2013: It’s a Brave(s) New World!

Will it be once every 57 years?

That’s how long it took El Cajon Valley High to win its first league basketball championship, a feat not accomplished since the school opened in the 1955-56 school year.

The Braves (19-8) have yet to enter the UT-San Diego basketball poll Top 10 but  their exploits have created a stir along Main Street in the city sometimes known as the Big Box.

A 69-61 victory over Mount Miguel, in which Andre Nikkita scored 41 points (30 in the second half) gave El Cajon Valley a 7-1 league record and championship of the Grossmont Valley circuit.

The Braves open the San Diego Section II playoffs at home against Serra (16-10) Wednesday night, Feb. 21.

Nikkita, the County’s leading scorer with 764 points, is averaging 28.3 points in 27 games. He needs nine points to break the school record of 772, set by Kemmy Burgess, who averaged 29.7 in 26 games in 1997-98.

Nikkita (arms around teammates' shoulders) leads Braves into playoffs.
Nikkita (sixth from left, with arms around teammates’ shoulders) leads Braves into playoffs.

Scribe Bill Dickens has been following East County teams since the 1960s.

“They had some good teams in the Bill Walton era (1969-70 at Helix), but who could tell?” said Dickens, citing the achievements were such of the Highlanders, 61-2 in two seasons,  that all else was overshadowed.

SEEDINGS SET

If playoff seedings, determined after last Friday’s final regular-season games, stay true through the first three rounds, these Nos. 1 and 2 seeds will meet in the finals of each division:

I, Mission Hills-El Camino.

II, La Costa Canyon-Hoover.

III, Cathedral Catholic-St. Augustine.

IV, Army-Navy-Mater Dei Catholic.

V, Horizon-Foothills Christian.

UT-San Diego weekly poll:

First-place votes in parenthesis.

Place

Team

Record

Points

Last Week

1

Cathedral Catholic (9)

24-3

125

1

2

Army-Navy (2)

23-4

115

2

3

La Costa Canyon (2)

22-4

105

3

4

St. Augustine

21-4

93

4

5

Hoover

25-5

72

T5

6

Mission Hills

23-4

52

7

7

San Marcos

24-4

49

T5

8

El Camino

23-5

44

8

9

San Ysidro

22-7

23

9

10

Morse

22-7

10

10



1960-61: Where’s Aretha? Mustangs Want Respect

It was a question never answered, because it seldom was asked.

Which was the better team? The 25-1 San Dieguito Mustangs, who won the Class A championship, or the tradition-rich, 24-3 Hoover Cardinals, who won the AA title in the 1960-61,  first season of the CIF San Diego Section .

Some 50 years later a reader of this website suggested I write a story about that San Dieguito team.

My initial reaction was, why didn’t  I press the issue in 1961 and get Hoover coach Charlie Hampton to address the subject after the San Dieguito coach declared his Mustangs team the best?

Or confront CIF commissioner Don Clarkson and have him explain why the Mustangs wouldn’t be allowed to participate in the AA (large schools) playoffs, despite their almost-unbeaten record against bigger schools.

I was a cub reporter on the Evening Tribune, out of Lincoln High, and I thought all things started and ended with the Eastern League, of which Hoover was a member.

My colleague, Roger Conlee, covered County schools and leaned heavily to the Grossmont and Metropolitan leagues.  The Avocado League was held in slightly more regard than the tiny Southern League.

Underrated Mustangs, from lower left: Coach McCracken, Ted Repa. Randy Simpson, John Fairchild, Jim Gonzales.
Underrated Mustangs, from lower left: Coach McCracken, Ted Repa. Randy Simpson, John Fairchild, Larry Scholl, and Jim Gonzales.

This was a terrific San Dieguito team, led by  6-foot, 7-inch senior John Fairchild, who would be a standout at Brigham Young University and play for the Los Angeles Lakers and other professional teams over a six-year period.

Conlee and I believed otherwise, I guess.  There were weeks when the Mustangs were not even in the Tribune’s Top 10, compiled by the two of us. Late in the season San Dieguito’s 16-1 record wasn’t good enough.  Sweetwater (5-8) and Point Loma (7-8) were considered more worthy.

North County squads, other than Escondido, didn’t get much currency in those days.  Bias definitely favored the city.  The population swing and subsequent North County power emergence still was years away.

Roger Conlee finally took a trip late in the season up U.S. 101 to Bing Crosby Hall, a cavernous barn on the Del Mar Fairgrounds which served as the Mustangs’ home court.

