Prep football: No mercy expected
Barry Faulkner
ALISO VIEJO - Any other week, Estancia High football coach Jay
Noonan might pick up the phone to commiserate with Aliso Niguel Coach Joe
Wood. It was Wood, after all, like Noonan a former Capistrano Valley
assistant, who guided an Aliso team last year very similar to the one
Noonan is piloting this fall.
But, with the Eagles (0-1) scheduled to visit Aliso Niguel (1-0)
Friday for a nonleague contest, any exchange of fraternal coaching wisdom
will have to wait.
Last season, it was Aliso which struggled with a roster that included
very few seniors and very little varsity experience.
This fall, it’s the Eagles who are short on both familiar faces and
experience, though they do plan to start nine seniors Friday.
Aliso, 3-7 a year ago, when it missed the CIF playoffs for the first
time since its inaugural varsity campaign in 1994, appears to have turned
the corner. The Wolverines handled Capo Valley, 34-13, last week.
Estancia, on the other hand, opened what is expected to be a bumpy
10-game road with a 35-12 loss to Magnolia.
What’s more, the Wolverines are likely anxious to avenge last year’s
17-13 loss to Estancia, a dramatic contest decided on an Estancia
touchdown with 1:43 left.
Noonan whose Capo Valley teams split two meetings with Wood’s
Wolverines the last two seasons, expects a bigger challenge than the one
Magnolia presented.
“(Aliso) did a very good job using its strengths to beat a very sound,
big and physical Capo Valley team last week,†Noonan said. “(The
Wolverines) are very quick and they use a spread formation, but that’s
not to say they are a finesse team. They’re defense is sound and they hit
and tackle well. We’ve got our work cut out for us.â€
Aliso’s offense is keyed by quarterback Bryce Latimer, as well as
running back and fellow senior Trent Carroll. Latimer completed 9 of 15
passes for 123 yards and a touchdown against Capo Valley. Carroll, who
gained 79 yards on 14 carries against the Eagles last year, had 117
rushing yards and scored three TDs in the opener.
Prominent Wolverines also include first-team All-Sea View League
kicker Stephen Berneking, as well as second-team all-league linebacker
Adam Omernick (5-foot-10, 205 pounds) and second-team all-league
offensive lineman Chris Bowser (6-6, 265). They are all seniors.
“It’s a team on the rise and it is hot right now,†Noonan said of the
Eagles’ former PCL rival.
Estancia, hampered last week by the absence of seniors Nate Harriman
and Jermaine Snell -- their transfers were OKd by section officials this
week -- will benefit from the addition of the two receivers, who also
start defensively. Harriman will open at outside linebacker, Snell at
cornerback.
The Eagles will also feature senior running back Junior Tanielu, who
gained 57 yards on nine rushing attempts against Magnolia and also caught
a pass for 28 yards on a fake punt.
Junior quarterback Lewis Bradshaw completed six passes for 46 yards in
his first varsity start, while senior receiver Mitch Valdes caught two
passes for 23 yards and returned a kickoff 89 yards for an Estancia TD.
Estancia will be without senior offensive tackle-defensive end
Fernando Montes, who dislocated his shoulder against Magnolia. Sophomore
Tim Bates is scheduled to start for Montes on defense, while senior Eric
Sahagian gets the call at tackle.
Estancia’s win last season ended a four-game losing streak against
Aliso, which leads the series, 4-2.
The Eagles are attempting to avoid what would be only the sixth 0-2
start in the program’s 36 varsity seasons. Estancia has won at least one
of its first two games 13 of the last 14 years.
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