Girls basketball: Estancia waits, watches
Barry Faulkner
CERRITOS - Pacific Coast League girls basketball co-champion
Estancia High will have to wait until Saturday for its postseason to
begin. But fellow CIF Southern Section Division III-A playoff
representative Costa Mesa will play its second playoff game Thursday.
Coach Paul Kirby’s Eagles, who claimed a share of the program’s first
PCL title since 1991 with a decisive 48-25 thumping of co-champion
University Thursday, received a first-round bye when pairings were
announced Sunday at Gahr High.
Estancia will host the Morningside-La Canada winner Saturday in the
second round of the bracket, which had only 24 teams to fill its 32
spots.
Costa Mesa (12-15), which defeated Northwood, 58-49, in a PCL playoff
for third place which extended into overtime Friday, visits No. 4-seeded
Rosary (15-13) Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Estancia (16-10), winner of 11 of its last 12, including five straight
after a surprising 43-41 loss at Uni Jan. 22, is among eight league
champions in the division to receive a first-round bye, much to the
dismay of Kirby.
“I’d rather be playing Thursday,” said Kirby, who is concerned about
the effects of what will be a nine-day layoff before Saturday’s
second-round contest.
“But I guess we’ll be well-rested,” he said. “And we’ll get a chance
Thursday to scout the team we’re going to play.”
Kirby said he plans to bring up five junior varsity players to help
bolster a roster that has included only seven players most of the season.
The Eagles will be led by sophomore point guard Trisha Wase, junior
center Tisha Gray and junior forward Xochitl Byfield.
“Those girls won’t be intimidated by (No. 3-seeded) Morningside,”
Kirby said.
The Eagles were eliminated by Morningside, 61-38, in a CIF Division
III-A quarterfinal in 1999.
Coach Jim Week’s Costa Mesa squad won three straight and four of its
last five against league foes, including a pair of overtime triumphs over
Northwood.
The first overtime conquest, Jan. 29, was set up by a 35-foot
desperation three-pointer by Rhondi Naff to tie it at the regulation
buzzer.
“I told our girls, if we went to the playoffs, that shot would be the
turning point in our season,” Weeks said.
Naff, after some early struggles in league, has returned to the form
that made her a prolific offensive force in the preleague campaign. She
averaged 22.3 points in three wins last week.
Mesa, which extended the school’s streak of postseason appearances to
13 seasons after a 2-4 league start, earned praise from Weeks for
salvaging its season.
“Except for the third quarter against Estancia (Jan. 31), we’ve had a
solid six or seven games,” Weeks said. “We know we have a tough matchup
in Rosary. But if we beat (the Royals), our season would turn glorious.”
If Costa Mesa should manage the upset, it would visit Montview League
champion Gladstone (16-5) Saturday.
Bishop Montgomery (19-4) is the No. 1 seed in III-A, while Muir (22-4)
is the No. 2 seed.
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