estancia - Fertig and his staff have the Eagles believing and
230-pound seniors Bubba Kapko and Mike Cahill are monsters at both
running back and linebacker. But the playoff invitations may be
delayed until 2004.
* Santa Ana - The Saints (2-1) have defeated winless Bolsa Grande
and Anaheim, and don’t figure to have as much talent or muscle as
last year’s third-place finisher.
* Ocean View - Veteran quarterback Alex Hickerson may not have
enough help to keep the Seahawks (1-2) from escaping the cellar.
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