Estancia continues self-destructive tendencies
Barry Faulkner
If experience wasn’t important, no one would start in the mail
room.
Perhaps no greater proponent of such reasoning can be found than
Estancia High football coach Jay Noonan, who is reminded on a daily
basis how little experience most of his players bring to the field.
Just when Noonan and his assistants seem to have one shortcoming
addressed, another crops up.
“We are still a very young team and I have to remind myself of
that,” Noonan said after an absence of acumen surfaced at two crucial
moments of the Eagles’ 24-14 Golden West League loss to Saddleback
Friday at the Santa Ana Bowl. “Our kids are still learning football,
which can be frustrating, at times, for us coaches. There are times
you just want to say ‘Come on guys!’ We just have to keep working to
try and cut down our mistakes. Right now, we’re our own worst enemy.”
The first costly mistake was a breakdown in the secondary, which
allowed a 36-yard touchdown pass on the final play of the first half
to enable the Roadrunners to take a 17-7 lead, and momentum, into the
halftime locker room.
“We were screaming at (the defensive backs) to get back, but maybe
we weren’t loud enough,” Noonan said. “It was a foolish mistake and
it cost us a lot of momentum.”
Noonan said the Eagles also broke down on punt coverage, allowing
a long return to set Saddleback up for a short scoring drive in the
third quarter.
“That was probably the play that turned things their way in the
second half,” Noonan said.
Noonan said he was pleased with the improvement his ball carriers
showed protecting the ball, but the Eagles lost two fumbles on
center-quarterback exchanges, something that had not occurred
previously.
Noonan was happy about his defense’s ability to contain Roadrunner
rushing leader Ramiro Chavez to 29 rushing yards, more than 100 fewer
than his average coming in. But the outside portion of Saddleback’s
option attack proved problematic for the Eagles, who saw Roadrunner
quarterback Guillermo Garcia score on an 18-yard option keeper and
produce a team-leading 54 rushing yards.
Noonan found positives in the pass protection provided by his
offensive line, which allowed the Eagles to throw for 212 yards, the
most in the school’s last 35 games, as well as a strong defensive
performance turned in by senior end Erik Andersen.
But the bottom line resulted in the Eagles’ fourth straight loss,
their 14th in their last 15 contests.
“Sooner or later, we’re going to have one game where everything
functions together,” Noonan said. “But until then, this is difficult
to deal with.”
The Eagles (1-4) continue their quest for efficiency Friday, when
they visit Santa Ana (4-1) at the Santa Ana Bowl.
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