Soccer: Davis mixes it up in 2-0 win
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Richard Dunn
COSTA MESA - With a makeshift boys soccer team, combining third-
and fourth-grade division players from three Costa Mesa elementary
schools, Davis Coach Chasen Marshall only had two weeks to assemble his
squad for the third annual Daily Pilot Cup.
But the players responded Friday as if they’d known each other for
years.
In pool play, Davis defeated Newport Heights No. 2, 2-0, with a pair
of second-half goals at the Farm Field. Neither team advanced to today’s
quarterfinals, reserved for pool champion Lincoln.
“Coming in, a lot of the players said they had never played soccer
before, but they seemed to pick it up pretty quickly. They seemed to know
what they were doing,” Marshall said. “There were only a couple of kids
we really needed to teach the game to.”
Davis, a school of only fourth through sixth graders, combined with
Sonora and Paularino to form its entry in the Daily Pilot Cup, and, with
just two weeks for introductions and practice, the team captured its
first win.
In the 30th minute, Dennis Mondragon scored for Davis to break a
scoreless tie in the second half, kicking in a ground-hugging shot from
close range.
“It just slipped through the defense,” Newport Heights Coach Jim
Carmack said.
Danny Estrada added the second goal for Davis in the 47th minute, when
he took the ball away from a Newport Heights player deep in his own end
and fired in another ball from close range.
“It was a very good game, especially since we came off a 12-0 loss to
Lincoln (in the pool-play opener),” said Carmack, whose Newport Heights
squad was led by first-half goalie Tyler Starkweather (three saves), who
shut out Davis.
Davis, also sparked by Jose Faboreno, was tough on defense, holding
Newport Heights to three shots on goal (none in the second half). Forward
Max Jolliffe and midfielders Joshua Brusseau, Wyth Rietveld and Patrick
Briand led Newport Heights.
Davis, which lost to Lincoln, 3-0, in earlier pool play, outshot
Newport Heights, 7-0, in the second half.
“There was definitely a mix of kids on our team,” Marshall said. “I
thought it might get clicky, with Sonora kids only hanging out with
Sonora kids, or something like that. But they all mixed well. They all
listened and got along.”
Neither team moves on in the Cup, but the memories (and T-shirts)
could last a long time.
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