James Flook breaks a tackle on a long run late in the game Friday against Palma.

It appears as if the San Benito Haybalers are in the exact same
position as they were last year
— entering the postseason coming off a loss, opening the Central
Coast Section Division I Championships against a lower-seeded
Independence team, and playing with question marks at the
quarterback position. On the surface, it’s really 2009 all over
again. But the similarities aren’t as striking fo
r head coach Chris Cameron, who feels last week’s last-minute
loss to Palma wasn’t nearly as emotionally draining as last year’s
back-to-back losses to both Palma and Gilroy to close out the
regular season.
HOLLISTER

It appears as if the San Benito Haybalers are in the exact same position as they were last year — entering the postseason coming off a loss, opening the Central Coast Section Division I Championships against a lower-seeded Independence team, and playing with question marks at the quarterback position.

On the surface, it’s really 2009 all over again.

But the similarities aren’t as striking for head coach Chris Cameron, who feels last week’s last-minute loss to Palma wasn’t nearly as emotionally draining as last year’s back-to-back losses to both Palma and Gilroy to close out the regular season.

Said Cameron of last week’s Palma match, “The feeling was really good. They were able to move the ball and be ahead of a team that hasn’t been behind much this season.

“Our kids battled throughout the game.”

And they did so with their third-string quarterback for much of the second half.

Once Michael Bocksnick went down with an injury, Garrett Avina came in behind center and sparked a pair of touchdown drives for the Balers, who although trailed 17-6 at halftime, led 21-17 with 3:29 remaining.

The visiting Chieftains managed to swipe certain victory in the final minute en route to a 24-21 win, however, a heartbreaking loss for the Balers.

“We didn’t do too bad (on Monday at practice),” senior fullback Cody Hendricks said. “We did a lot better than I thought we were going to do, especially after coming off a loss to Palma.”

Last year, the Balers were coming off two emotional losses against their two biggest rivals, Palma and Gilroy — the team’s only losses of the regular season. Furthermore, it lost starting quarterback Trevor Fabing — the team’s emotional leader on offense — in the fourth quarter of the regular-season finale against Gilroy, a team they were expected to beat.

Put it all together, and San Benito came out flat last year against Independence in the first half — the cold and wet conditions not helping one bit. It took a turnaround effort in the second half for the Balers to emerge with a 13-9 victory over the visiting 76ers.

“Last year, it was like, ‘blah.’ We weren’t riding a good wave and you could feel it,” Cameron said of the week leading up to the playoffs. “Everything was different.”

The team’s quarterback position appears to be in better sorts entering this postseason than it was a year ago, too. Although Cameron had not named a starter for Friday night’s contest against visiting Independence, the team was practicing with three options on Tuesday, including Avina, freshman call-up Josh George and starting senior Tyler Decker, who was sidelined with an injury during last week’s game against Palma.

“Decker’s going to get better, but we’ll find out by the end of the week,” Cameron said Tuesday. Decker was limited in practice early in the week, while Bocksnick is not expected to play.

“We have more options, but you don’t want to be shorthanded,” Cameron said. “You want to have your guys. If Tyler is playing, we’re pretty much full-go. He’s played pretty much every game this year, and he’s our senior quarterback.”

“But on Friday night,” Cameron later added, “I don’t know whose gonna have their hands underneath center.”

The questions at signal-caller will likely not change what the Balers try to do offensively. Last week, with its third-stringer behind center, San Benito ran its usual brand of offense, with Avina pitching left and right out of the triple-option set.

“He can run the option and he can read it extremely well,” Cameron said last Friday of Avina, who although quarterbacked both the freshmen and junior varsity teams, has played free safety for much of the year.

Aside from the difference in personnel, not much has changed on Independence’s side of the football. The 76ers went 8-2 overall this season and 6-1 in league as champions of the Santa Teresa Division, having won their last four games against Willow Glen, Gunderson, Branham and Evergreen Valley by a combined score of 181-73.

The Sixers’ last loss was on Oct. 15 against Lincoln, a team that is much improved from last year when the Balers routed them 55-0 in San Jose.

Running similar formations as last year — everything from a tight set to a spread-out shotgun — the Sixers possess plenty of speed (“Lots of speed,” Cameron said) and strong special teams (“They return kicks really well, too,” he added).

“They have some pretty big guys on defense, a lot of two-way players,” said Hendricks, who scored the go-ahead touchdown against Independence last year. “I think we’re gonna do a really good job against them offensively, and defensively I think we can stop them.”

Such was the case last year. San Benito limited the Sixers to 174 yards of total offense, 65 of which came on Independence’s only touchdown early in the first quarter.

