Mustangs sustain a potentially big blow
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Patrick Laverty
Costa Mesa High is as deep as it has been since Dave Perkins took
over as coach three seasons ago and as Friday’s three-way scrimmage
against Tustin and Long Beach Cabrillo proved, the Mustangs will need
that depth.
Every coach’s nightmare became a reality for Perkins when one of
his top returning players, first-team all-league left tackle Rodrigo
Gutierrez, went down with what could be a broken right leg in the
latter stages of the scrimmage at Tustin High.
Gutierrez left the field in an ambulance and the exact nature of
the injury was unknown.
“Rodrigo has never been hurt before so we don’t know how bad it
is,” Perkins said. “It could be a break, it might just be a knee
injury. I’m not a doctor. But hopefully, it’s not going to be a major
deal.”
The Mustangs were playing offense against Cabrillo and had a
first-and-goal at the 10-yard line. Quarterback Bruce Wilkinson was
chased out of the pocket and as a trio of defenders tracked him down,
Gutierrez was caught standing and went down.
An inflatable splint was put on Gutierrez’s leg until the
paramedics arrived. Meanwhile, play was moved to the other end of the
field.
Replacing the 6-foot-4, 275-pound junior in the lineup Friday,
with the expectation the he will also do so in the Mustangs’ opener
Friday against Corona del Mar and possibly for the remainder of the
season, was 6-1, 245-pound junior Joe Ortiz.
Ortiz will be stepping into an offensive line that struggled
against Cabrillo and Tustin, but Costa Mesa had many struggles
against two programs from higher divisions. The Tillers have had a
strong football program for years and play in Division VI. Cabrillo,
which finished 5-5 in the Division VI Suburban League in 2002, moves
into the Moore League alongside national powerhouse Long Beach Poly
this season.
The Mustangs, the defending Golden West League champions who lost
in the first round of the Division VII playoffs last year, scrimmaged
against Magnolia and La Quinta, both of which play in Division IX,
last season.
“We got lulled into a feeling of complacency playing two teams
from lower divisions,” Perkins said of the reasoning behind the
stiffer competition this season.
Costa Mesa should go back to practice Monday knowing they have
some things to work on.
The Mustangs started well, playing offense against Cabrillo. On a
third-and-six play, Wilkinson connected with Jeff Waldron on a
17-yard pass for a first down. Costa Mesa drove down to the Cabrillo
27-yard line, but on fourth-and-nine Wilkerson was pressured and
forced to run in an attempt to pick up a first down. He was tackled 4
yards short.
The drive was the highlight of the scrimmage for Costa Mesa, which
had trouble tackling, couldn’t keep pressure off Wilkinson and showed
confusion on special teams.
“I thought we played well early,” Perkins said. “It’s kind of a
double-edged sword. We didn’t tackle well, but Tustin’s got a player
of the year running back (Marcus Malcolm) and Cabrillo’s got three or
four guys who could start for any team in our league.”
The teams took turns playing offense and defense, with each team
running 10 plays before switching. Offenses began at their own
35-yard line and the ball was moved up and down the field as in an
ordinary game. If a team scored or was stopped on fourth down, the
ball returned to the 35-yard line and things started over again.
The defense struggled against Tustin from the outset. On the
Tillers’ first three plays, they broke off rushes of 4, 16 and 45
yards, though the latter was called back because of a penalty.
Two plays later, Tustin broke lose for another 25-yard gain and,
four plays after that, scored on a 10-yard run.
The Mustangs allowed a 58-yard touchdown run to Cabrillo.
Offensively, Wilkinson was sacked six times and just barely
avoided a few others.
“Our pass protection wasn’t good,” Perkins said. “But we haven’t
thrown the ball that much and, again, we’re playing against two
really good teams.”
On special teams -- the squads went through a series of punts and
point-after-touchdown attempts -- the Mustangs looked shaky on punt
returns, with Luis Gonzalez and Jorge Quiroz, the deep men, and
up-back Junior Epenesa, lacking communication and nearly committing a
pair of turnovers.
“We’re still looking for a guy back there,” Perkins said. “We may
just rush 11.”
That wouldn’t come as a surprise, not after Costa Mesa started the
scrimmage with a fake punt, where punter Jeff Waldron completed a
pass to Gonzalez, and then ran the swinging gate on the its first PAT
attempt, which Wilkinson, after receiving a shotgun snap, bootlegged
into the end zone two points.
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