1990 Girls Track: 17th State Meet

Sophomores Alison Dring of Mt. Carmel and Erin Blunt of San Pasqual gave promise but only four of the original 45 qualifiers from the San Diego Section finished in the top five in finals at the state meet.

6/1/90

17TH GIRLS STATE TRACK TRIALS, @CERRITOS COLLEGE, NORWALK

EVENT NAME SCHOOL MARK PLACE
100 Kimmey University City :12.10 8th*
McKinney Monte Vista :12.20 10th
Henderson Morse :12.28 13th
200 Dring Mt. Carmel :25.11 10th
Henderson Morse :25.16 11th
Kimmey
400 Dring :55.55 2nd*
Bugg Patrick Henry :57.59 7th*
Freeman Crawford
800 Stowell Mt. Carmel 2:16.78 12th
Scott Mt. Carmel 2:18.57 19th
Schoene La Jolla 2:24.07 26th
1600 Schiebel Orange Glen 5:10.83 14th
Faye San Pasqual 5:11.50 15th
Ferguson La Jolla 5:14.10 17th
100 Hurdles Dill Poway :14.17w 2nd*
Blunt San Pasqual :14.60 13th
300 Hurdles Blunt :44.05 6th*
Dill :46.69 19th
4×100 Relay Morse :48.37 12th
Mt. Carmel :48.87 13th
Lincoln :48.95 16th
4×400 Relay Mt. Carmel 3:56.27 10th
San Pasqual 3:56.39 11th
Lincoln 4:01.05 16th
High Jump Armstrong Torrey Pines 5-4 8T*
Weeks Madison
Barnes Granite Hills 5-0 20T
Long Jump Crisell Fallbrook 16-9 18th
Conston Oceanside 16-3 ½ 20th
Triple Jump Sims Oceanside 38-3/4 6th*
Harrison Mount Miguel 37-3 ¼ 9th*
Andrews Torrey Pines 35-8 ¾ 16th
Shot Put Houston Montgomery 39-2 ¾ 10th*
Bailey Ramona 36-5 ¼ 19th
Beers Poway
Discus Bihis Mt. Carmel 139-6 6th*
Wadlington Granite Hills 118-9 20th
Allen El Capitan 109-02 23rd

6/2/90

17TH GIRLS STATE FINALS, CERRITOS COLLEGE, NORWALK

EVENT NAME SCHOOL MARK PLACE
100 Kimmey University :12.10 5th
400 Dring Mt. Carmel :55.07 3rd
Bugg Patrick Henry
3200 Glusac Fallbrook 11:10.01 7th
Armstrong San Dieguito 11:10.69 11th
Villareal La Jolla 11:13.73 15th
100 Hurdles Dill Poway :14.19 5th
300 Hurdles Blunt San Pasqual :43.95 7th
High Jump Armstrong Torrey Pines 5-6 7th
Triple Jump Sims Oceanside 38-2 ½ 2nd
Harrison Mount Miguel 36-5 8th
Bihis Mt. Carmel 133-6 8th



1990 Boys Track: Noon & Price Lead the Way

Seventeen of 48 qualifiers from the San Diego Section finals advanced from the 72nd state meet trials at Cerritos College in Norwalk, including San Diego Section all-timers, Brent Noon of Fallbrook and Jerome Price of University City.

Nine of the 17, or 53 per cent, scored points based on at least a top six finish in the finals.

Noon, the 1969 state champion at 66-1 ½, defended his shot put title with a throw of 74 feet, 4 3/4 inches and came close to the national record of 77 feet in another competition, with a career best of 76-2.

The nearest anyone would come to Noon’s CIF meet standard in the next 30-plus years was more than two feet less, 72-0 by Matt Katnik of Bellflower St. John Bosco in 2015.

Noon was second in the discus at 200-8, his all-time best despite still recovering from a sore hamstring muscle.

Price won the long jump at 25-3 ½, and had several legal and wind-sided attempts trying to break Doyle Steel’s Section record of 25-5 ¼, once jumping 25-8 with more than the allowable wind allowance.