Conlee saw San Dieguito dispatch Vista, 49-40, before about 2,000 partisans.  The victory was  the 17th in a row  in a streak that began after a 54-47 loss to Helix in the season’s opening game.

Mustangs coach Dick McCracken, who posted a 40-6 record in his two seasons, spoke out after the game.

“I’m sure proud of this team,” McCracken told Conlee.  “I only hope we can get into the large school playoffs (Avocado League squads were consigned to the small schools alignment, reserved for schools with less than 1,500 enrollment).

Then McCracken elaborated:

“The only point I’d like to make is that we beat the two teams (Hilltop and Kearny) that beat Hoover. I think we can beat Hoover, too.  We have better shooters.  The only thing which might beat us would be the coaching.  I’m no Charlie Hampton.”

Hoover's AA titlists, front row from left: Jim Surber, Rich Keely, Dave Morehead, Rick Potter, coach Hampton. Top row: Nick Alessio, Nick Barket, Dave Sickels, Wilson Moore.
Hoover’s AA titlists, front row from left: Jim Surber, Rich Keeley, Dave Morehead, Rick Potter, coach Hampton. Top row: Nick Alessio,player-of-the-year Nick Barkett, Dave Sickels, Wilson Moore.

(Hampton was the legendary Hoover coach who compiled a .774 won-loss percentage in 11 seasons and posted a 223-65 record).

Coronado coach Don Valliere weighed in on the subject after a 67-49 loss to Fairchild and company.

“San Dieguito without question has the best basketball team in the County,” said Valliere.   “They may not play defense as well as Hoover, but all in all they’re better.”

The final Tribune Top 10, published before the playoffs:
1—Hoover, 21-3.
2—Hilltop, 19-5.
3—Lincoln, 16-7.
4—Point Loma, 13-9.
5—San Dieguito, 22-1.
6—Crawford, 14-8.
7—Clairemont, 12-10.
8—Grossmont, 12-8.
9—Chula Vista, 10-10.
10—Escondido, 13-10.
10—Ramona, 21-1.

San Dieguito rolled through the Class A playoffs, beating El Cajon Valley, 73-57, Kearny, 66-53, and Sweetwater, 54-46.  Hoover won the AA title, defeating Chula Vista, 63-36, Hilltop, 56-49, and Point Loma, 66-53.

There would be no matchup of city and county powerhouses.  Section commissioner Clarkson  hadn’t considered allowing the Mustangs into the AA playoffs.

So the season ended.

With apologies to Aretha Franklin, the Mustangs also deserved a little R-e-s-p-e-c-t!




2013: UT-San Diego’s All-Time, All-County Football Team

FIRST TEAM OFFENSE

Quarterback Ezell Singleton San Diego 1958
Running Backs C. R. Roberts Oceanside 1953
Tyler Gaffney Cathedral Catholic 2008
Darrin Wagner Lincoln 1987
Receivers Patrick Rowe Lincoln 1986
Art Powell San Diego 1954
Line Jack Harrington Rancho Buena Vista 1988
Lincoln Kennedy Morse 1988
Steve Riley Castle Park 1968
Robbie Coffin Mira Mesa 1983
Steve Vieria Carlsbad 1999
Athletes Deron Johnson San Diego 1955
Charlie Powell San Diego 1950
Reggie Bush Helix 2002
Bill Fudge El Capitan 1970

FIRST TEAM DEFENSE

Line Ed Imo Kearny 1973
La’Roi Glover Point Loma 1991
Tamasi Amituani Vista 1988
Arthur Smith Lincoln 1963
Linebackers Junior Seau Oceanside 1986
Pisa Tinoisamoa Vista 1998
Greg Slough Point Loma 1964
Travis Hitt Grossmont 1971
Secondary Marcus Allen Lincoln 1977
Willie Buchanon Oceanside 1968
Monte Jackson St. Augustine 1970
Eric Allen Point Loma 1982
Athletes Dave Grayson Lincoln  1956
Dokie Williams El Camino 1977
Darnay Scott Kearny 1990
Kicker Noel Prefontaine El Camino 1991

SECOND TEAM OFFENSE

Quarterback Sal Aunese Vista 1985
Running backs Dillon Baxter Mission Bay 2010
Michael Hayes San 1974
Markeith Ross Rancho Buena Vista 1989
Receivers Glenn Kozlowski Carlsbad 1980
Harold (Brick) Muller San Diego 1916
Line Erik Magnuson La Costa Canyon 2011
Pete Adams University 1968
Pulu Poumele Oceanside 1989
Volney Peters Hoover 1947
Hobbs Adams San Diego 1922
Athletes Cleveland Jones San Diego 1956
Teddy Lawrence Morse 1990
Allan Clark San Marcos 1973
Cotton Warburton San Diego 1930

