Method to the madness
- Share via
Barry Faulkner
After his team failed to upset crosstown rival Costa Mesa, favored
by three touchdowns and an eventual 41-0 winner in the 36th edition
of the Battle for the Bell Friday night, Estancia High football coach
Jay Noonan explained the reasoning behind his pregame predictions of
victory.
“The method to my madness is to support my team,” said Noonan, who
declared his Eagles (1-6, 0-4 in the Golden West League) the better
team in the week that led to Friday’s drubbing and had predicted his
team would reclaim the perpetual Bell trophy this season, immediately
following last year’s 21-6 loss to the Mustangs. “If that means being
bold and making bold statements that support my kids, then I’ll be
guilty of being bold.”
Noonan said his comments were not intended to reflect negatively
on Costa Mesa.
“I’m the messenger for my program and I’m trying to reinforce to
my players, my team and my school, that though times may be tough
right now, we aren’t giving up or quitting. If I come off bold, it’s
because I believe in the kids and the program and I think it’s
important for me to support our community. If that means making
statements that may be above and beyond when the odds are not in our
favor, who else is going to step up for us? I want our kids to always
fight the battle and I expect nothing less from anyone who competes
on or off the field. I tell my kids in class that they can and will
achieve an A on a test if they put forth the effort. Does that
guarantee them an A? No, but it lets them know I believe they can do
it.
“The things we ask for kids to play this game require sacrifices,
so you want your kids to know you believe in them. Win or lose, the
coaches better be the ones supporting them.”
Noonan acknowledged Costa Mesa’s superiority Friday night.
“We played a better team,” he said.
Noonan inserted senior Lewis Bradshaw, who had been playing
receiver since injuring his nonthrowing shoulder the first play of
the third game, at quarterback after Costa Mesa took a 20-0 lead with
6:46 left in the first half.
Bradshaw completed six passes for 77 yards and had a 12-yard
keeper, one of only three Estancia rushing attempts to gain more than
10 yards.
“We thought Lewis would enable us to run the option a little
better,” Noonan said. “But it didn’t seem to matter who was in when
we tried to throw, because Costa Mesa’s pass rush and defensive line
were very good.”
Bradshaw was sacked twice for 38 yards in losses, while starter
Brad Young, who returned to action in the fourth quarter, was sacked
three times for minus-22 yards.
No less than 11 Estancia running plays were stopped at or behind
the line and Mesa benefited from two breakdowns on would-be punts,
which resulted in 46 yards of losses and both set up short touchdown
marches.
Noonan was pleased that his team committed only one of the game’s
four penalties, after averaging nine penalties the previous four
games. Estancia was flagged for an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty,
but Noonan said that was for a muscle-flexing gesture after a tackle,
not verbally baiting the opponent.
“It was a very clean game,” Noonan said.
Noonan was also pleased by his defense’s goal-line stand early in
the fourth quarter, which began when a Costa Mesa running back,
running alone toward the end zone, deliberately slid down at the 1 to
set the table for one of his offensive linemen to get a rushing
touchdown.
A penalty backed Mesa up to the 6 and four successive running
plays gained only 5 yards.
Noonan had plenty of praise for Costa Mesa running back Keola
Asuega, who had four TDs by halftime and finished with 177 rushing
yards.
“Asuega is a very tough runner,” Noonan said. “Costa Mesa makes no
secret of what they’re going to do on offense, but they make it tough
to stop them. Asuega is probably the hardest runner in our league.
The difference between Asuega and Durrell Moss (whom the Eagles will
try to stop Friday when they meet Orange) is like the difference
between a bull and a deer. We saw the bull last week and this week,
we get the deer.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.