Sophomore Riley Washington of San Diego Southwest gave notice of what to expect in the future, finishing third in the 100 meters in :10.70.

5/3/90

Fallbrook’s Brent Noon hurled the shot 76 feet, 2 inches, a personal improvement of almost two feet in a dual meet with Torrey Pines.

Noon’s distance, second best all-time in the U.S., moved him closer to the accepted national record of 77 feet by Michael Carter of Jefferson high in Dallas in 1979.  Carter had a throw of 81-3 ½ in the postseason Golden West Invitational.

Noon also set a personal best and a San Diego Section record with a 196-6 effort in the discus, bettering Billy Joe Winchester’s 195-8 in 1970.

—Pat Pidgeon of St. Augustine became the first record holder in the first Harbor League finals, clearing 13 feet in the league meet at Balboa Stadium.

–Scott Hammond ran the 100 meters in :10.6 as Lincoln clinched the Eastern League dual championship, 71-54 over Crawford.

5/9/90

BOYS

EASTERN LEAGUE TRIALS, @BALBOA STADIUM

George Denny of Morse won a 400 heat in :49.2 and ran a leg on the Tigers’ 400 relay team that included Brian Griffith, Teddy Lawrence, and Stephan McQueen.  The Tigers quartet was timed in :42.1.

Patrick Henry’s David Gregory (:49.5) and Mira Mesa’s Sean Cahill (:50) ran 1-2 in another 400 heat.

AVOCADO LEAGUE TRIALS, @MIRACOSTA COLLEGE

Pulu Poumele of Oceanside (51-11 ¾) edged Junior Cienega of Escondido (51-11 3/8) in the shot put, setting up a rematch in the finals.

5/10/90

FINALS

PALOMAR @MIRACOSTA COLLEGE

Poway’s Steve Pomiak was a triple winner and named athlete of the meet.  Patrick won the 100-meter dash in :11. 200 in :22.8, and long jumped 22 feet, 7 inches.

Fallbrook’s Brent Noon set a San Diego Section record in the discus with a throw of 195-9, topping the 1970 mark of 195-8 by Mount Miguel’s Billy Joe Winchester.

5/11/90

PALOMAR SHOT PUT, @ORANGE GLEN

Brent Noon of Fallbrook smashed his meet record with an effort of 75 feet, 2 inches.

METROPOLITAN, @HILLTOP

Riley Washington of San Diego Southwest won the 100 (:10.80), and 220 (:21.7) and was a member of the winning 4×100 (:43.5) and 4×1600 (3:30.4) relay teams.

Castle Park’s Eric Bell struck four hurdles but still managed to finish the 110 highs in :14.8 and won the 300 barriers in :40.2.

Hector Hernandez of Mar Vista won the mile in 4:27.8 and two-mile in 9:54.7.

AVOCADO, @ MIRACOSTA COLLEGE

Junior Cienega of Escondido won the shot put showdown with Oceanside’s Pulu Poumele, 56-2 ¾-53-0.

Escondido doubled in the relays, :42.9 in the 4×100 and 3:24.3 in the 4×1600.  The Cougars Keith Williams  was byed into the CIF trials in the 300 hurdles.

GROSSMONT 3-A, @HELIX

El Capitan edged Helix, 75-74, for the team championship, with Granite Hills at 73 ½, Monte Vista, 32, and Mount Miguel, 19.

David Loshenkohl of Granite Hills was a double winner, 53-8 ½ in the shot put and 145-4 in the discus. Chris Ruff of El Capitan won the 110 hurdles in :14.9, 300 hurdles in :40.5, and ran a leg for the Eagles’ 4×1600 relay.

GROSSMONT 2-A, @HELIX

Santana outscored Grossmont, 96-71, for the team title.  El Cajon Valley had 63 points, Valhalla 31, and West Hills 28.