SECOND TEAM DEFENSE

Line David Gates Morse 1994
Jimmy Gunn Lincoln 1965
Dan Saleaumua Sweetwater 1981
Ty Morrison Morse 1988
Linebackers Ted Johnson Carlsbad 1991
Frank Stephens San Diego 1974
Donnie Edwards Chula Vista 1990
Zeke Moreno Castle Park 1996
Secondary Leon Hall Vista 2002
Bryant Westbrook El Camino 1992
Chuck Cecil Helix 1982
Willie West San Diego 1955
Athletes Nate Shaw Lincoln 1962
Jose Perez Oceanside 2002
Lenny McGill Orange Glen 1988
Kicker Scott Webb Helix 1982

THIRD TEAM OFFENSE

Quarterback Pete Gumina San Diego 1955
Running backs Roger Price Vista 1985
Ricky Williams Henry 1994
Rashaan Salaam La Jolla Country Day 1991
Receivers Bill McColl Hoover 1947
Kenny Stills La Costa Canyon 2009
Line John Michaels La Jolla 1990
Tom Dabasinskas San Pasqual 1985
Tom Dahms San Diego 1944
Calvert Fackrell San Diego 1957
Sale Isaia Oceanside 1989
Athletes J.J. Stokes Point Loma 1989
Bill Dunckel Fallbrook 1986 1986
Touissant Tyler El Camino 1976
Wally Henry Lincoln 1973

THIRD TEAM DEFENSE

Line Russell Tialavea Oceanside 1985
Darrell Russell St. Augustine 1993
Okland Salavea Oceanside 1985
Dan Daris Oceanside 1975
Linebackers Barry McKeever San Pasqual 1983
Jeff Staggs Point Loma 1961
David Lewis Lincoln 1972
Brandon Chillar Carlsbad 1999
Secondary John Lynch Torrey Pines 1988
Jim Smith Kearny 1963
Stefan McClure Vista 2010
Ronnie Cortell Sweetwater 1984
Athletes Frank Green Coronado 1929
Pesky Sprott San Diego 1916
Jerome Price University City 1989
Kicker Nate Tandberg Rancho Bernardo 1995

—–
Team chosen by:
Steve Brand, retired U-T staff writer;
Nick Canepa, U-T columnist;
Bill Center, U-T staff writer;
Jess Kearney, U-T deputy sports editor;
John Maffei, U-T staff writer;
Terry Monahan, U-T staff writer; and
Rick Smith, San Diego sports historian.




2013: Cathedral Holds Sway as Playoffs Near

With nine days until the first round of San Diego Section playoffs,  Cathedral Catholic still is No. 1.

UT-San Diego’s CIF basketball ratings did not change from the previous week.

One through 10, no one moved up or down, although Army-Navy cleared up a nettling mark on its record.

The Warriors, 21-4 and ranked second, defeated La Jolla Country Day, 72-36,  in a rematch of its upset,  44-43 loss to the Torreys Jan. 15.

St. Augustine defeated La Jolla 76-41 and Olympian 74-41 last week and commemorated a special moment in the Saints’ history.

OLD RIVALS MEET AGAIN

Tom Shaules, who set a County record of 60 points in a 102-38 win over Crawford in 1958, was honored at halftime of the Olympian contest, which the Saints led 56-16 after 16 minutes.

Among those who came to see Shaules was an old rival, San Diego High’s Arthur (Hambone) Williams, who was part of two hard-fought games with the Saints in 1958.  Shaules’s team won the first game on the Saints’ floor, 62-56.  Hambone and the Cavers won the rematch at San Diego, 65-57.

MAVERICKS GET RESPECT

La Costa Canyon battled state No. 4 Etiwanda before bowing 56-51.  The Mavericks are fourth in San Diego but the highest-ranked County team as judged by Max-Preps, which has them 17th in Southern California.  Cathedral is 19th.

