Boys basketball: Mustangs roll past CdM, 42-29
Richard Dunn
COSTA MESA - If Super Bowl XXXV is anything like this, at least CBS
will keep television viewers interested in the second half.
With several basketballs clanking against the rim or missing
everything entirely, inspiring already enthusiastic students to yell “air
ball!” throughout most of the first half, things finally settled down and
the boys played real hoops in the second half.
“Our guys battled, and this is the type of game last year we might not
have won,” said Costa Mesa High Coach Bob Serven, whose team defeated
visiting Corona del Mar, 42-29, in Pacific Coast League action Wednesday
night.
For the Mustangs (13-7, 3-2 in the PCL), their program officially
reached a new level, knocking off Newport-Mesa District rival CdM for the
first time in boys basketball since 1983, when both teams played in the
Sea View League. The schools played in different leagues from 1987
through 1999, and CdM swept the two-game PCL series last year.
“This is a really big week for Costa Mesa High School basketball,”
Serven said. “First, we beat Corona del Mar, a perennial power and
traditionally the best team in our school district. Then we play
Estancia, our city rival, on Friday (at home at 7 p.m.). Then we play in
the Nike Extravaganza (Saturday against St. John Bosco at 11:30 a.m. at
Long Beach State’s Pyramid).
“Our goal is to win two league games this week, then Saturday might be
the icing on the cake.”
Costa Mesa, which opened the game by missing its first nine
three-point attempts, staggered out of the gate, but found a shooting
groove in the second half as the Mustangs built a 30-16 lead after the
fourth quarter’s initial series.
Corona del Mar (9-13, 3-2), which shot 18% from the field (6 of 33) in
the first three periods, only discovered its shooting touch in the final
quarter (5 of 9, including a pair of three-pointers by 6-foot-3 senior
Blake Mancillas).
No CdM player scored in double figures, but 6-3 senior Zach Brewster
finished with 15 rebounds.
In an odd game, Costa Mesa led at halftime, 13-9, then missed its
first seven field-goal attempts in the third quarter. But the Mustangs
still managed to increase their lead early in the second half as Chad
Vakili and Danny Krikorian connected from three-point territory.
“Danny really stepped up tonight,” Serven said. “That’s his best game
of the season, because he (also) played great defense.”
Costa Mesa, which attempted zero foul shots in the game, was led by
6-7 center Mike Payne, who scored a game-high 12 points, pulled down 17
rebounds, blocked six shots and added one steal.
Junior guard David Conte chipped in with five steals, three rebounds
and two assists for Mesa, while Steve Whittaker had seven first-half
rebounds.
“We didn’t have a very good game plan on how to attack their zone, and
that’s my fault,” CdM Coach Paul Orris said of the Mustangs’ defense,
which created seven Sea King turnovers in the fourth quarter and held CdM
to only 3 of 20 from the floor in the first half.
After a slow first quarter offensively for both teams, the Mustangs
went to work on CdM in the second, outscoring the Sea Kings, 9-5.
Payne, who was 6 of 12 from the field, scored on a putback with 3:54
left before halftime to give Costa Mesa an 8-7 edge, an advantage the
hosts would maintain until the final buzzer.
Later in the second, Krikorian netted a three-pointer, then, with 1:00
left, Payne scored on a turnaround jump shot after a nice post move for a
13-8 Mesa lead. CdM was 1 of 8 from the floor in the second.
“My concern was that I thought (the Mustangs) were missing shots in
the first half they would normally make,” Orris said, referring to Mesa’s
dismal 1-of-12 effort from three-point country in the first half.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.