Prep column: Mesa’s light of Day
Barry Faulkner
Winning its first tournament in recent memory, perhaps school
history, was the easy part for the Costa Mesa High boys soccer team. Now,
the hard part: finding a spot for the waist-high championship trophy.
“I guess we’ll have to make some room in one of the trophy cases in
the gym,” said Eugene Day, the first-year varsity coach who has helped
the Mustangs build a 6-3-1 record, not to mention near-unprecedented
pride in the program.
Day, who guided Mesa’s frosh-soph boys team the last five seasons, has
been a catalyst in the turnaround, challenging, cajoling, even creating
new terminology to help his players dodge the downtrodden image that has
plagued the program since it last made the CIF Southern Section playoffs
in 1991.
“Since I first started coaching here, we’ve always had pretty decent
players,” Day said. “But we didn’t play together well enough to finish.
“The first thing I told the (varsity) guys when I took over, was that
I didn’t care what they did off the field. But, on the field, with their
teammates, they were not to argue with each another. If anyone stepped
out of line, I said I’d take them out. I had to lay down the law.”
In the light of Day, Mesa earned five victories last week en route to
conquering the Magnolia Tournament. The Mustangs’ six wins already match
the school’s best single-season output in the last six years. Mesa teams
earned six wins in 1997-98 and 1994-95. But, including the last playoff
qualifier (which lost a CIF 2-A wild-card game to Pacifica), no team has
won more than four Pacific Coast League games. The Mustangs have won only
three league games the last four years and have averaged just one PCL
triumph the last seven seasons. The 1991 appearance broke a postseason
drought that began in 1981.
“Our kids are on cloud nine right now,” Day said of the tournament
crown. “We’ve dominated most of the games we’ve played.”
In addition to gelling as a team, Day said he has finally gotten
across his philosophy of capitalizing on scoring chances.
“I may have made up a word, but I tell our kids I want rolley-poley
balls,” Day explained. “Just like the little bugs that roll on the
ground, I want them to keep their shots low. I’ve emphasized placement,
instead of power. I want them to shoot as if they’re passing to one side
of the goalkeeper. Keepers like to go up before they go down and 90% of
the shots that beat them are balls rolling near the post.”
Most of Mesa’s goals have come on these rolley-poley balls, according
to Day.
The Mustangs are hoping for more of the same when, after closing out
the preleague season with a Jan. 8 game at Westminster, they host
defending league and CIF Division IV champion Estancia, Jan. 10 at the
“Farm Sports Complex,” adjacent to the Mesa campus.
Day said all PCL home games, as well as the Estancia game originally
slated for the Eagles’ campus, will be held at the pristine new facility,
on which Mesa has yet to play. The league opener will be played under the
lights, beginning at 5 p.m.
My best-laid releaguing plans (see Dec. 20 column), have already been
waylaid by the addition of Tustin-based Beckman High, which, along with
Tesoro, will open the fall of 2002.
Costa Mesa Boys Athletic Director Kirk Bauermeister has outlined a
proposal that would include current Golden West League residents Ocean
View, Saddleback, Santa Ana and Westminster, in the PCL with the Mustangs
and Estancia, beginning the fall of 2001.
The same plan would shift current PCL member Laguna Beach to the
Century League, where it would be joined by Anaheim, Beckman, Calvary
Chapel, Tesoro, Century and Santa Ana Valley.
The proposal did not outline how the remaining Orange County schools
would be leagued, including current PCL participants University, Corona
del Mar and Northwood.
Costa Mesa girls soccer coach Dan Johnston, who also teaches and
coaches at Edison High, would like to see county schools leagued
separately in every sport. He would also like to see as many as 10
schools in a soccer league, arranged in descending groupings based on
strength of program, similar to the format used in the English
professional soccer leagues.
Such a plan would have the top 10 (or so) schools in the highest
division, with subsequent divisions comprised of schools grouped by
relative strength, from the most competitive to the least competitive.
Once the divisions are initially set, Johnston said they would be
automatically adjusted each year, with the top five teams from the
next-lowest division moving up and the bottom five teams from the
next-highest division moving down.
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