Prep football: Lobos looming
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Barry Faulkner
GARDEN GROVE - Lobo is Spanish for wolf, but there has been nothing
big and bad about the Los Amigos High football team’s postseason
performance over the last decade.
Yet, having made the playoffs for the 10th straight season, the Garden
Grove League champion Lobos (8-2) will be attempting to huff and puff and
blow Costa Mesa off to its postseason banquet when the two collide Friday
at 7 p.m. in a CIF Southern Section Division IX first-round playoff game
at Garden Grove High.
Coach Roger Takahashi’s Lobos, who claimed only the school’s fourth
league title this fall, bring a five-game winning streak into the game.
They are hoping that roll, which includes a 41-7 romp Oct. 19 over a 9-1
Garden Grove squad, will be enough to overcome a six-game postseason
losing streak that includes first-round ousters each of the last five
years, following a Division VII semifinal appearance in 1995.
Since failing to qualify for the playoffs in 1991, Los Amigos is 3-9
in the postseason, including a 21-13 loss last year to then-Pacific Coast
League champion University.
Costa Mesa (7-3) is back in the playoffs for the fifth time in six
years after breaking a streak of four straight trips last fall. The
Mustangs have also clinched the school’s sixth straight winning record,
which occurred just six times the program’s first 36 varsity seasons.
The Mustangs have dropped their last two CIF openers and are 5-6 in
the first round in their 42 seasons. Since winning three straight
postseason openers (1976, ’78 and ‘79), they are just 2-6 in playoff
debuts. Mesa’s only trip past the quarterfinals came in 1993, when the
Myron Miller-coached Mustangs lost in the Division VIII title game.
Friday’s winner will likely be faced with top-seeded defending
champion South Hills in next week’s quarterfinals, but both Takahashi and
first-year Mesa head man Dave Perkins would gladly accept the assignment.
This game should feature two productive running attacks, though
Takahashi said the key to the Lobos’ recent success has been better
run-pass balance.
Mesa, on the other hand, has regressed in the passing game since the
PCL campaign began. In five league games, the Mustangs completed just 17
passes for 232 yards and no touchdowns, averaging just more than 46 yards
per game via the air.
It’s the third-place Mustangs’ ground attack, however, which worries
Takahashi.
“They execute their offense very well and I’m concerned with how they
run the ball,” Takahashi said. “I think their quarterback (senior A.J.
Perkins) can throw when he has the opportunity.”
The Mesa ground game should be bolstered by the return of junior
fullback Keola Asuega, who sat out a 37-13 loss to University in the
regular-season finale with a strained hamstring.
Asuega has rushed for 940 yards and 14 touchdowns on 135 carries and
has assured his coach he’ll be ready this week.
Senior tailback Nick Cabico (698 yards and six TDs on 97 carries) is
another backfield threat, while senior Freddy Rodriguez and sophomore
Omar Ruiz have combined for more than 500 yards and eight touchdowns.
Los Amigos counters with sophomore sensation Anthony Matagi, a
5-foot-8, 170-pound darter who has amassed 1,463 rushing yards and 15 TDs
on 149 carries. Matagi, the sixth-leading rusher in Orange County, has
also caught 13 passes for 155 yards and a TD.
“(Matagi) is real quick and elusive,” said Perkins, who used the
latter word to describe sophomore quarterback Maopu Tuato.
Tuato, the younger brother of the late Ape Tuato, who set the school
career passing record with 2,753, before he was killed in a car accident
while attending college, has rushed for 387 yards and four TDs on 56
carries.
Tuato, listed at 5-8, 200, has also been productive through the air.
He has completed 48 of 113 for 931 yards and four TDs, with four
interceptions.
“Our quarterback has come a long way,” said Takahashi, a respected
offensive mind who has had successful teams at Los Amigos and La Quinta.
Costa Mesa’s passing game is triggered by the younger Perkins, who has
completed 52 of 133 for 588 yards and seven TDs, with just two
interceptions. His last TD pass came Oct. 5.
Senior tight end John Garcia is the Mustangs’ leading receiver with 14
catches for 214 yards and two TDs.
Tuato’s primary targets have been Wes Holoway-Taylor (averaging 20.5
yards on 15 catches) and Mat Hardin (averaging nearly 30 yards on 13
receptions). Holoway-Taylor has three TD catches and Hardin has two.
The Lobos are keyed up front by senior Mike Myers, a 5-8, 255-pound
center who earned All-Garden Grove League honors last season.
Defensively, the Lobos have seven players with one interception each.
Costa Mesa is led defensively by senior middle linebacker Bobby
Arroyo, as well as Cabico, who starts at strong safety and shares the
team interception lead (five) with free safety Freddy Rodriguez. The
Mustangs’ 16 interceptions have helped create a plus-13 turnover ratio.
Mesa has outscored opponents, 287-166, this season, while Los Amigos
has bettered foes, 299-169.
The Lobos losses are to Paramount and Irvine, neither of which made
the playoffs in Division II and Division VI, respectively.
Costa Mesa’s setbacks have come to Golden West League champion
Westminster, unbeaten PCL champion Northwood, seeded No. 3, and No.
4-seeded Uni.
It’s the first meeting between the two programs since 1993 and Los
Amigos holds a 3-1 series lead.
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