A Hunter’s quarry
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Bryce Alderton
Evan Hunter’s first run from scrimmage Thursday foreshadowed
things to come.
The Costa Mesa High freshman runner took the handoff from Mustang
quarterback Scott Knox on a reverse end-around and raced through the
Estancia High Eagle line for a 49-yard touchdown, his first of three
rushing TD’s on a day Costa Mesa played a nearly flawless first half
and cruised to a 29-8 triumph over host Estancia for Mesa’s eighth
straight victory in the cross-town rivalry.
Hunter starred in the backfield for the Mustangs, 5-2, 3-0 in the
Golden West League, with TD scampers of 49, 14 and 25 yards, and
finished the game with 127 rushing yards alongside Mesa runner Brian
Molina, who gained 73 yards on seven carries and scored one TD, a
31-yard run to cap Mesa’s scoring with just over a minute remaining
in a dominating first half by the Mustangs.
Hunter and Molina combined for 200 rushing yards through the first
two quarters before Costa Mesa Coach John Carney inserted the
reserves in the second half.
The Mustangs scored touchdowns on all four of their first-half
possessions and the defense sacked the quarterback six times for
minus 48 yards. Mitchell Caldwell led the Mustangs with four sacks
and constantly pressured Eagle quarterbacks Nick Engelke and Kyle
Bannon, while Lang Azurin added one sack and stuffed out a pitch to
tackle an Eagle runner for a 5-yard loss early in the fourth quarter.
Second-year Estancia Coach Bob Bandaruk was amazed at Hunter’s
speed.
“I couldn’t believe (Hunter),” Bandaruk said. “I thought we had a
really fast group of players but he made some big plays and had some
long runs that got us.”
Hunter also led the Mustangs in receiving with one catch from Knox
for 25 yards.
Mesa’s aggressive defense also forced the Eagles to punt twice and
turn the ball over on downs once.
“(Caldwell) had a hell of a game,” Carney said. “The offense
started clicking and the kids came together as a team and moved the
ball downfield.”
Though the game for city bragging rights needed little incentive,
Bandaruk gave his Eagles another source of inspiration at halftime of
Thursday’s game.
“I told them they wouldn’t have to condition tomorrow if they held
(Costa Mesa) scoreless in the second half,” Bandaruk said with a
smile. “I’m very happy we held them scoreless in the second half, and
we got a score coming back.”
Carney, who coached in his eighth Mustang-Eagle clash, gave the
Eagles credit for going strong the entire four quarters.
“I was surprised with how well Estancia played,” Carney said.
“They brought nine guys to the line of scrimmage, showed a lot of
emotion and played with heart.”
Estancia tailback Kalami Teo came alive in the second half for the
Eagles, 1-6, 0-3 in league, gaining 107 of his 154 yards on the ground in the final two quarters and scoring a 4-yard TD after a
19-yard scamper two plays earlier. Teo also caught two passes for 10
yards.
The drive was set up by after Eziquel Villavazo recovered a fumble
and ran 35 yards to the Mesa 25. Villavazo also intercepted a pass in
the end zone on Mesa’s first drive of the third quarter with the
Mustangs driving at the Eagle 20.
Engelke completed two of six passes for 10 yards, while
counterpart Knox completed two of seven passes for 37 yards. Tyler
Legg finished with four carries for 23 yards, while Jonathan Valencia
carried twice for 11 yards and Miles Palmer ran twice for 10 yards
for the Mustangs. Ryan Bagwell caught one ball for 12 yards for Mesa.
For Estancia, Bannon ran five times for 5 yards and Travis Todd
carried twice for 11 yards.
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