GAMES
RANKINGS
Katy Jordan wins first playoff game in first varsity season
KATY—In his team’s inaugural year of varsity competition this season, Katy Jordan boys soccer coach Jason Meekins kept his team’s mission simple.
“Plus one.”
During offseason training, that meant getting “one percent better.” It meant getting physically stronger. It meant striving for the extra.
“We’re playing juniors, freshmen and sophomores,” Meekins said. “In November, our goal was to play one more game after the season, just to make the playoffs.”
In Friday’s Class 5A bi-district playoff game against Lake Creek, with the season on the line, Jordan was plus one.
The Warriors nipped the Lions, 1-0, at Legacy Stadium in the playoff debut for each program. Jordan is in its first year of varsity play. Lake Creek (14-6-3) is in its fourth.
It was the Warriors making history as they exacted revenge on Lake Creek's 1-0 win earlier this season.
“Emotionally, it’s amazing,” sophomore midfielder Ryan Armijo said. “It’s fantastic. We worked all year for this moment. For how many kids came from different schools, we have such good team chemistry.”
.@KatyJordanBSoc celebrating its first playoff win in its first year of varsity play. Tremendous accomplishment. @LethalSoccer @JordanHSAthlet1 @JHSWarriors_ABCpic.twitter.com/lULiTRS9ja— Dennis Silva II (@Dennis Silva II) 1648262245
Jordan broke a scoreless game in the 44th minute. Junior forward Nico Flores’ shot was deflected off the foot of a Lake Creek defender. The ball bounced high into the night. Once it came back down, Lake Creek goalkeeper Kaden Harmann headed the ball toward a teammate, but the pass was intercepted right to the foot of a Warriors striker.
“We were pressing their backline, trying to make them play out instead of playing long,” Meekins said. “In the first half, 70 percent of the game was in their half (of the field). We were creating chances, trying to put numbers, overload them on one side and get their backline to shift. We couldn’t break through. It was really good to get that goal.”
.@KatyJordanBSoc strikes in the 44th minute! And quite a celebration afterward. 1-0 Warriors. @JordanHSAthlet1 @JHSWarriors_ABCpic.twitter.com/7KhOoIMSw2— Dennis Silva II (@Dennis Silva II) 1648258376
The Warriors held off the Lions from there.
Since starting the season 3-4, Jordan is 11-2-2.
“We started off the season shaky and we came back from it,” junior defender Ben Bucic said. “We learned how to work with each other, and we just kept improving and getting better. It’s been a really good season ever since and we’re proud of it.”
Meekins said players have bought in. Katy ISD is a hotbed for soccer. They’ve seen what it takes to be successful, especially for neighbors Seven Lakes and Tompkins.
“They want to build that here,” Meekins said. “I told them before we came here that they have a chance to be the first to do everything. They’ve really taken ownership in that and really thrive in that situation.”
Junior defender Pierce Sanchez, sophomore goalkeeper Elijah Betancourt, and Armijo have been key for the Warriors. Jordan has scored 36 goals and given up just 13 in its last 15 games.
“They work hard and they’re always asking for more,” Meekins said. “We’re always trying to give them as much as we can. We give them a lot of freedom to play, and they take it and run with it. We enjoy watching them just as much as we enjoy coaching them.”
Bucic said the Warriors, who are 14-6-2 overall heading into next week’s area playoff against Austin Crockett in College Station, have nothing to lose. They’re working everything they have.
“We’ve all come together and are playing as a group,” Bucic said. “We practice hard every day and we got here. It feels like something we’ve really, actually built. It’s way more special. It’s great to be a part of it.”
‘Soccer is an expression of who we are:’ Dobie boys enter playoffs district champs for 8th straight year
Pasadena Dobie senior Isaac Cortez often travels two hours, round trip, daily during the offseason to play club soccer in Aldine. It’s not the most decorated of teams, but it’s what he can afford.
During the season, after Longhorn practices, Cortez hurries to Home Depot to work the evening shift, making money to help pay to play club. He’s not alone. Almost every one of his teammates holds a job.
This is the way of life in the South Belt area. It’s the way of life for Dobie soccer players.
“It’s this mentality of knowing we’ve gone through struggles that not a lot of players from other regions and area codes (of Houston) have gone through,” Cortez said. “Waking up extra early just to catch a bus to a game. Going to buy socks right before a game to complete a uniform. It’s a different experience.
“We can do so much for this game that we all love, and we can make it the best experience.”
The byproduct of the commitment of Longhorns players is winning. Lots and lots of winning.
Dobie, of District 22-6A, has won eight straight district championships. Since 2015, the Longhorns hold an overall record of 92-6-14.
They enter Friday’s bi-district playoff game against Atascocita in Deer Park on an eight-game winning streak.
“I always work on them emotionally, like, ‘Hey, those guys don’t want it as bad as you do,’” said head coach Justo Manrique, in his ninth year at the helm of the program. “The game means more to us, and it’s what we want to make them feel. The game means more to me, as a coach.
“We’re not just playing a game. We’re trying to do what’s right. We’re trying to teach the younger guys how to compete, how to act, how to stay out of trouble, how to improve every day. So, a victory for us on the soccer field just means more. Soccer is an expression of who we are.”
