Eagles fall in controversial finish
Roger Carlson
NEWPORT BEACH - Championships are sometimes made from the remnants
of frustration and Estancia High’s Eagles appear to have all they need as
they prepare for their Pacific Coast League slate.
Oh, there’s still the matter of dealing with Orange Friday night at El
Modena High in the season’s final nonleague tuneup, but the seeds of
victory have clearly been planted.
“We’re taking the fury of this football game into the next six weeks,”
said a seething Eagles Coach Dave Perkins in the aftermath of Saturday
night’s 35-28 loss to Santa Ana Valley at Newport Harbor, leaving both
teams 2-2 on the nonleague trail.
Clearly the Eagles had their chances, but at the top of the list of
Perkins’ agonies were two fumbles, both recovered in the Santa Ana Valley
end zone by Falcons, both within a mass of swarming defenders, that stung
a distraught Perkins.
The third-year Estancia coach raced to confront the officials at
game’s end.
“(Game referee) Al Hackney told me ‘Our crew did a lousy job. We took
the game away from your kids,’ ” said the angry Perkins.
Hackney’s verification failed to soothe, rather inflaming the
competitive fire of the Eagles’ coach, who felt the first of two
goal-line fumbles by scrambling quarterback Kenny Valbuena was caused
when he hit the turf in the end zone, and that the second, airborne with
2:31 left was well across the plane of the goal line.
“It’s the worst officiating I’ve seen in 25 years of coaching,” said
Perkins. “But we’re going to be stronger because of this. Our kids played
hard through adversity and showed a lot of character.”
Perkins had watched his team, aside from multiple self-inflicted
wounds, strike with promising quickness and strength.
Wingback Andy Romo ran for 217 yards on 21 carries, including bursts
of 57 and 28 yards, with touchdown runs of 22 and 3 yards, as well as an
83-yard second-half kickoff return for another TD to extend the Eagles’
lead to 28-12.
Valbuena had struck for 139 yards on 6 of 13 attempts, including a
67-yard TD pass to David Stoddard and a 46-yard gainer to Jeremy Valdes.
He also scrambled like a Fran Tarkenton, but failed to finish as a Dan
Fouts would with a ball-wrapped slide, and all things considered, it was
a fatal flaw.
The Eagles’ bull-like pounding of Fahad Jahid was evident, as well (8
yards per carry offensively and two quarterbacks sacks from his
linebacking spot), and numerous big moments by other Eagles.
Santa Ana Valley had its own version of explosion, however, with the
antics of 230-pound sophomore Junior Iafeta, a 5-foot-9 Sherman tank who
rumbled his way to 191 yards on 22 carries, including a 67-yard burst and
a 3-yard TD run.
Quarterback James Burgueno connected on 9 of 21 for 230 yards with TD
passes covering 15 and 11 yards, as well as nudging in the game-winning
touchdown from a yard out with 6:25 left.
That set it up for the final Estancia flurry.
Valbuena, whose first controversial fumble in the Valley end zone came
with 4:34 left in the third quarter as Estancia was trying to extend a
28-20 lead, guided the Eagles on their final drive, the key pickup a
bruising 26-yard burst up the middle by Jahid to the Valley 10-yard line.
On third-and-15, Valbuena went back to pass, then opted to run over
his left side, threading the needle and crashing into the end zone, only
to see the ball pop out as he went airborne at the goal line.
Perkins complained bitterly at the moment on the field at length and
appeared to deserve a flag, but the officials let it go with perhaps a
tacit display of understanding.
Estancia had no timeouts left and Valley ran out the final 2:31 to
claim victory.
Aside from the officiating, the Eagles were at times their own worst
enemy.
They were flagged a dozen times for 84 yards, two of the 5-yard
variety costing them gains of 26 and 20 yards.
The Eagles had 11 possessions, lost four of five fumbles and had a
16-point lead in the second half, only to see it all turn
around.Explosiveness?
Estancia trailed, 12-6, then scored three touchdowns in a span of 83
seconds.
Romo’s 3-yard TD run capped a 96-yard march on the only third-down of
an eight-play drive and a subsequent Romo-run for the two-pointer put the
Eagles up, 14-12, with 1:12 left in the half.
Ivan Garcia’s third-down pressure on the quarterback forced a Valley
punt and Estancia had the ball again with 0:27 left on its 33.
Valbuena found Stoddard over the middle at midfield on the first play,
and the big tight end juked his way into the open and stretched it to a
67-yard touchdown play with 0;12 left in the half.
Then Romo took over with his 83-yard third-quarter kickoff return,
splitting would-be tacklers in his wake and escaping Lance Johnson’s bid
for a touchdown-saving tackle at the 10.
The clock showed just one second had ticked off in the third quarter,
and the Falcons must have felt it correct, considering the swiftness of
Estancia’s rapid fire.
Game officials finally saw the error and moved it ahead 10 seconds to
account for the play.
A gracious Santa Ana Valley Coach Eddie Steward, a one-time prep
sensation for Santa Ana High in the ‘60s, with the victory snapping a
two-game streak for his boys, smiled and shook his head slowly, and then
probably summed the whole thing up in four words:
“That’s high school football.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.