5/16/90

Brent Noon sustained a leg injury in the Palomar League finals but would be denied a request to be byed into the Section finals in the shot put and discus, according to CIF commissioner Kendall (Spider) Webb.

5/19/90

SAN DIEGO SECTION TRIALS, @BALBOA STADIUM

Allowable wind is 2.04 meters, so Jerome Price’s 25-foot, 8-inch long jump, while better than Doyle Steel’s 25-5 ¼ in 1966, was not a record.

Nor was another wind-sided jump of 25-3, so the University City jumper settled for 25-0 ¾, second longest in County history and No. 1 in the state.

Morse’s Teddy Lawrence was second with a jump of 23-4.

San Diego Southwest sophomore Riley Washington won a heat in the 100 meters in :10.72 and Kearny’s Darnay Scott lowered the season best in the 220 to :21.55.

OTHER SEASON BESTS

Eric Bell, Castle Park, :14.46, 110 high hurdles.

Hector Hernandez, Mar Vista, 4:19.2 1600.

Lincoln 4×100 relay, :42.01.

Morse 4×1600 relay, 3:21.92.

A virtually immobile Brent Noon, nursing a tender hamstring, led qualifiers with a 61-1/2 shot put and 168-foot discus throw.

5/26/90

SAN DIEGO SECTION FINALS, @POWAY

Morse outscored Mt. Carmel, 56-38, for the team title.
Brent Noon set a meet shot put record of 74-10 ½ and University City’s Jerome Price came close to Doyle Steel’s 25-5 ¼ broad jump in 1966, closing with a 25-4 ½ leap.

Two meet records were set.

NAME EVENT RECORD NAME PREVIOUS YEAR
Washington, San Diego Southwest 100 :10.53 Ethridge, Crawford :10.56 1987
Noon, Fallbrook Shot Put 74-10 ½ Noon 66-7 1989

OTHER SEASON BESTS

—Darnay Scott, Kearny, :21.49 200.

—Sean Cahill, Mira Mesa, :48.49 400.

—Scott Robeson, Mt. Carmel, 1:54.49 800.

—Hector Hernandez, Mar Vista, 4:17.26 1600.

—Tom Bache, University, 9:25.78 3200.

—Chris Jones, Morse, :37.89 300 hurdles.

—Wes Stephens, Orange Glen, 15-0 pole vault.

—Matt Johnson, Castle Park, 46-11 triple jump.

6/1/90

72ND STATE TRACK TRIALS, @CERRITOS COLLEGE, NORWALK
(*qualified for finals)

EVENT NAME SCHOOL MARK PLACE
100 Washington San Diego Southwest :10.66 5th*
Lawrence Morse :10.88 12th
200 Hammond Lincoln :21.75 8th*
400 Cahill Mira Mesa :50.01 16th
Gregory Patrick Henry :50.26 18th
800 Robeson  Mt. Carmel 1:54.59 9th*
Luna Poway 1:56.96 19th
Sanchez Castle Park 2:01.70 27th
1600 Hernandez Mar Vista 4:12.95 3rd*
Walker San Pasqual 4:14.05 9th*
Biddle Mt. Carmel 4:17.15 14th
4×100 Relay Lincoln :41.98 7th*
Morse :42.38 9th*
University City :42.60 13th
4×1600 Relay Mira Mesa 3:17.87 4th*
Morse 3:20.83 13th
Poway 3:22.10 15th
110 Hurdles Jones Morse :14.8 11th
Bell Castle Park :14.87 14th
300 Hurdles Williams Escondido :38.26 3rd*
Lewis Mira Mesa :38.94 12th
Jones Morse :39.97 21st
High Jump Duffield Vista 6-4 10th
Krebs University City 6-2 18th
Long Jump Price University City 24-4 3/4 2nd*
Balina Mt. Carmel 23-4 ½ 5th*
Hammond Lincoln 22-1 3/4 13th
Triple Jump Johnson Castle Park 45-1/4 20th
Lundy Morse 43-10 ¾ 22nd
Shot Put Noon Fallbrook 73-6 1st*
Martz Orange Glen 54-9 1/2 10th
Cienega Escondido 53-5 1/2 13th
Discus Noon 193-6 2nd*
Martz 168-7
Graham Mira Mesa 154-11
Pole Vault Stephens Orange Glen 14-8 9th*
Roth Mt. Carmel 14-0
Aubuchon Fallbrook 13-8

