Mustangs pull it out!
Barry Faulkner
It took just four offensive plays and 14 explosive points for
Orange High to send the Costa Mesa football team into Plan B in a
clash of Golden West League unbeatens Friday night at Orange Coast
College.
Fortunately for the Mustangs (4-2, 3-0 in league), they took B to
stand for bounce back, or perhaps battle, maybe even ball control.
Whichever, the homecoming hosts responded in championship fashion to
claim a 27-21 victory that sets them on a collision course for what
may be a league title showdown Nov. 8 with Santa Ana.
“A team that hasn’t dealt with the kind of adversity we have,
would have folded and gotten beat, 60-0, after (Panther star running
back Durrell Moss) broke those two long touchdown runs,” Costa Mesa
Coach Dave Perkins said. “But I could see the looks on our guys’
faces. They were thinking, ‘Just give us the ball.’ ”
After two mildly effective but scoreless possessions, the
Mustangs’ methodical offense sank its teeth into the football and
proceeded to bury Orange in a series of determined runs by a quartet
of running backs, led by senior Keola Asuega.
Asuega, who took his meeting with the Washington-bound Moss as a
personal challenge, as well as a chance to assert himself as the
premier rusher in the league, rolled up 220 yards and three
touchdowns on 33 carries to leave a lasting impression.
Asuega, who now has 2,897 career rushing yards, good for the No. 2
spot on the school’s all-time list, bolted 39 yards on a counter two
plays into the second quarter cut Orange’s lead in half, 14-7.
On Mesa’s next possession, Asuega capped an 11-play, 55-yard drive
with a 7-yard touchdown run and Nate Hunter’s conversion kick erased
Orange’s early advantage with 3:15 left in the first half.
The ensuing kickoff bounced off an Orange returner’s stomach and
Mesa’s Luis Gonzalez fell on it to set up a four-play, 23-yard
scoring drive that ended when holder Brian Knox rolled to his right
on a fake field goal and hit Daniel Cooper in the end zone. Hunter’s
PAT gave Mesa a 21-14 lead and the Mustangs made sure it stood up in
the second half.
“We came through some adversity tonight,” Asuega said. “Our plan
was to stop Moss, but he got off to that fast start. I didn’t sleep
last night, because I knew this game was big and I thought it may
come down to back against back.”
The Mustang defense, which collected all four of the game’s
turnovers, helped foil Orange’s comeback hopes when 315-pound senior
noseguard Borotha Pov fell on a fumble with 4:14 left in the third
quarter at the Mesa 45-yard line.
Mustang offensive linemen Luke Sapolu, James Paulsen, David
Vernotico, Paul Martin, Brett Via and Rodrigo Gutierrez then went to
work, paving the way for a 14-play TD procession that ate 5:09 off
the clock. Asuega capped the march with a 4-yard TD run off left
tackle to build the Mesa lead to 13.
“Our offensive line just pounded on ‘em,” said Via, who also
contributed to a defense that held the Panthers scoreless after Moss
raced 80 yards for a TD on the first play of the game, then sprinted
77 on the third play of the next possession to produce a 14-0 cushion
with 7:06 left in the first quarter.
“That was crazy,” Via said of the Moss’ early heroics. “I didn’t
like that at all.”
Al Rodriguez intercepted in his own end zone to thwart one Orange
drive late in the first half and Tyler Waldron picked off a pass and
returned it 28 yards to the Panthers 2 with 1:08 left to clinch the
crucial victory.
“We slugged this one out,” Perkins said. “Our kids play physical
football and they showed tonight they have huge hearts. Keola wanted
to show he was a pretty good running back, too, and he just kept
coming and got some tough yards.”
Moss, who committed to Washington this week, finished with 234
yards on 18 carries and is now closing in on 2,800 yards the last two
seasons. But, after his early bursts, none of his next 15 carries
produced more than 11 yards. And Orange (3-3, 2-1) failed to complete
any of its six pass attempts.
Mesa’s ground game benefited from a combined 105 yards from
receiver Nate Hunter, wingback Tyler Waldron (39 each) and junior
tailback Omar Ruiz, as the Mustangs churned out 16 first downs,
including three fourth-down conversions.
“Their offense played well,” Orange Coach Greg Gibson said of the
Mustangs. “They took it to us and, you know, that happens.”
Though the Mustangs did not have any turnovers, they hurt
themselves with penalties, committing nine infractions for 90 yards.
Holding penalties contributed to keeping the hosts scoreless on their
first two possessions and Mesa overcame a holding penalty on its
final scoring drive.
“Orange is a good football team and this is one (victory) we had
to get,” said Perkins, who wasted little time reminding his players
what’s up next.
“Next week, we get the Eagles,” Perkins bellowed in the postgame
huddle, referring to Friday’s Battle for the Bell against crosstown
rival Estancia.
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