After last night\u2019s results\u2026 YOUR LONGHORNS are the 2022 District 22-6A CHAMPIONS!!!! This title makes it 8 CONSECUTIVE DISTRICT CHAMPIONSHIPS for YOUR DOBIE SOCCER LONGHORNS!!!\n2015-2022 92 wins - 6 losses - 14 ties \n#OneDream @DobieHS @PasadenaISD_TXpic.twitter.com/njqKRhQwce— DOBIE BOYS SOCCER (@DOBIE BOYS SOCCER) 1646746530
Manrique said winning district titles has become the expectation. A yearly goal. He demands the best out of his kids during practices so that they can give their all on game nights.
Manrique has implemented discipline, structure, and culture. But all of that means nothing without buy-in from the kids.
“South Belt is a soccer-rich community,” Manrique said. “It’s tradition. El Franco Lee Park has been here a long time. It’s not like Meyer Park or Bear Creek or Katy parks, or a club like Albion or Texans. You won’t find the Dynamo here. It’s pure South Belt. It’s independent, daddy-coached teams, but the kids get a base. They start at the park.”
‘REMEMBER WHERE WE CAME FROM’
It was at El Franco Lee Park in the late 1970s and early 1980s that a soccer league for various age groups was played. A team, South Belt Hotspur, was formed. It played other teams from Clear Lake and anyone anywhere else who wanted a game.
Because of soccer bonding generations of locals, Dobie players have pride in where they come from. They might show up to games in tattered, old uniforms, but they know once they take the field, looks don’t matter.
“In soccer, on the field, everything cancels out,” Manrique said. “We’re going to work harder, because we’ve had to work harder all our lives.”
To be able to play club soccer at a high level outside of school, at a reasonable cost, Dobie players must travel. They have to find a way to play competitively in the offseason. They know their competition is.
“The kids have to hustle,” Manrique said. “They’ve faced challenges like that all their lives, and they like to use it as a chip on their shoulder.”
Only a handful of Dobie players play club soccer. The rest don’t, simply because they don’t have the means. So Manrique tailors in-season practices to be intense and “as hardcore as possible.”
“The group of guys we have has a lot of heart,” Cortez said. “We’re really talented, but we’re passionate. We come from a community that’s not that wealthy, and every time we play, we remember everything we’ve been through, and we remember where we come from.”
Manrique’s practices are more competition-based than drill-based. Game situations are simulated consistently. Manrique likes to have players make their own decisions on the field. He awards freedom and trust for them to be creative.
He wants an attacking team, which means winning the ball back immediately, hustling hard, and running more and harder than the opponent.
Heart and effort is in the DNA of Dobie futbol.
“The kids see it’s game realistic and they’re getting something out of it, so they tend to give their all in practices,” Manrique said. “The intensity in practices is good because it complements what they can get outside of school. As long as they’re good on the ball, we’re going to work with them and try and polish the rest of it.”
Pasadena Dobie boys soccer players huddle as a team before a game earlier this season.Courtesy of Pasadena Dobie Boys Soccer
TEACHING, BELIEVING
Schematically, the Longhorns are more of an amoeba, able to adapt and counter everything and anything thrown their way.
Assistant coach Nicolas Condon, who enjoys martial arts, describes what Dobie does as “soccer Jiu-Jitsu” because of how far Manrique will go to control a game.
Take Cortez, for instance. A four-year varsity starter, arguably the team’s best player, and one of its team captains. Last season, Cortez played exclusively in the center forward. This season, Manrique moved him up top on the left side, giving him more of an attacking responsibility. Cortez started his Longhorns career playing on both the left and right sides.
The Longhorns are constantly changing formations, player positioning, and tactics in practices. It’s a variable style of play.
“It’s his experience and his love for the game,” Cortez said of Manrique. “With that experience, we’re learning all the time.”
Dobie even went through drastic restructuring prior to this season, coming off a 16-4-1 2021 campaign in which the Longhorns won district, but fell to Kingwood in the first round of the playoffs.
Because of an abbreviated, stunted offseason in the summer and fall of 2020 due to COVID-19 restrictions, Manrique said the team’s ways were lost the following season. Bad habits were developed. Attention to details and rules were loose. Discipline was nonexistent. Structure was flimsy.
“A big part of our success is the constant day-to-day teaching,” Manrique said. “We struggled through the whole year, won district, but the playoffs showed we weren’t as good as we could have been.”
The day after the team was eliminated by Kingwood, Manrique told his players things were going to change. The 2021 season was not acceptable.
It was a frustrating year for a coach who harps that the “little things become the big things.”
“We pushed the standard higher on discipline, attitude and grades,” Manrique said. “We lost quite a few players because of all of that. This year, we had a full offseason, full training and a six-month window to really reinvent it.”
Now things are back on track. The Longhorns are optimistic they have what it takes to make a run to the state tournament like they did in 2017, when they fell in the semifinal.
“Ever since I got here to Dobie, it’s always been a great environment,” Cortez said. “It’s a good thing to play for Dobie, and it’s a great accomplishment to win eight straight district championships. It’s never really been a standard as much as it is a tradition. It was never about we had to win it. It’s a product of our passion and talent, to where we all just believed.”