Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week, Nick Cabico: Muscling up
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Barry Faulkner
To this point, Nick Cabico’s prep football career has featured more
misses than hits. But, in his case, or any other ball carrier for that
matter, this is good news.
This season, however, the shifty Costa Mesa High wingback has more
than one method of leaving would-be tacklers strewn in his wake.
“If you can run around a guy, it’s a lot easier,” said the senior
standout, who made his varsity debut as a freshman and earned second-team
All-Pacific Coast League honors last fall. “But it feels good to put
someone on the ground.”
Most of last season, Cabico enlisted gravity as a trusted ally,
unleashing a repertoire of moves that often forced frustrated defenders
to topple without contact.
This year, having added nearly 10 pounds of muscle in the weight room
and also having improved his speed, Cabico said he is more confident
about attacking tacklers with grit, as well as guile.
“I didn’t believe I was physically ready to (seek out collisions) last
year,” Cabico said. “But (first-year) strength coach) Scott Briscol
pointed me in the right direction in the weight room and I feel a lot
stronger. I think I can be a big part of this team.”
The Daily Pilot Player of the Week was just that in Friday’s 39-13
season-opening win over Saddleback. He carried 13 times for 117 yards (a
9-yard average), including an 8-yard touchdown, and also caught two
passes for touchdowns of 9 and 18 yards. He returned two kickoffs and one
punt for a combined 50 yards to finish with 195 all-purpose yards, while
also starting and playing most of the night at cornerback.
It was a familiar refrain for Cabico against Saddleback, which saw him
accumulate 304 all-purpose yards in last year’s 48-23 Mustangs’ triumph.
Despite taking himself out to rest on frequent occasions last year
when the Mustangs had the ball, Cabico gained 531 yards rushing and 465
more on 17 receptions. He scored 10 touchdowns and shared the team lead
with three interceptions.
This year, he plans to take his breaks on defense.
This appears to be fine with Dave Perkins, Mesa’s first-year coach,
who looks forward to exploiting Cabico’s versatility in the combined wing
T and fly offensive scheme.
“You can do a lot of things with him,” said Perkins, who calls the
Mustangs’ plays. “You can give him the ball on the sweep, you can throw
it to him underneath, and he can beat (defensive backs) deep. If he has
to, he can also stick the ball up in the middle.”
Perkins has also been impressed by Cabico’s work ethic.
“He’s very deserving of the success he has, because he works very hard
in everything he does,” Perkins said. “Over the summer, he was in the
weight room two hours a day, he was running two miles a day and he also
ran a lot of sprints. Every conditioning drill we’ve done this year, Nick
has been the first guy to finish.”
A former youth football standout, the 5-foot-8, 148-pound Cabico matured physically at an early age. That physical prowess allowed him, he
recalled, to run over defenders, before reaching high school.
But, as tacklers became bigger and stronger, Cabico focused on
subtleties such as changing speeds, setting up blocks and changing
direction to be able to avoid getting crunched. He said the season he
spent on the Mater Dei sophomore team enabled him to learn much in this
area from veteran varsity tailback Junior Palacios.
“I watched Junior in drills,” Cabico said. “I watched his feet and
tried to work on my quickness. By the time I got back to Mesa, I was
using my hips a little more, trying to break defenders down. I never used
that stuff in Pop Warner.”
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