6/2/90

72ND STATE FINALS, AT CERRITOS COLLEGE, NORWALK

EVENT NAME SCHOOL MARK PLACE
100 Washington San Diego Southwest :10.70 3rd
200 Hammond Lincoln :21.84 8th
800 Robeson Mt. Carmel 1:53.89 6th
1600 Hernandez Mar Vista 4:14.42 5th
Walker San Pasqual 4:18.78 7th
3200 Lozano Helix 9:32.17 19th
Hernandez 9:35.81 21st
Bache University 9:46.93 23rd
110 Hurdles Jones Morse :14.90 7th
300 Hurdles Williams Escondido :38.29 6th
4×100 Relay Lincoln :42.34 7th
Morse :42.38 8th
4×400 Relay Mira Mesa 3:17.66 7th
Long Jump Price University City 25-3 ¼ 1st
Balina Mt. Carmel 23-1w 5th
Shot Put Noon Fallbrook 74-4 ¾ 1st
Discus Noon 200-8 2nd
Pole Vault Stephens Orange Glen 15-2 5th

The CIF’s scoring system had evolved since the first meet in 1915. Originally a finish in the top four was awarded points and a medal.

By 1980, scoring had evolved to include recognition and points as far down as sixth place.

YEARS FIRST SECOND THIRD FOURTH FIFTH SIXTH
1915-28 5 3 2 1
1929-30 5 3 2 1 ½
1931-65 5 4 3 2 1
1966-79 6 4 3 2 1
1980— 10 8 6 4 2 1

6/16/90

The 31st Golden West Invitational in Sacramento attracted some of the nation’s premier athletes.

Brent Noon of Fallbrook won the shot put with a throw of 72 feet.  Jim Flanigan of  Brussels, Wisconsin, was second at 66-5.

University City’s Jerome Price was fourth in the long jump at 24-5 ½, behind the winning 25-5 ½ by Michael Hightower of Paris, Texas.

(Avocado and Eastern League championship meet results were not found).




2023 Week 13: Lincoln, Granite Hills Survive Semifinals Thrillers

After an essentially quiet first week, quarterfinals and Open Division semifinals brought the San Diego Section playoffs to life, starting with a couple wild Open Division battles.

Distance and facing California’s No. 8-ranked team and second seed didn’t deter third seed and California-ranked 14th Granite Hills.

The Eagles bused 44 miles and then outlasted state No. 8 Carlsbad, 46-45, in overtime, while top-ranked Lincoln, behind in the fourth quarter for the first time, rallied to beat Helix, 45-38, in two overtimes.

Two startling contests and two outstanding teams, 10-1 Carlsbad of the Avocado League and 9-2 Helix of the Grossmont Hills, that saw their seasons come to jarring ends.

“It might have been the best game I’ve ever seen,” said veteran Union-Tribune writer John Maffei of the Carlsbad-Granite thriller.

WARHAWKS BRING DOWN FALCONS

Two surprises stood out in  Division I and III quarterfinals.

A stunner was No. 9 Madison’s upset of D-I top seed Torrey Pines, 21-0.

The loss shocked not only the Falcons but the North County cognoscenti, which proclaims, sometimes loudly, that the best football is played in the Avocado League.

Other reversals included D-I No. 5 St. Augustine’s thumping No. 4 La Costa Canyon, 32-17, in another Avocado League setback, and No. 6 La Jolla Country Day’s 35-7 win over 3 West Hills in D-III.

Madison, written off after six losses in a seven-game stretch that ended with a seemingly meaningless, 33-0 win against 1-9 University City, pitched its third consecutive shutout.