First-place votes in parenthesis

Team+Record+Points+Last Week

 

 

 

 

 

1

Cathedral Catholic (9)

22-3

125

1

2

Army-Navy (2)

21-4

115

2

3

La Costa Canyon (2)

22-4

104

3

4

St. Augustine

19-4

95

4

5

San Marcos

23-3

68

5

5

Hoover

23-5

68

6

7

Mission Hills

21-4

52

7

8

El Camino

22-4

44

8

9

San Ysidro

20-7

20

9

10

Morse

20-7

7

10

Others receiving votes: Mt. Carmel (16-11, 4 points), Torrey Pines (16-9, 3), Westview (18-7 , 3), Mater Dei (20-5, 2), Santa Fe Christian (17-7, 2).




2013: Army-Navy Rises in Poll

Army-Navy, gathering steam behind the long, shot-blocking, 7-foot, 1 inch Cheikh N’Diaye and slick-shooting guard Devin Watson now is second in the UT-San Diego boys’ basketball poll.

N’Diaye had six blocked shots and 20 rebounds to with his 20 points and Watson scored 29 as the Warriors eased past Santa Fe Christian 64-53 in a Coastal League battle last week.

Earlier in the week Army-Navy defeated Horizon 71-54.

The Cadets still trail Cathedral Catholic in the poll, although they earned a 67-61 victory over the Dons last month.

Place

Team

Record

Points

Last Week

1

Cathedral Catholic (9)

20-3

124

1

2

Army-Navy (2)

19-4

114

3

3

La Costa Canyon (2)

15-4

104

4

4

St. Augustine

17-4

102

3

5

San Marcos

21-3

68

6

6

Hoover

21-5

64

7

7

Mission Hills

19-4

50

8

8

El Camino

20-4

32

5

8

San Ysidro

18-6

30

9

10

Morse

20-5

28

10

Also receiving votes: Torrey Pines (15-8, 6 points); Santa Fe Christian (16-6, 1); Westview (16-7, 1).




1957: Downey Gives Cavers Tummyache

San Diego had two teams in the Southern California finals and another poised to advance, but neither could get over the hurdle.

Three losses by the area’s best, based on enrollment size, made for a  bitterly disappointing end to a difficult and unprecedented season, made uneven and often unimportant by the invasion of a virus known as the Asian Flu.

San Diego High won  11 consecutive games at the big table, then fell flat and lost in the championship, 24-7, to Downey. The Cavers also lost in the finals in 1925, ’33, and ’47.

Ramona, after sitting for three weeks with canceled or postponed games, was beaten by Bishop 33-0 in  finals for the smallest schools,  those with under 500 enrollment.

Visiting Santa Ana Mater Dei defeated Escondido, 20-14 after the Cougars had eliminated Calexico, 48-12.

Defense was hallmark of Cavemen. from left: Neal Petties, Manuel Darisay, Mike Ritchey, Robert Fowler, Carlos Gutierrez, Calvert Fackrell, Larry Landon, George Coggins.

SLEIGHT OF HAND

Quarterback Pete Yoder of Downey almost faked San Diego High out of Aztec Bowl, where some 12,500 persons were on hand, including 22 busloads of red-clad partisans who ventured down U.S. 101 to support the visiting Vikings and arrived two-and-a-half hours before kickoff.

(The Downey supporters  also were hungry, setting an Aztec Bowl record at the concession stands, according to San Diego State official Spence Gartz).

Downey had knocked out San Diego, 35-21, in the first round of the 1956 playoffs, when the Vikings were  on a fast track to a legendary championship game that would pit Downey’s Randy Meadows against Anaheim’s famed Mickey Flynn.

San Diego was favored in the rematch.

After starting the season with a loss and a tie, Downey kicked in with 11 straight victories.

Art Buchanan was in the open field for one of the few times, but Dallas Moon, hidden by Caver Robert Felix and the Vikings’ Roger Malstead (79) and Jim Quinn (99) hounded San Diego runners all night.

CAVERS GO BELLY UP

Yoder flawlessly ran  the so-called belly series, in which the quarterback attempts to confuse the defense by appearing to hand off to a ball carrier, then withdraws the ball and hands off to another or runs or passes.

The Vikings rushed for 293 yards, including 194 in the second half.  San Diego ran only six offensive plays in the third quarter and just 16 in the second half.  Downey was successful on one of two onside kickoffs after intermission.

San Diego narrowed the score to 18-7 with 8:45 remaining in the game, then did not see the ball again until 15 seconds were left as the Vikings played keep-away.

The Cavers never figured out the Downey offense.

Cavers coach Duane Maley, who was thinking about retirement and moving into administration, was shocked but not at a loss for words.

“Our line didn’t hold up,” Maley said to Jerry Magee of The San Diego Union.  “We made too many mistakes and they didn’t make any.  We’re not that bad and they’re not that good.”

