Laughingstock no longer
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Barry Faulkner
Professionalism, intensity and consistency are traits one would
associate with Golden West College football coach Ray Shackleford,
who is entering his 32nd season leading the Rustlers.
A straight-laced advocate and practitioner of the old school -- he
became Golden West’s inaugural coach in 1966 -- Shackleford would,
however, not be the first person the Rustlers would turn to in need
of a good joke.
But it was Shackleford who broached the subject of laughter when
addressing this year’s team, which comes off a 2003 campaign that
produced more victories (four) than the program had achieved in its
previous five seasons (a 3-49 record including consecutive 0-10
seasons from 1998 to 2000).
“To go 4-6, lose one in overtime and three games by a touchdown or
less was a dramatic turnaround, no question,” Shackleford said. “We
were very competitive last year. I don’t think there is anybody kind
of giggling this season when they see Golden West on their schedule,
like they may have in previous years.”
With 10 starters back, including sophomore quarterback Todd
Crabtree, who helped the Rustlers finish second in the 12-team
Mission Conference in passing yards last fall, Shackleford believes
more forward progress is in order.
“Wins and losses are hard to predict, but we’re much better for a
second year in a row,” said Shackleford, who also welcomes back
first-team all-conference American Division tight end Brandyn McCall
(the conference is broken into two six-team divisions).
First-team all-conference inside linebacker Tyler Hall and
second-team all-conference center Jose Cardoza are also back.
Crabtree, who played receiver at Fountain Valley High, showed a
talent for delivering passes last fall. He completed 139 of 245 for
1,667 yards and 13 touchdowns, with 11 interceptions.
“We’d like to be more balanced offensively this year,” said
Shackleford, who calls the plays. “But if we can’t, we could be up
near the top of the conference in throwing the ball.”
Helping to improve on the meager total of 975 rushing yards last
season will be talented running back Turill Engelman, a Marina High
product who played last season at the University of Montana.
Engelman, a speedy 6-foot, 190-pounder, should benefit from an
offensive line that gained seasoning last fall. Those slated to flank
Cardoza are sophomore guard Joe Hadley and sophomore tackle Robert
Tialino. Shackleford also cites freshman Dustin Hensel and sophomore
Carlos Hernandez as potential contributors to a front wall the coach
said may be as big physically as any group he has ever had.
When Crabtree needs to throw, he has the comfort of looking for
McCall and sophomore returning starter Steve Yaden.
McCall, whom Shackleford said is being recruited by dozens of
Division I programs and may be one of the best community college
tight ends in the nation, caught 22 passes for 256 yards and two
touchdowns in 2003.
Yaden, a complement to then-sophomore Ryan Partridge (a team-high
56 catches for 830 yards and eight TDs), collected 27 receptions for
540 yards, a 20-yard average, and four TDs as a freshman.
“Yaden is very physical and very aggressive,” Shackleford said of
the 6-0, 215-pounder.
Potential backfield contributors also include speedy freshman
Kevin Thompson, as well as 6-3, 220-pound Quinton Sayers, a freshman
from Hawaii and the nephew of Pro Football Hall of Famer Gale Sayers.
Dana Franklin, Ryan Green, Anthony Gil and Jason Burch are
additional receivers with potential.
Hall and fellow linebackers Zeke Rodriguez, Russ Tupper-Brown and
Estancia High product Mike Cahill may have plenty of room to operate
between the tackles, where sophomore Tommy Moolio and Junior Iapatu
lead a stable of large, active linemen capable of both occupying
blockers and drilling ball carriers.
But it is the secondary where Shackleford reports the biggest
improvement in a defense ranked No. 11 overall in the conference last
season (No. 10 against the rush and No. 11 against the pass).
“We’re much improved, thankfully,” Shackleford said. “I can not
even tell you how many times better we are in the secondary. We have
way more speed and we have better athletes.”
Sophomore safety Bobby Thompson, as well as freshmen cornerback
prospects Brent Cogburn and Martin Mares are among those expected to
bolster the pass defense this fall.
In addition to the typical roster turnover at the two-year level,
Shackleford welcomes seven first-year assistant coaches, replacing
six coaches from last year’s staff who left for various reasons.
The Rustlers, who defeated West Los Angeles and Southwestern to
open last season 2-0, play West Los Angeles Saturday at L.A.
Southwest.
The Rustlers will play their Sept. 11 home opener at Westminster
High, due to ongoing renovations at Orange Coast College.
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