The Warhawks’ defense constricted Torrey Pines, which mustered 113 yards offense and six yards rushing.

Madison (6-6) will try to continue its late-season run in the semifinals against Western League rival 8-4 St. Augustine, a 34-14 winner in the teams’ Week 9 matchup.

Not all was despair for the Avocado League.  Mission Hills, annually tough and seasoned and the No. 2 seed in D-I, takes on loop rival 3 El Camino after a 27-13 win over 7 seed and neighbor San Marcos.

The Grizzlies  of coach Chris Hauser, making their 15th semifinals appearance in the last 18 years, gave the ball to Giovanni Harte, who responded with 286 yards in 37 carries and scored four touchdowns.

FOUR FINALS

Games at Escondido High Friday, Nov. 17, and Saturday, Nov. 18, will determine lower division champions:

V-AA—1 Holtville (8-2) versus 2 Army-Navy (8-3), 1  p.m. Saturday.

VI—1 Foothills Christian (8-2) versus 2 St. Joseph (8-3), 4:30 p.m. Friday.

V—No. 1 Calexico Vincent Memorial (9-3) versus 2 Sweetwater (6-6), 7:30 p.m. Friday.

OPEN–1 Lincoln and 3 Granite Hills will kick off at 7:30 p.m.  Saturday, Nov. 18, at Snapdragon Stadium.

Divisions I and IV will be part of a doubleheader Friday, Nov. 24, at Southwestern College.  Divisions II & III will settle matters in a twin bill Saturday, Nov. 25. Starting times are 2 and 7:30 p.m. each day

Lincoln (11-0) and Granite Hills (11-0) are the first undefeated, 11-man opponents since Christian (12-0) met The Bishop’s (12-0) in the Division III championship in 2016.

Foothills Christian (10-0) played San Diego Jewish (8-0) in an eight-man title game in 2019.

Three others undefeated but tied also have played.

Bold type  indicates winning team:

YEAR/DIVISION TEAM RECORD TEAM RECORD SCORE
1970 AA Grossmont 11-0 St. Augustine 11-0 13-8
1974 AA Vista 12-0 Patrick Henry 11-0-1 32-0
1982 AA El Camino 12-0 Pont Loma 10-0-2 6-6
2004 III Brawley 12-0 Valley Center 10-0-2 39-36
2016  II Christian 12-0 The Bishop’s 12-0 49-20
2019 8-MAN Foothills Christian 10-0 San Diego Jewish 8-0 62-0
2023 OPEN Lincoln 11-0 Granite Hills 11-0

TRUE GRID

Lincoln is 2-0 all-time versus Granite Hills…the 1977 Marcus Allen-led Hornets upset the No. 1 Eagles, 19-12, in the semifinals and they repeated, 34-20, in a 2018 semifinal…St. Augustine is 13-11 against Madison in a series which began in 1968 with a 26-0 Saints victory….2 Chula Vista (9-2), which is host to 3 Westview (7-4) in D-IV, hasn’t been as successful since the 2003 team was 10-2…1 Del Norte (9-2) is in uncharted waters…the D-II Nighthawks, who entertain playoff savvy 5 Point Loma (6-5), came into the season with an all-time best record of 7-5 in 2021 and ’22…Greg Tate was Mission Bay’s fifth coach in four years when he took the job in 2019… the D-III 3 seed Bucs, who take on 5 seed Grossmont (6-5), are 27-13 with Tate…Holtville leads Army-Navy, 15-10, in a series that began in 1981 but hadn’t been renewed since 2014…latest Cal-Hi Sports state rankings:  6, Lincoln; 7, Granite Hills; 11, Carlsbad; 16, Helix.  On the bubble: El Camino, Madison, Mission Hills, St. Augustine….




2023 Week 12: Pairings Are More On Than Off in Postseason Openers

The  CIF’s power ratings, a football version of diversity, inclusion, and equity, worked in all but four games in the week 12, first round of San Diego Section playoffs.

The National Football League long has fostered the “on-any-given-day-any team-can-win” mantra.  There aren’t upsets; they’re…well, surprises.