The Cavemen had swept the City Prep League, then outpointed Sweetwater, 31-7, Montebello, 27-7, and Whittier, 20-6, to gain their sixth trip to the finals 41 years.

HONORS

San Diego tackle Calvert Fackrell was a first-team all-CIF Southern Section choice. End and teammate Neal Petties and quarterback Ezell Singleton were on the second team.

San Diego’s Mike Kellough (arrow), scored one-yard touchdown in Cavers’ 31-7 playoff victory over Sweetwater. Red Devils’ Bill Hill (44) is blocked by San Diego’s Willie McCloud  Albert Belmontez (29) and Joe Meeker (21) of Sweetwater observe, while San Diego’s Iva Tucker (right, on ground) gets up-close look and Roy Pharis (42) surveys backdrop.

Teen magazine named Fackrell, Lincoln quarterback Russ Boehmke and Coronado halfback Hal Tobin to its all-America team.  Boehmke and Tobin received honorable mention on the Wigwam Wisemen of America all-star squad. Seven teams were selected with Jim Josephson of San Jose the only Californian on the first squad.

Tobin was the Southern Section lower division co-player of the year with Santa Ana’s Henry Enriquez. Center Mike Heyn of Coronado and back Gordon Frank of Escondido were on the second team.

NOT THAT BISHOP

Ramona’s opponent in the smallest schools finals was not the private institution in La Jolla, which was years from fielding a football team.

The Bulldogs took on a team located at the foot of the Eastern High Sierras in a small community not unlike Ramona’s, although sitting a couple thousand feet higher.

Bishop bused more than seven hours and 355 miles south, but it was the host Bulldogs who lacked energy. The visiting Broncos scored in every quarter.  Ramona twice advanced to the visitors’ 20-yard line but gave up the ball.

Ramona may not have  recovered from it first playoff trip, to Needles, where the Bulldogs topped the host Mustangs, 20-18.

Ramona to Needles is about 180 miles as the crow flies, but approximately 307 miles via major highways U.S. 395 and U.S. 66 after a 20-mile jaunt from the the Bulldogs mountain community on State 67.

There were other, shorter distances on rural highways but those might not have gotten the Bulldogs there any sooner.

P.D. Jernigan, later known later as Pete during a 10-season career mostly spent the baseball AAA Pacific  Coast League, was a contributor to Mount Miguel’s surprising, first-year record of 5-3.

MONARCHS RUN AND RUN

Escondido outgained Mater Dei, 364 yards to 359, but the Monarchs, guided by future NFL coach Dick Coury, rushed for 340 yards and, after building a 20-7 halftime advantage, held off the Cougars before 6,500 persons at Escondido.

The visitors came on the field in a military double time and ran their plays with soldierly precision. Fullback Henry Enriquez kept the Cougars at a distance by rushing for 171 yards in 26 carries and scored on a 32-yard run.

The Monarchs topped Claremont, 20-14, for the Southern Group title and San Marino beat Pomona Catholic, 26-13, for the Northern Group championship, both divisions for small schools.

SAINTS FINALLY FIND THEIR NICHE

St. Augustine joined the City Prep League after decades on the outside.

The school opened in 1922 and played its first game in 1924, then meandered through the years with a “Have-Team-Give-Us-A-Game” mantra.

The Saints were in the Southern Prep League from 1941-43 but their games did not count in the standings.

St. Augustine was a member of the Los Angeles-area Southland Catholic League from 1945-50. Travel was costly for the small, private school, which teetered on athletic insolvency.

The Rev. John  R. Aherne joined the school faculty in 1942 and was named principal in 1952. The 6-foot, 5-inch Aherne became a towering figure in the community.

Aherne, with Bob Breitbard, and Notre Dame athletic director Moose Krause, held swat at Appreciation Night.
Aherne (left), with Bob Breitbard, and Notre Dame athletic director Moose Krause, led St. Augustine.

Aherne lobbied the media, enjoyed power lunches with civic big shots at the Grant Grille downtown and Lubach’s on Harbor Drive,  and was the driving force behind St. Augustine’s “Appreciation Night” which was first held in 1955 and became an event so large in scope that principal speakers included major college coaches and some of the country’s leading sports figures.

City schools, uneasy about St. Augustine’s ability to recruit in their school districts, possible conflicting  eligibility issues, and that the Saints represented the  Catholic faith, finally let them into the club.

In its 33rd year of football St. Augustine at last had some local partners.

