Football: Eagles crash into Canyon
Tony Altobelli
NEWPORT BEACH - According to Coach Dave Perkins, school was in
session for the Estancia High football team Thursday night and visiting
Canyon slapped knuckles with rulers and passed out plenty of detention
slips in the Eagles’ 24-7 nonleague loss.
“We just got hammered on both sides of the ball, simple as that,”
Perkins said. “We weren’t that disciplined tonight, in large part to
Canyon. We played badly because Canyon played good.”
The Comanches broke open a close game in the third quarter thanks to
Darryl Parker’s two long touchdown runs, turning a 10-7 game into a 24-7
cushion.
Parker finished the night with 187 yards rushing on 11 carries with
two touchdowns, bringing the Eagles’ modest two-game winning streak to a
screeching halt.
“This was a good learning experience for us,” Perkins said. “We’ve got
to learn not to play to the level of our opponent. Last week, we played
above our opponent and we won. Tonight, we didn’t and we lost.”
One player that did play above the competition was senior Andy Romo,
who ran for 94 yards on 13 carries and had the game’s lone touchdown. He
also caught six passes for 62 yards and was the bulk of the Eagles’
offense.
“He’s a warrior, there’s no doubt it,” Perkins said. “He’s about 135
pounds soaking wet and he lays it all out there.”
Fullback Fahad Jahid also ran the ball well, rushing for 86 yards on
18 carries.
But it was Estancia’s passing game that was stopped by the Comanches,
holding the Eagles to only 73 yards in the air.
The Eagles’ offense resembled the Nebraska Cornhuskers on the opening
drive of the game.
Estancia (2-1) marched down the field on nine plays, covering 74
yards. The Eagles used powerful runs by Jahid, safe passing from
quarterback Kenny Valbuena (3 for 3 on the drive) and a big-time run from
Romo.
Romo broke through several tacklers and found the end zone on a
22-yard scamper, giving the Eagles a 7-0 lead.
The key stat on that drive was that Estancia was 3 for 3 on third-down
conversions, keeping the drive alive.
Canyon got on the scoreboard late in the first quarter, using a
eight-play, 54-yard drive. Travis Tolly scored on a 5-yard run up the
middle, tying the game at, 7-7.
The score remained tied with two minutes left in the first half, until
a costly Estancia interception and a 45-yard return by Joe Medina gave
the Comanches (2-1) excellent field position.
With one second remaining before halftime, Ryan Keys booted a 29-yard
field goal and gave the Comanches the lead for good.
“We weren’t prepared as well as we should have been and I’ll take full
responsibility for that,” Perkins said. “I guess I have to do a better
job of coaching to get these guys to the level we need to be.”
The Eagles defense tightened up early in the second half with big hits
coming from Jahid, senior David Rodriguez and senior Cesar Romero.
Estancia’s best offensive drive came on its first drive of the second
half. Big 20-yard runs from Romo and Jahid helped the Eagles move from
its own 10-yard-line down to the Comanches’ 34.
But the drive stalled and the Eagles were forced to punt.
That’s when Parker took over. On Canyon’s next possession, he busted
through nearly untouched for a 72-yard touchdown, stretching the
Comanches’ lead to, 17-7.
“We had troubles blocking and tackling,” Perkins said. “Most of the
time, it all comes down to the basics and that’s what we’ll work on this
week.”
Following another stalled Eagles drive, Parker broke free again, this
time for a 53-yard touchdown, putting the game away.
Junior A.J. Perkins, son of Coach Dave Perkins came in late in the
game and completed a couple of passes for 27 yards in his varsity debut.
“He didn’t do too bad,” Dave Perkins said of his son. “Fortunately,
he’s better athlete than his old man ever was.”
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