There were four “surprises” as the San Diego Section postseason got underway. Three ninth-ranked squads beat No. 8 seeds and a 5 seed upended a 4 seed.

WARHAWKS HAVE HISTORY

No. 9 Madison’s 27-0, Division I victory over No. 8 Mater Dei might be classified as an upset, considering what played out in the regular season.

The Warhawks, traditionally strong and blooded with two state championships in three seasons since 2010, limped into the Division I bracket with six losses in their eight previous games.

Mater Dei, the defending state D-IIAA champion, was riding a six-game winning streak but ran into a Warhawks defense that suffocated the Crusaders, who finished with minus 45 yards rushing.

COUGARS GET HEALTHY

Escondido coach Stephen Dixon told John Maffei of The San Diego Union that his Cougars squad was “whole” for the first time, after losing eight of 10 during the regular season, including its last six.

The 37-21 D-IV win over Calexico was a nice bounce and also maintained the Cougars’ record of never losing to the Bulldogs in this infrequently played series.

YEAR TEAM  OPPONENT SCORE
1956 Escondido Calexico 26-6
1957 48-12*
2002 32-6
2003 35-0
2008 70-0
2009 79-0
2023 37-21*

*Playoff games.

El Capitan, seeded ninth, ushered out Patrick Henry, another eight seed, 30-14 in D-III, and Maranatha ranked fifth in DV-AA, rocked No. 4 Rock, 35-14.

DREADED ADMINISTRATIVE GLITCH

Orange Glen had a whopper.

The Patriots forfeited their D-IV playoff opener to Crawford not long after it was determined the Patriots had used an ineligible player for a 10th consecutive game.

Someone was asleep at the Academic check point.

The player was a classroom grading casualty almost from Day I but was allowed to play the entire regular season before those responsible apparently discovered the oversight.

OPEN SEASON

Action advances to the quarterfinals this week with four Open Division stalwarts beginning play in a couple blockbusters.  Helix (9-1) is at Lincoln (10-0) and Granite Hills (10-0) visits Carlsbad (10-0).

Those four rank from sixth to eighteenth in Cal-Hi Sports’ state Top 50.

There are lots of other interesting quarterfinals matchups, including but not limited to those ranging up and down the Roman numerals:

D-I—6 Cathedral (4-7), @3 El Camino (7-4).

D-II—6 El Centro Central (9-2), @3La Jolla (8-2).

D-III—9 El Capitan (7-4), @1 Mission Bay (8-3).

D-IV—5 Crawford (8-3), @4 Santana (5-6).

D-V—4 Hoover (7-4), @1 Calexico Vincent Memorial (8-3).

DV-AA—4 Maranatha (5-6), @1 Holtville (7-2).

D-VI—4 Coastal (5-5), @Foothills Christian (7-2).

 

 

 




2023 Week 11: Hats Off! League Champions!

The advent of  power ratings, leading to alteration of teams’ division and league placements and affecting playoff seeding, changed the landscape.

League championships don’t carry that once-cherished cachet.

But don’t tell that to the players, coaches, and student bodies.  A league title still goes down as a matter of  record and still looks great on that letterman’s jacket or sweater.

There are 20 champions in the CIF San Diego Section’s 18 leagues this season, with playoffs beginning this week (schedules on the Football/Scores/2023 page).  Oceanside, Valley Center, and San Pasqual tied for first in the Valley loop.

