Prep football: Steep learning curve
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Barry Faulkner
COSTA MESA - The learning process continues for the Estancia High
football team, which obtained a 58-13 nonleague lesson from Canyon Friday
night.
As the inexperienced Eagles continue to develop, one might think the
patience of first-year coach Jay Noonan and his staff is being most
severely tested.
Noonan, however, remains positive and reports his players and
assistants are doing the same.
“The good news is, we’re making mistakes we can fix,” Noonan said
after his Eagles (0-2) fumbled 11 times against the Comanches, who
recovered three to start short touchdown drives. “The problem is, we are
asking our kids to go from the lab (practice) to the test (games). And,
when you play good football teams like Canyon, there isn’t much margin
for error.
“The kids realize there is a learning curve involved, but they’re also
competitive and they want to win. I think their spirits are good and
they’ll keep working to get better.”
Noonan and his assistants are also motivated by progress, which Noonan
saw specifically in several areas Friday.
“I thought we improved a great deal from the Magnolia game,” Noonan
said of the team’s season-opening loss Sept. 6. The Eagles game last week
against Aliso Niguel was canceled.
“We used our personnel better and it was nice to have some of that
personnel there. I thought (quarterback) Lewis Bradshaw improved on his
reads and our running backs ran very hard. With our type of offense, the
ball is in motion a lot, so there is some risk involved. And Canyon was
much quicker on the defensive line than we thought going in.
“When it clicks, our offense should help keep our defense off the
field. But when we put our defense in a bad position by repeatedly losing
fumbles, we’re cutting our own throat.”
The education process includes videotape study, both of their own
mistakes, as well as what opponents will present, Noonan said.
“In education, any type of visual aid is very valuable to the learning
process,” he explained. “Sometimes, the film shows kids the things they
aren’t even aware they’re doing. When they can see it for themselves, it
sinks in much better than if I were to walk them through things on the
field.”
Noonan said his team escaped without injury against Canyon and has
even received some potential reinforcements, with a small number of kids
who had played in previous years, electing to rejoin the program.
“Some of the (new additions) have good instincts from having played
before,” Noonan said. “We should have a better idea this week about how
they might be able to fit in for us.
“The good news against Canyon, was that I thought schemed these guys
well,” Noonan said. “We thought we had guys in position to do some
things, but we continue to show our youth. In a lot of ways, we’re
beating ourselves.”
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