Russ Boehmke completed 16×25 passes for 207 yards and ran 43 yards for a touchdown in Lincoln’s 20-7 win over Point Loma.

THREE NEWCOMERS IN THE VILLAGE

Crawford opened on 55th Street in East San Diego, taking a huge chunk of Hoover’s enrollment.

Carlsbad finally broke off from Oceanside and went out on its own, but students still attended classes in the building at Oceanside High.  There no longer was an Oceanside-Carlsbad High.

Helping itself to Helix and Grossmont expatriates, Mount Miguel rose in Spring Valley, in the shadow of the 2,559-foot Mount San Miguel.

Crawford and Carlsbad essentially played junior varsity opponents. The teams’ varsities met and  Carlsbad defeated Crawford 20-13, on John Penrod’s 85-yard pass interception return.

OLE!

Mount Miguel’s Matadors had some impressive firsts.  Rocky Barsotti scored a touchdown the first time Mount Miguel had the ball in the Metropolitan League carnival.

Wayne Summers returned the opening kickoff 80 yards for a touchdown and the Bullfighters dispatched Mar Vista 20-6 in their first-ever game.

Coach Tom Welbaum, who left Helix to Dick Gorrie when the Mount Miguel position opened, directed the new school to an impressive, 5-3 start. Included were victories over big brothers Grossmont, 32-14,  and Helix, 21-19.

Sweetwater’s Bob Jordan intercepted pass by San Diego’s Ezell Singleton and looked to avoid Cavers defender Art Buchanan (22).

AVOCADO COACHES WAVE WHITE FLAG

There was  no question that coach Bob (Chick) Embrey’s Escondido Cougars were a landslide choice to win the Avocado League.

Oceanside’s John Simcox described the Cougars as “sure winners”.

“Escondido could lose its eleven starters and still have a club which could take the league,” said Mar Vista’s Art Filson.

The Cougars are “twice as good” as anyone else, said Vista’s Harry Johnston.

Pessimist Embrey tried to downplay his club’s prospects, but wasn’t convincing:  “I thought it might be our year to really go, but in addition to…injuries (17 players reportedly out for awhile), our line hasn’t been coming around.”

The Cougars were undefeated in league play (6-0) and outscored its brethren 239-52 en route to a 9-1 campaign. A 47-6 win over Fallbrook gave Escondido a sendoff of 18 consecutive league wins.

HIGH-STEPPING HAL

Coronado’s Hal Tobin (below) was the leading scorer in Southern California with 144 points in nine games, although Escondido held Tobin to 51 yards in 18 carries and one touchdown when the Cougars routed the Islanders 49-18 in the Avocado League’s biggest game.

Tobin, who would continue on to play at USC, finished with 1,029 yards in 127 carries for an  8.5-yard average in leading the undermanned Islanders to a 5-4 record.

Tobin was unique in pursuit of points after touchdowns.  He ran for the point by lining up 8 yards behind the center and taking a direct snap.

Tobin kept Islanders afloat.

STEP RIGHT UP!

Writer Jerry Magee of The San Diego Union let it all hang out in the lead on his story for the City Schools’ carnival:  “Some 300 strutting girls…eight bands, music, pageantry, and football derring do–and all for the price of a single admission!”

Magee described a “sideshow hawker in a checked vest” employing such a spiel to describe the 19th annual event, which drew 20,000 to Balboa Stadium.  On the same night the Metropolitan League carnival was viewed by an overflow crowd of 12,500 in Aztec Bowl.

The East’s Kearny, Point Loma, Lincoln, and San Diego outscored the West, 24-0, as each squad scored a touchdown in the City League extravaganza.  El Cajon, Mount Miguel, and Helix of the East topped Grossmont, Chula Vista, and Sweetwater of the West 13-6 in the suburbans’ fourth annual carnival.

SIGN OF THE TIMES

The state division of highways announced plans for a four-lane road from San Diego to Yuma, Arizona.

“When the freeway is completed you will be able to drive from San Diego to Yuma without encountering a stoplight or intersecting road,” said Jacob Dakema, district highway engineer.

The trip would obviously be  faster but also shorter, said Dakema.  The Highway 80 route covers 178 miles.  The interstate drive will be 173 miles.

The freeway will be part of the Interstate Highway System, inaugurated in 1956 by President Eisenhower partly as a means of quicker transportation and mobilization of troops in event of a crisis in the Cold War with the Soviet Union.

