Keola Asuega
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Barry Faulkner
Keola Asuega has never had a problem finding the path to the end
zone. Since he first strapped on a helmet at age 7, he said his
ability to slice through the flow of oncoming tacklers, lope into
open spaces and across the goal line, has come easily, even
mystically, from a source he has never questioned.
He calls it instinct
Off the football field, however, navigating this naturally has
proved more problematic. And while he does not divulge specifics, the
Costa Mesa High senior running back acknowledges he has run into the
fork of fate and accelerated in the wrong direction.
But those days, like a steam of frustrated tacklers he has left in
his wake during a distinguished three-year varsity career, are behind
him now, he believes. And it is football that has pulled him back
onto a path of achievement, both academic and athletic.
“Football knocked me back straight,” said the 6-foot-1, 200-pound
talent, who, with a solid B-plus grade-point average, is drawing the
kind of big-time recruiting attention Costa Mesa has seldom seen.
“I’ve been a football freak since I was 7 and I’ve always dreamed of
playing college football and getting a chance to play in the NFL. For
a while, I was going off my path and doing bad things. I was going
down a back road. But I had some football coaches who got my
attention and guided me back to the good road. I love everything
about football, the discipline, the hitting, the coaching, the
competitiveness and how it’s so family oriented. I think it’s the
greatest thing a kid can do.”
And Asuega clearly does it well, as evidenced Friday when he
rushed for 279 yards and three touchdowns to help propel the Mustangs
to a 27-24 nonleague victory at Chaminade.
The Daily Pilot Player of the Week collected 263 yards after
halftime Friday, including a 1-yard TD run in the third quarter and
fourth-quarter scoring gallops of 71 and 56 yards.
He now has 358 rushing yards and three TDs this season and has
2,239 yards and 31 TDs in his varsity career. He is the fifth Mesa
player to surpass the 2,000-yard plateau and is 621 yards shy of
moving past Charles Chatman into the No. 2 spot on the Mustangs’
career rushing list. Binh Tran owns the Mustangs’ and Newport-Mesa
record with 4,333 yards.
Injuries -- strained hamstrings and foot problems taken care late
last season by orthodics -- have, perhaps, been Asuega’s most
menacing opponent.
A hamstring problem sidelined him late last season and again for
most of the practices leading up to this year’s season opener. Asuega
said both hamstrings ached after his workhorse second half against
Chaminade.
Asuega also said he jammed his left big toe against Friday, but
will be ready to go when the Mustangs face Laguna Beach tonight in
their final preleague tuneup.
“I left it all on the field (Friday),” Asuega said. “The linemen
blocked great and we won the game. It was a very good feeling.”
Asuega said instincts take over when he attempts to feel his way
through holes, but his competitive nature can complicate the process.
“I get really excited out there and sometimes I have to just tell
myself to breathe and relax,” he said.
Toward that end, Asuega said he gained inspiration from a magazine
article about Miami Dolphins running back Ricky Williams, given to
him by Mesa assistant coach Izzy Isbell last week, in which Williams
talks about relaxing enough when carrying the ball to let instinct
take over.
“I’ve never been a big Ricky Williams fan, but I felt like he was
speaking to me in the article,” Asuega said. “In the second half
Friday, I decided to relax and just run. Whenever I go out for an
offensive series now, I tell myself to just run. I think I’m going to
read that article as a reminder before every game.”
Though Perkins has rarely seen Asuega get a chance to run at 100%,
he believes the affable senior, who has become a team leader, is
capable of repeating his performance against Chaminade.
“He missed some practices and that affected his timing in our
first game,” Perkins said. “But he found another gear the other
night. His long touchdown runs were impressive, but he had one run in
our first TD drive of the third quarter, where he was stopped up at
the line and ended up breaking about eight tackles and getting about
12 yards. He’s powerful enough to make that kind of run and he can
also make a move and run away from defenders.”
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