Boys soccer: Tars Wahl off CdM, 2-1
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Barry Faulkner
CORONA DEL MAR - First-year Newport Harbor High boys soccer coach
Kevin Esparza appears to have figured out the Sailors’ blueprint for
success. And, not surprisingly, it has a lot to do with where he has
chosen to place his Wahl.
Senior captain Tyson Wahl, whose commitment to the under-17 national
team took him away from Newport last season, played his second straight
game at sweeper Saturday, after spending the first seven games of the
season at midfield.
Wahl’s ability to anchor the defense and also kick-start the offense,
helped the visiting Tars earn a 2-1 nonleague win over Back Bay rival
Corona del Mar.
“I think defense is going to be more his natural position at the next
level, so I decided to move him back there from midfield two games ago,”
Esparza said.
It’s hardly coincidental that Esparza terms Wahl’s first two games on
the back line -- including an 0-0 tie earlier this week against El Modena
-- as Harbor’s best two performances of the campaign.
“I think our guys just relax a little more when they know Tyson is
back there to cover for any mistakes,” Esparza said. “He gives us a whole
new confidence level.”
Intensity level was another reason the Sailors (4-4-1) were able to
claim Back Bay bragging rights over the Sea Kings (3-5-2), according to
Esparza.
“I think playing a rivalry game really helped put us in the mind-set
for league, said Esparza, whose squad opens its Sea View League schedule
Wednesday at Aliso Niguel.
“I thought everybody played well and I thought we deserved to win. We
created many chances on offense that we couldn’t finish, but I like the
way we played.”
CdM Coach Pat Callaghan, whose team opens Pacific Coast League play
Wednesday at home against Laguna Beach, was also pleased with his squad’s
effort.
“We have to be proud of the way we played, especially after the first
seven minutes,” said Callaghan, who told his players in his postgame
address “they were ready to take (the PCL) by storm.”
The Sailors opened the scoring Saturday when Wahl converted a penalty
kick in the 28th minute. The chance was created when junior forward Jose
Serpas was taken down in the 18-yard box, an automatic penalty shot.
The Sea Kings answered just more than seven minutes later on what
Callaghan called “a very beautiful goal.”
Senior sweeper Andy Almquist triggered the scoring chance with a
well-placed chip from midfield that floated toward a pack of players
about 15 yards in front of the right goal post.
CdM junior Tristan Harris leaped and headed the ball toward the
opposite corner of the goal and it arced into the net to bring the hosts
even.
“That thing went about 60 yards and through about eight of our
players,” Esparza said of the CdM tally.
Both teams finished the first half with six shots and each keeper,
Newport’s Hector Campos and CdM’s Geoff Collier, had three saves before
the break.
Newport came out storming in the second half as a Wahl drive caromed
off the crossbar in the 44th minute. The rebound came directly to a
Harbor attacker in front, but his one-timer went wide of the open net,
prompting groans of frustration from the Newport sideline.
Serpas, however, eased the Sailors’ collective pain by scoring the
game-winner, assisted by junior Ramon Zaccuri, just two minutes later.
Zaccuri poked a pass ahead to Serpas, who broke free on the right
wing. Serpas quickly delivered a low, hard shot, which went through the
charging keeper and into the net.
Serpas, who had a team-leading four shots, earned praise from Esparza,
while teammates Matt Tracy and David Marshall also had shots bounce off
the goal post.
CdM’s Almquist also had a direct kick kiss off the post and his
overall play, including clearing several chances in front of his own
goal, was a CdM highlight.
Newport finished with 15 shots to CdM’s 10, while Campos had 10 saves
including a diving stop near the post just after the Sailors’ had taken
their final lead.
Collier totaled seven saves.
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