THE KEARNY COMET

Ed Buchanan  of Kearny led the CPL with 86 points in eight games and scored 53 consecutive points for the Komets, including the last touchdown in a 13-13 tie with Point Loma.  He scored  all of his team’s points in a 26-13 win over St. Augustine and 13-6 triumph over Hoover, and the first seven points in a 44-20 win over Mission Bay.

Buchanan kept Kearny in the game every week.

The 165-pound, :09.6 100-yard dasher passed 50 yards to Kenny Griffin for the second touchdown against Mission Bay, then returned a punt 75 yards for the third touchdown.

Buchanan, who rushed 24 times for 209 yards against St. Augustine, had two additional touchdowns against the Saints nullified by penalties.

Buchanan went on to an outstanding career at San Diego Junior College, was a nine-season player in the Canadian Football League, and was named to the Saskatchewan Roughriders all-time team.

YUMANS IMPRESSED

San Diego did not have  benefit of the new highway, as it bused to  Arizona  over the circuitous U.S. 80.

Quarterback Ezell Singleton completed 14 of 16 passes (the two incompletes were drops) as the Cavers wowed an overflow crowd of 9,000 and defeated the Yuma Criminals 40-0, with a demonstration of ball control.

Four of the Cavers’ six touchdowns  came on drives of 60, 79, 65, and 75 yards. Highlight of the game, however, was a point after touchdown.

The play began with Singleton taking the snap from center, but Singleton soon was trapped by a horde of defenders.  The quarterback lateraled the ball to Bobby Anderson, over Anderson’s head.  The elusive halfback recovered and weaved his way 25 yards into the end zone.

Point Loma coach Bennie Edens apparently also was the team’s part-time trainer, administering to end Ted Faris.

REALIGNMENT

Escondido, twice the size of other Avocado League schools with an enrollment of almost 1,400, will return to the Metropolitan League in 1958.  The Cougars were in the Metro from 1933-42 as one of the original members. They were part of a CIF-designated Group 12 affiliate from 1943-45.

Escondido returned to the Metro in 1946 and became a charter member of the Avocado League in 1954.

City Prep League bosses met for five hours and adjourned with a plan to realign in 1958 with two divisions in basketball and baseball.  Football would continue with one round-robin schedule. La Jolla would continue to be a member, but its games would not count in football.

A new high school, James Madison in Clairemont, reportedly would open in 1958 with its teams competing on a junior varsity level for one year. Madison would bring to 10 the number of CPL schools.

Lincoln, St. Augustine, Hoover, San Diego, and Point Loma would form one division and Kearny, Mission Bay, La Jolla, Crawford, and Madison would be in the other.

Realignment would come in the city with advent of the Eastern and Western Leagues but not until 1959.  Madison would not open until 1962. And La Jolla returned to league standings in 1958 after two seasons in which its games did not count.

Hoover coach Roy Engle declared tackle Don Loshonkohl had “the biggest hands I’ve ever seen.”

REVENUE AND LIGHTS

Lincoln vice principal George Parry attended the re-leaguing meeting and pointed out that the issue of facilities never came up and that only three of the nine CPL schools had lights: La Jolla, Hoover, and San Diego/Balboa Stadium.

Parry revealed that Lincoln realized about $2,000 as its share of gate receipts for a night game in Balboa Stadium with St. Augustine. Lincoln’s share for an afternoon contest with visiting Kearny was about $200, Parry said, stressing the need for more fields with lights.

THE GAMBLER

Shan Deniston always thought the odds were in his favor.

The new Lincoln coach faced a fourth down and three yards to go at Lincoln’s eight-yard line in a game in which the Hornets trailed at Point Loma 7-6 early in the fourth quarter.

Fullback Dick Carey wedged for the first down and Lincoln went on to complete a 99-yard drive, scoring on quarterback Russ Boehmke’s 43-yard dash. Lincoln won, 20-7.

Deniston tested his luck again in Balboa Stadium against San Diego.

After stopping the Cavers on Lincoln’s 5, 20, 16, and 4-yard lines in the first half, the Hornets were on their 36-yard line with  fourth-and-two.  Less than a minute remained in the half.

Cavers' Bobby Anderson, aided by Manuel Darisay's block, pulled away from Lincoln's Jerry Puerile and Gene Sickles to put San Diego ahead.
Cavers’ Bobby Anderson, aided by Manuel Darisay’s block, pulled away from Lincoln’s Jerry Puerile and Gene Sickles.

Lincoln passed incomplete and San Diego took over. On the next play Bobby Anderson zigzagged through the Hornets’ defense to score with 35 seconds left in the half.  San Diego won, 13-7.