While the San Jose school has averaged 37 points per game this year, limiting the Sixers on offense would be a telling sign — the only team to have shut out Independence this year is Piedmont Hills, the top-seeded team in the Division I bracket.

“It doesn’t seem like anyone wants to stop playing yet,” said Cameron, who noted how important the emotional aspect of the game is, especially this late in the season.

“It’s been a long stretch of time, since August,” he said. “Making it here, you obviously have to play well. But you’ve got to want to compete. You want to play hard and you want to compete, and sometimes that’s why it works.

“If you want to come out and be excited about it, it’s that much easier.”

Kickoff is Friday night at 7 p.m. at Andy Hardin Stadium.

TCAL Leaders

Passing

Name, School Com Att Yd Int TD

Fortino, Gilroy 149 292 2068 11 18

Ceralde, N. Salinas 80 183 909 12 6

Morrison, Palma 64 112 687 5 7

Turner, Alvarez 31 105 671 6 7

Barron, Alisal 49 114 625 13 8

Decker, Hollister 28 55 328 2 2

Leighton, Salinas 28 58 322 5 5

Bocksnick, Hollister 9 13 130 1 0

Reyes, Alvarez 8 26 128 2 3

Rosales, Alisal 11 20 119 2 1

Rushing

Name, School Att Yd Avg

Baird, Palma 229 1252 5.4

Estassi, Salinas 201 1125 5.5

J. Morales, Alisal 139 996 7.1

Melano, Alvarez 97 848 8.7

Hendricks, Hollister 127 829 6.5

Morrison, Palma 100 568 5.6

Mendoza, N. Salinas 101 549 5.4

Cerda, Salinas 107 528 4.9

Sanchez, Hollister 58 527 9.0

A. Reyes, Alvarez 73 464 6.3

Vegas, Gilroy 74 436 5.8

Coleman, Salinas 81 425 5.2

Pearson, Alisal 62 294 4.7

Myers, Palma 41 285 6.9

Camel, Alvarez 55 282 5.1

Almario, Salinas 31 271 8.7

Garcia, Alvarez 44 267 6.0

Bocksnick, Holl 31 249 8.0

Tomas, Alisal 43 236 5.4

R. Travis, Gilroy 41 228 5.5

Gutierrez, Palma 35 221 6.3

Carter, N. Salinas 74 215 2.9

Zarate, N. Salinas 56 181 3.2

Rodriguez, Alvarez 31 168 5.4

J. Travis, Gilroy 10 151 15.1

Sheppard, Alvarez 14 145 10.3

Decker, Hollister 88 139 1.5

Flook, Hollister 30 134 4.4

Tapia, Alisal 15 131 8.7

Salazar, Gilroy 37 123 3.2

Rushing touchdown leaders: Baird (Palma) 13, Morrison (Palma) 11, Estassi (Salinas) 11, Hendricks (Hollister) 8, Sanchez (Hollister) 7, Melano (Alvarez) 7, Bocksnick (Hollister) 6, Mendoza (N. Salinas) 5, Pearson (Alisal) 5, Coleman (Salinas) 5.

Receiving

Name, School Rec Yds Avg

J. Travis, Gilroy 32 488 15.2

Soares, Gilroy 29 661 22.7

Estrada, N. Salinas 25 256 10.2

Sherman, Palma 20 228 11.4

Flook, Hollister 17 224 13.1

Newton, Gilroy 17 159 9.3

Alba, Gilroy 16 220 13.7

Sanchez, N. Salinas 15 210 14.0

Vegas, Gilroy 15 174 11.6

Estrada, Alvarez 14 243 17.3

Sheppard, Alvarez 12 342 28.5

Allen, Palma 10 130 13.0

Harrington, Gilroy 10 119 11.9

Gonzales, N. Salinas 9 119 13.2

Ontiveros, Salinas 9 92 10.2

Neff, Palma 9 81 9.0

Coleman, Salinas 9 35 3.8

Pearson, Alisal 8 75 9.3

Almario, Salinas 7 150 21.4

C. Reyes, Alvarez 7 122 17.4

Valdez, Alisal 7 97 13.8

Tomas, Alisal 7 86 12.2

Ross, Palma 7 58 7.4

Receiving touchdown leaders: Soares (Gilroy) 9, J. Travis (Gilroy) 5, Estrada (Alvarez) 5, Sheppard (Alvarez) 4, Allen (Palma) 3, Almario (Salinas) 3, Estrada (N. Salinas) 3, Sanchez (N. Salinas) 3.

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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