Turnovers unravel Eagles
Richard Dunn
There’s a time and a place for everything, but unfortunately for
Estancia High’s football team, most things went host Century’s way in
the second half Friday night as the Centurions earned a 35-7
nonleague victory at Tustin High.
The Eagles (1-1), who won their season opener against Magnolia,
dominated Century in the game’s first series as the Estancia
offensive line blew the Centurions off the ball. Junior fullback
Bubba Kapko capped the nine-play, 80-yard drive with a 3-yard
touchdown run and it appeared the Eagles met business.
But Century’s defense shut out Estancia the rest of the game and
the Centurions took advantage of five turnovers to coast to the win
-- their first over an opponent other than Bolsa Grande in the last
three years.
Century (2-0), which responded with a touchdown on its first
offensive possession to tie matters, 7-7, opened the second half with
an 85-yard kickoff return for a touchdown by senior co-captain Myles
Ramsey and Izic Fernandez booted his second of five PATs, giving the
Centurions a 14-7 edge.
On Estancia’s ensuing drive, it took only three plays for matters
to get worse for the visitors, as Alan Amasio, a 5-foot-10, 240-pound
linebacker, stepped in front of Estancia quarterback Lewis Bradshaw’s
pass on third down and returned an interception 31 yards to the end
zone.
So, without an offensive play, Century suddenly found itself
leading, 21-7, with 10:42 remaining in the third quarter.
After Estancia was forced to punt after three plays on its next
series, Century scored again, this time on a 42-yard touchdown pass
from quarterback Ronnie Rosas to 6-3, 264-pound tight end Hebron
Fangupo.
On first down, Rosas scrambled and rolled to his left, then found
Fangupo behind the defense. Fangupo caught the pass at the Estancia
26 and sprinted to the end zone untouched with 6:37 to play in the
third, giving the hosts a commanding 28-7 lead.
“That pick kind of turned it around, and (the Centurions) just
built from there,” Estancia Coach Jay Noonan said. “We moved the ball
real well in the first series, but then we fumbled the ball a couple
of times. We made too many mistakes and let a good football team back
in it. You can’t give a team momentum like that. We had our
opportunities. We had our chances. We just let them back in the
game.”
On the first play of the second quarter, Bradshaw rushed for 48
yards on a broken play, giving Estancia possession at the Century 39
with the game tied, 7-7. But two plays later the Eagles fumbled and
Century’s Vincent Valencia recovered at the Centurions’ 22.
Century, however, could not convert the game’s first turnover into
a score, and both teams eventually entered the halftime locker room
in a deadlock.
After Century scored three touchdowns in 5:09 in the third
quarter, Estancia was on the move again, this time behind junior
quarterback Brad Young, who completed 4 of 4 passes in the drive for
43 yards. But, as the Eagles edged inside the Century 30, they
fumbled again and the Centurions’ Nick Zuniga recovered.
On the last play of the third quarter, Century’s Daniel Lockington
sacked Bradshaw and forced a fumble, which was recovered by Valencia
at the Eagles’ 18 to set up another touchdown.
Two penalties on Century and a sack for a 4-yard loss by
Estancia’s Bryce McKendry pushed the Centurions back to the 21, but
on a third-down play, Rosas connected with Lockington on a touchdown
pass with 9:18 to play in the fourth quarter.
Century sacked Estancia quarterbacks five times for losses
totaling 47 yards.
Bradshaw, who accounted for 79 ground yards (despite two sacks
against him for minus-25 yards), completed 5 of 10 passes for 53 yards and caught three balls from Young for 26 yards.
“My hat’s off to Century,” Noonan said. “They played with a lot of
heart tonight.”
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