Hoover’s Roy Engle strangely rolled the dice against Mount Miguel.

Art Samuel and John Erickson had combined on a 50-yard touchdown pass play to put the Cardinals ahead 21-14 with a minute to play.

Hoover then stunned its home crowd by attempting an on-side kickoff.  The Cardinals recovered and quickly scored again in a 28-14 victory.

SANGUINARY FLOW

“We’ve tasted the tiger’s blood and like the taste,” said Chula Vista coach Bob Geyer after the Spartans surprised Helix’ defending Metropolitan League champion, 32-19, and went on  to a 28-6 win over Mount Miguel and 52-19 victory over El Cajon Valley before a 20-13 loss to Sweetwater in the  title-deciding final game.

1957 or 1954?

Only the first names changed.  Hoover’s Jim Pfister, Sam Sharamitaro, and Jim Young all had brothers, Bill, Al, and Ken, respectively, who played for the Cardinals in 1954.

10 OKAY ONCE

San Miguel School in National City, its numbers shrunk after a 65-0 loss to Ramona, defeated North Hollywood Harvard Military, 13-7, the following week, playing the last half with just 10 players.

The school, which would eventually merge with The Bishop’s in La Jolla in the early 1970’s, pulled the pin on the season, forfeiting its final game to Army-Navy.

San Diego High coach Duane Maley and quarterback Ezell Singleton were architects of 11-1 season..

QUICK KICKS

Ramona defeated Claremont-Webb, 6-0, to end a 25-game winning streak for the Gauls…the growing CIF Southern Section, now numbered 270 schools…Sweetwater set a school scoring record in a 59-0 victory over El Cajon Valley, bettering a 57-0 romp over Oceanside in 1926, the last season the Red Devils were in the CIF playoffs…Sweetwater’s 8-2 record represented its most wins since the 1941 squad went 8-0…official San Diego city population was 494,201 on the June 1 start of fiscal year…a new rule restricted city football coaching staffs to 4, for varsity and JV…Grossmont coach Ken Maynard was direct, predicting that his team “is certainly going to better its sorry showing of a year ago.”…the Foothillers improved from 1-7 to 4-4…Lincoln’s Russ Boehmke passed for 271 yards against Kearny, completing 11 of 17 attempts and touchdown passes of 32, 29, 19, and 50 yards, plus running 16 yards for a touchdown in a 33-13 victory…Chula Vista and St. Augustine had their wrists slapped by CIF Southern Section commissioner Ken Fagans for scrimmaging before the permitted date…Kearny coach Don Henson coached from the press box in the first half of a 13-13 tie with Point Loma…Lincoln and St. Augustine scored five touchdowns in the last seven minutes, the Saints winning 25-18…attendance for the 25th San Diego-Hoover game was a disappointing 6,000…Mount Miguel was 2-0 and feeling its oats when the Matadors took on Sweetwater…”They’re hot but we’re going to cool them down a bit,” said Tom Parker, whose Red Devils shut down the Lemon Grove team, 18-0…St. Augustine’s JV defeated Lincoln,7-6, when Raul Martinez reached back into the mists of time and drop-kicked the winning point after touchdown…San Diego was behind for the first time all season when Point Loma led 13-7 into the fourth quarter, but Willie McCloud ran 32 yards for a score and Ezell Singleton ran five yards for a touchdown with 46 seconds remaining and the Cavers pulled out a 21-13 victory…the San Diego-Sweetwater playoff was considered a home game for both teams, although the Balboa Stadium site was on the San Diego campus…a coin flip determined after the game that the Cavers would be  visitors for the quarterfinals against Montebello…that game was played at East Los Angeles Junior College, as was the semifinal game versus Whittier…San Diego’s yell leaders were reinforced by one cheerleader from every other school in the CPL when the Hillers played Downey…Lincoln rushed for 361 yards in an opening-game, 46-13 rout of Chula Vista…San Diego and Hoover teams came together at the North Park Lions Club’s annual dinner honoring the Cavers and Cardinals at the Imig Manor (later known as Lafayette Hotel) on El Cajon Boulevard….

From left: Hoover coach Roy Engle, Cardinals' All-City center Dave Vorpahl, San Diego's all-Southern California tackle Calvert Fackrell, and Cavers' coach Duane Maley.
From left: Hoover coach Roy Engle, Cardinals’ All-City center Dave Vorpahl, San Diego’s all-Southern California tackle Calvert Fackrell, and Cavers’ coach Duane Maley confer at annual event.