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Denair boys cruise to win, girls fall late in matches with Orestimba
Denair boys soccer 1
Denair’s Diego Padilla is embraced by teammate Octavio Valle after scoring a sixth minute goal to open the scoring in the Coyotes’ 4-1 win over the Orestimba Warriors in Southern Athletic League action on Tuesday night (CANDY PADILLA/The Journal).

Imelda Beltran may be a freshman, but she has already established herself as one of Orestimba’s impact players. On Tuesday evening, she willed the Warriors to a 2-1 comeback victory against the Denair Coyotes in Southern Athletic League action. It was also their fifth straight win.

After falling behind 1-0 in the 18th minute after a Skylynn High goal, Beltran knotted the game up with a 40th minute goal. She put her team up for good with a 20-yard free kick from just outside the penalty box in the 71st minute.

Denair girls soccer
Denair’s Ximena Padilla passes to a teammate in the second half of the Coyotes’ 2-1 loss to the Orestimba Warriors on Tuesday night (CANDY PADILLA/The Journal).

“That kick, I just thought, ‘Take a deep breath. Placement over power. If it goes in, it goes in,” she explained. And it surely went in, sailing over the head of Denair goalie Maryfer Carrillo and into the top left corner of the net. It was a moment of elation for Beltran, but one of frustration and disappointment on Denair’s side of the field.

Head coach Mark Morphy and staff pleaded with the officiating crew that the foul, which was called after contact was made in Beltran by a trio of Coyotes defenders, was too severe, considering the match had been incredibly physical up to that point.

“Unfortunately, they called what I thought was not a good call in a 1-1 ballgame,” Morphy said. “That always messes you up. You have to let them play it out, especially with the way things were going, but it is what it is.”

Beltran acknowledged that the physicality from the Coyotes and other opponents has been a major eye-opener through her first few weeks as a high schooler. It isn’t anything she can’t handle, though.

“It’s physical. The pushes surprised me because I haven’t been used to that, but I’ve played with boys in the past, so it’s similar to playing them,” she explained. 

Beltran also didn’t let the outstanding defense of Carrillo discourage her. By the end of the match, Carrillo had racked up seven saves off of 10 Orestimba shots-on-goal.

“She has been nails for us in the goal box,” Morphy said. “She goes out and gets the ball, kicks it away, she just does everything. We appreciate her efforts.”

Meanwhile, Mariah Avila, Orestimba’s junior goalkeeper, had five saves after the Coyotes launched nine shots-on-goal. High’s score against Avila in the first half was the senior captain’s fifth of the year. As for Beltran, her two goals pushed her season total to seven.

“It was a hard fought game. But every game, there is a winner and a loser,” said Beltran. “They are a good team and we all fought hard.

The Warriors improved their season record to 6-1-2 and their Southern League record to 4-0. On the other end, the Coyotes dropped to 5-5-1 overall and to 2-3 in league play.

 

BOYS: Denair 4 - Orestimba 1 — It was business as usual for the two-time, defending Sac-Joaquin Section Div. VI champions on Tuesday night. After finding themselves tied 1-1 with Orestimba at halftime, the Denair Coyotes found their mojo to end up besting their Southern Athletic League rivals by a 4-1 score.

The Coyotes had their foot on the gas pedal immediately as senior captain Diego Padilla dribbled past defenders and, when he found himself one-on-one with Orestimba goalkeeper Oscar Tovar, skipped an easy goal into the back of the net in the sixth minute.

The Warriors quickly responded less than three minutes later when senior captain Juan Flores fired a shot past Denair’s Sergio Torres.

But Padilla and the Coyotes refused to settle for a draw. Padilla knocked in his second goal of the night before his brother, Goliath scored a goal of his own. The fourth goal came way of Azael Gil.

“Orestimba, they’re tough,” said head coach Antonio Padilla. “But this is a good group. They have the experience.”

Indeed, 13 of the 22 student-athletes on the Coyotes’ roster were members of last year’s Section-clinching team. Of course, their goal is to achieve the prestigious three-peat. 

The win pushed the Coyotes’ overall record to 12-5 overall and to 3-1 in the Southern Athletic League. They remain in second place behind the undefeated Delhi Hawks, who are 3-0-1 in league play and 11-3-1 overall.