St. Augustine students residing in “The Pit,” were off their game last night.
When the score reached 79-20, the vocal cheering section in a corner of the Saints’ tiny gymnasium began serenading visiting Mar Vista players with “This game is over! This game is over!”
The game actually was over barely a minute after it began, the Saints stunning the Mariners with eight consecutive points.
Coach Mike Haupt’s team pressed the visitors throughout, and unleashed a suffocating, man-to-man defense in winning the San Diego Section Division III first-round playoff, 87-22.
The Saints (22-4) led 29-8 after one quarter and 53-16 at halftime.
The home team entertained a turnout that included San Diego State associate head coach Brian Dutcher with an explosion of dunks, breakaways, and three-point bombs that appeared to be launched from nearby 32nd Street.
Haupt emptied his bench fairly early in the third quarter when the Saints were leading 64-18.
Though never in it, Mar Vista (13-16) hustled and played hard all the way.
Next up for the Saints is a quarterfinals game against Mount Miguel Saturday, February 22, at St. Augustine. Mount Miguel defeated Del Norte 74-53 last night.
Cathedral Catholic, top-seeded in III and favored to meet the Saints in the finals, walloped San Diego High Tech 93-30 in its first-round “test”.
HUNDRED POINTS OR BUST
In another why-was-this-game-even-considered Division V mismatch, Horizon’s girls defeated Foothill Christian, 101-4.
The blowout reinforced the idea that too many unqualified teams are invited to the playoffs, serving as sacrificial lambs in the name of more brackets and more revenue.
1974: CIF Teams Caught in Game of Musical Chairs
San Diego High was in the playoffs and San Dieguito was out.
Oops, San Dieguito was in and San Diego was out.
The seeds of a legislative tempest had germinated in the spring when the San Diego Section Coordinating Council requested that the County Football Coaches’ Association prepare an analysis of the 1973 playoffs.
Point Loma’s Bennie Edens, Kearny’s Birt Slater, and Oceanside’s Herb Meyer, the Association’s current President, created a white paper.
The document concluded that the postseason was a financial and artistic success, but the coaches noted a pesky loophole.
There had been no provision in the 1973 playoff structure for the handling of a three-way tie for first place in leagues that were allotted only two playoff berths.
The coaches suggested that tri-champions in a league with two playoff berths be given priority over second- and third-place teams from leagues with three playoff berths, with rotational alternatives in succeeding seasons.
SOUNDS SIMPLE, BUT…
The issue never got out of committee, as they say in politics. “Although the recommendation was considered, it was never passed,” said El Capitan principal Bill Davis, representing the Grossmont League on the San Diego Section coordinating council.
Crawford principal Dick Jackson disagreed: “…there was a general feeling among the council members considering the recommendation that it was a good one and should be passed.”
Jackson believed the recommendation by the coaches was adopted in principle, but no written record of the endorsement went to the CIF board of managers.
Apparently the CIF playoff seeding committee did not get the memo. The seeds and pairings reflected the coaches’ recommendation. Thus, San Diego (6-3), which tied for the Western League championship, was in, and San Dieguito (5-4), third in the Avocado League, was out.
“We always get a raw deal,” screamed San Dieguito coach Grant Gaunce to Steve Brand of The San Diego Union.
Not to worry, coach.
Gaunce was assuaged a couple days later when the CIF Board of Managers reversed the decision by the playoff committee, which set off other reactions.
About 75 San Diego High students attended a San Diego Board of Education meeting later in the week to complain about their team’s treatment. A student who spoke on behalf of the group said it had gathered 850 signatures in the first 20 minutes after hearing of the decision.
A parent of one of the players said it was “cruel” to raise the kids hopes on Saturday, then arbitrarily pull the rug out from underneath them.
Board members indicated they were sympathetic to San Diego High’s situation but that a decision was not within their authority.
San Diego coach Shan Deniston was stunned. “I must go to the wrong church,” he said.
San Dieguito was ushered out by Vista in the first round, 24-0.
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 (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, 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 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).