Prep column: Estancia emotion runs deep
Barry Faulkner
The tears of joy lining the faces of some Estancia High football
players after Friday’s dramatic come-from-behind victory over crosstown
rival Costa Mesa, were not the first they spilled that day.
The initial liquid emotion surfaced about five hours before, when
Eagle players and coaches, in what Coach Dave Perkins said has become a
pre-Battle for the Bell ritual, visited the grave of the late Paul
Troxel.
Troxel, a beloved figure whose career coaching baseball and football
covered 20 years, 17 at Estancia, his alma mater, died suddenly of a
brain aneurysm and heart attack in the spring of 1999 at age 40.
His memory lives in the hearts of most Estancia student-athletes, as
well as Perkins and his assistants, many of whom played for “Trox” at
Estancia.
“It’s really an emotional thing,” Perkins said of the afternoon visit.
“We do it to reaffirm (Troxel’s) belief in the kids, Estancia athletics,
and football in particular. We head over there after our pregame meal and
we give the kids a chance to talk about Paul. It’s a tradition we want to
keep alive and we all take it to heart.”
Perkins, who displayed a framed 8-by-10 photograph of Troxel before
addressing the team huddle following the 34-27 win, frequently references
Troxel with his players. The team still punctuates some of its football
activities by chanting “Trox” in unison and some black labels with Trox
in white letters, are stuck to players’ helmets, as well as coaches’ hats
and jackets.
Perkins said the perseverance his team displayed, overcoming a 20-0
deficit, is the type of lesson which can serve his players the rest of
their lives.
“In everybody’s life, terrible things happen,” Perkins said. “In tough
times, maybe they can use (Friday’s comeback) to draw on. They all did a
great job of responding to adversity, which is what it’s all about. Our
kids never gave up.”
Estancia Principal Tom Antal, during the postgame ceremony to award
the perpetual Bell trophy, said he wants every Estancia student to drop
by the main office where the trophy is displayed and ring the bell some
time during the remainder of the school year.
“For the seniors, it’s a graduation requirement,” he declared.
First-year Costa Mesa Principal Diana Carey congratulated the Eagle
players during the same ceremony, but prompted muffled jeers with a
parting vow that the Mustangs would reclaim the Bell next fall.
And this may not be a hollow promise, since the Mustangs’ junior
varsity defeated the Eagles, 15-7, and the Mesa freshmen prevailed, 32-6.
While rainfall last week did not appear to have any negative effects
on the quick-draining playing surface at Newport Harbor High, the same
was not true at Laguna Beach, where Corona del Mar slogged to a muddy
27-7 football win over the Artists.
CdM Coach Dick Freeman was less than flattering about the lack of
drainage at Laguna’s Red Guyer Field.
“I don’t think they even use gravity,” he quipped.
Homecoming games are usually played against opponents the home school
is confident of beating and a defending CIF Southern Section champion
coming off an unbeaten season would not appear to fit that bill.
But Newport Harbor played four straight homecoming games, including
its own, in October.
The Sailors spoiled the party for Claremont and Woodbridge, handled
Laguna Hills before its alumni, and lost as homecoming guest at Irvine.
The streak ends this week, Coach Jeff Brinkley reports, since
Cathedral City, which hosts the Tars Friday at 7:30 p.m., held its
homecoming last week.
Friday’s CdM win not only clinched a berth in the CIF Southern Section
Division IX playoffs, it also earned the Sea Kings the final spot in this
week’s Division Top 10.
Mesa, ranked No. 1 at one point this fall, fell out of the Top 10 for
the first time in 2000.
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