The VFW Memorial Trophy, above, is given to the winner of the annual Prune Bowl between San Benito and Gilroy. The Mustangs have won the trophy for the last three years.

In the realm of Prune Bowl lore, three years is an
excruciatingly long time. On Nov. 9, 2007, the San Benito Haybalers
handed the VFW Memorial Trophy over to the Gilroy Mustangs after a
57-27 Prune Bowl loss on its home field. One thousand and ninety
days have passed between that night and Friday’s annual bash
between the two programs with a deep and bitter rivalry.
HOLLISTER

In the realm of Prune Bowl lore, three years is an excruciatingly long time.

On Nov. 9, 2007, the San Benito Haybalers handed the VFW Memorial Trophy over to the Gilroy Mustangs after a 57-27 Prune Bowl loss on its home field.

One thousand and ninety days have passed between that night and Friday’s annual bash between the two programs with a deep and bitter rivalry.

Gilroy’s senior class hasn’t witnessed a loss to San Benito, while conversely, the Baler seniors haven’t had the trophy in their possession — enough motivation to move a mountain, metaphorically speaking.

The premise to this year’s saga is simple: The Balers are fighting for postseason position and a possible share of the Tri-County Athletic League crown, while the Mustangs are playing for pride to salvage a sub-par season. Rivalry games are unpredictable. Teams, players and coaches alike have learned to prepare for anything and expect nothing.

Gilroy’s Central Coast Section playoff hopes hinged on a victory in 2009. This year, the Mustangs are 1-7 and 0-5 in league. There are no playoffs, leaving tonight’s 54th Prune Bowl — and a Week 10 matchup with crosstown foe, Christopher High — the championship-esque games for GHS.

“We are telling the kids that they are playing two bowl games back-to-back,” GHS head coach Greg Garcia said. “They are in their championship season, their postseason. They want it. It’s verbally there. It’s about putting it together.”

Last year’s improbable 35-30 GHS upset victory over San Benito in the 53rd annual Prune Bowl is evidence of that. The back-and-forth battle left one lingering lesson: a desperate team is a dangerous one.

“This is their last game of the league season. This is their most important game of the league season,” San Benito head coach Chris Cameron. “And then next week they have the in-town rivalry now with Christopher, so the last two games of the season, to me, are real meaningful to them. Forget all the other stuff that’s happened throughout the course of the season, these last two games are the season for them.”

Knowing full-well the Mustangs will come out with a chip on their collective shoulder in defense of the trophy they have stored three years in a row, Cameron said execution is what it boils down to for the Balers (5-3 overall, 3-1 in TCAL), whose defense and special teams surrendered kickoff return touchdowns of 85 and 90 yards and a receiving score of 67 yards in last season’s defeat.

“Once practice starts, you don’t think about Gilroy and the trophy and all the rest of that stuff. You think about executing what you’re supposed to execute, and that’s how we’re coaching and that’s how the kids play it during practice,” Cameron said. “You don’t think about, ‘Hey, it’s Gilroy.’ That stuff just kind of goes out the window.”

Each team has its signature-style offense — the Balers’ triple-option attack and the Mustangs’ air attack — and neither will stray from what they do best. But a few trick plays aren’t out of the question.

“We’ve been stoning the run the last couple of weeks pretty good,” Cameron said. “So, I think, they’re gonna come out throwing the ball a little more than they did earlier in the season.”

“It’s about improving every week. That’s the push,” Cameron added. “It’s not the playoffs. It’s not, to me, the so-called hype of the game of the week. It’s about getting better, man. It’s about each kid making an effort to get better every day.”

From Gilroy’s standpoint, stopping the run is first and foremost in keeping the Balers under wraps.

“They are going to say, ‘This is our football. If you want to try and stop us, we are going to catch you some way, shape or form,'” Garcia said.

“Every week we have gotten a little bit better. After the (Palma) game, the respect our team got from their coaches, they told us we were the toughest team they played all year. It showed the kids that they can play with a championship-caliber team.”

Kickoff for Friday’s showdown is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. at Garcia-Elder Sports Complex.

TCAL leaders

Passing

Name, School Com Att Yd Int TD

Fortino, Gilroy 103 202 1388 9 8

Ceralde, N. Salinas 59 136 653 9 3

Barron, Alisal 46 104 611 11 8

Morrison, Palma 51 87 607 5 7

Turner, Alvarez 23 77 469 4 6

Decker, Hollister 26 50 313 2 2

Leighton, Salinas 23 51 215 5 3

Reyes, Alvarez 7 25 96 2 2

Rushing

Name, School Att Yd Avg

Baird, Palma 180 927 5.1

Estassi, Salinas 157 903 5.7

J. Morales, Alisal 103 836 8.1

Hendricks, Hollister 102 710 6.9

Melano, Alvarez 75 631 8.4

Mendoza, N. Salinas 101 549 5.4

Cerda, Salinas 88 439 4.9

A. Reyes, Alvarez 62 423 6.8

Morrison, Palma 65 375 5.7

Vegas, Gilroy 56 353 6.3

Sanchez, Hollister 46 335 7.2

Pearson, Alisal 54 261 4.8

Garcia, Alvarez 37 249 6.7

Gutierrez, Palma 35 221 6.3

Coleman, Salinas 59 219 3.7

Camel, Alvarez 42 214 5.0

Tomas, Alisal 31 209 6.7

Almario, Salinas 19 201 10.5

Myers, Palma 30 185 6.1

R. Travis, Gilroy 35 182 5.2

Zarate, N. Salinas 55 174 3.1

Bocksnick, Hollister 18 167 9.2

J. Travis, Gilroy 10 151 15.1

Rodriguez, Alvarez 26 147 5.6

Salazar, Gilroy 37 123 3.2

Sheppard, Alvarez 9 117 13.0

Rushing touchdown leaders: Baird (Palma) 11, Estassi (Salinas) 10, Morrison (Palma) 6, Hendricks (Hollister) 5, Sanchez (Hollister) 5, Mendoza (N. Salinas) 5, Melano (Alvarez) 5.

Receiving

Name, School Rec Yds Avg

J. Travis, Gilroy 21 325 15.4

Estrada, N. Salinas 19 184 9.6

Flook, Hollister 16 214 13.3

Alba, Gilroy 14 193 13.7

Sherman, Palma 14 185 13.2

Newton, Gilroy 14 136 9.7

Soares, Gilroy 13 348 26.7

Estrada, Alvarez 13 211 16.2

Vegas, Gilroy 11 143 13.0

Harrington, Gilroy 10 119 11.9

Sheppard, Alvarez 9 251 27.8

Ontiveros, Salinas 8 74 9.2

Neff, Palma 8 71 8.8

Coleman, Salinas 8 34 4.0

Allen, Palma 7 109 15.5

Gonzales, N. Salinas 7 84 12.0

C. Reyes, Alvarez 6 93 15.5

Tomas, Alisal 6 86 14.3

Sanchez, N. Salinas 6 83 13.8

Rodriguez, Palma 6 67 11.1

Pearson, Alisal 6 63 10.5

Rosales, Alisal 6 54 9.0

Valdez, Alisal 6 80 13.3

Receiving touchdown leaders: Sheppard (Alvarez) 4, Estrada (Alvarez) 4, J. Travis (Gilroy) 3, Soares (Gilroy) 3, Allen (Palma 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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