The 17 other champions were outright winners:

League Overall
LEAGUE TEAM WON LOST Pct. WON LOST Pct.
Avocado Carlsbad 5 0 1,000 10 0 1,000
Central San Diego 4 0 1,000 4 6 .400
City Scripps Ranch 4 0 1,000 7 3 .700
Coastal The Bishop’s 6 0 1,000 7 3 .700
Desert Holtville 3 0 1,000 7 2 .778
Eastern La Jolla 4 0 1,000 8 2 .800
Grossmont Hills Granite Hills 5 0 1,000 10 0 1,000
Grossmont Valley Mount Miguel 4 0 1,000 9 1 .900
Imperial Valley El Centro Central 4 0 1,000 8 2 .800
Manzanita San Pasqual Academy 6 0 1,000 7 3 .700
Metro Mesa Mater Dei 3 0 1,000 6 3 .667
Metro Pacific Chula Vista 4 0 1,000 8 2 .800
Metro South Bay Olympian 3 0 1,000 6 3 .667
Ocean Foothills Christian 5 0 1,000 7 2 .778
Pacific Orange Glen 5 0 1,000 6 4 .600
Palomar San Marcos 5 0 1,000 8 2 .800
*Valley San Pasqual 5 1 .833 6 4 .600
Valley Center 5 1 .833 5 5 .500
Oceanside 5 1 .833 6 4 .600
Western Lincoln 4 0 1,000 10 0 1,000

*Coin flip held for purpose of playoff seeding.  San Pasqual declared  champion.

John Maffei’s Week 12 Union-Tribune Poll:
This is the final regular-season poll.  There will be a “final final” poll after the San Diego Section playoffs.
Points awarded on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis. *First-place votes.
NR–Not ranked.
Last entries in columns are previous rankings, except for San Marcos and St. Augustine.
Max Preps‘ and Cal-Hi
Sports‘ are state rankings.

RANK TEAM/RECORD POINTS MAXPREPS.COM CALPREPS.COM CAL-HI SPORTS
1. Lincoln (10-0) *27/297/1 6/8 63.9/61.3 6/6
2. Carlsbad (10-0) *3/269/2 9/12 61.1/59.5 7/7
3. Granite Hills (10-0) 244/3 26/27 50.3/50.3 14/14
4. Helix (9-1) 210/4 28/28
50.1/50.1 16/18
5. Torrey Pines (7-3) 155/5 41/47 42.539.6 On Bubble/On Bubble
6. Mission Hills (7-3) 145/6 38/40 43.6/42.3 On Bubble/On Bubble
7. El Camino (6-4) 96/7 73/68 35.4/35.1 NR/NR
8 San Marcos (8-2) 65/NR 91 32.6/29.8 NR/NR
9 La Costa Canyon (5-5) 52/9 77/72 34.8/34.6 NR/NR
10. St. Augustine (6-4) 45/NR 80 34.6/31.3 NR/NR

OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES
Mater Dei (6-3, 38 points),  Mount Miguel (9-1, 11), Del Norte (8-2, 6), The Bishop’s (7-3, 3), Cathedral (3-7, 3), La Jolla (8-2, 3), El Centro Central (8-2, 2).

VOTING PANEL

Twenty-nine sportswriters, sportscasters, administrators from San Diego County, plus Max Preps.com.

  • John Maffei (San Diego Union-Tribune).
  • Don Norcross, Steve Brand, Rick Hoff, Eric Williams, Thomas Gutierrez , Freelance contributors.
  • Brandon Stone, Allison Edmonds, John Carroll (KUSI, Channel 51).
  • Rick Smith (partletonsports.com).
  • Adam Paul (EastCountySports.com).
  • Bodie DeSilva (ScorebookLive.com). 
  • John Kentera, Braden Suprenant (97.3-FM The Fan).
  • Steve (Biff) Dolan (Mountain Country 107.9-FM). 
  • Christian Pedersen (San Diego Sports Association).
  • Troy Hirsch, Nic Pollino (Fox 5 San Diego). 
  • Joe Heinz, Todd Cassen, Ron Marquez (CIF San Diego Section).
  • Mike Dolan, Rex Johnson, Bruce Ward (CIF Advisory Committee).
  • Joe Evangelist (San Diego Coaching Legends Committee).
  • Will Torrez (Valley Sports Network).
  • Tom Ronco  (Imperial Valley Press).
  • Raymond Brown  (SDfootball.net).
  • Tom Helmantoler (Southern Conference Advisor).
  • Max Preps.



2023 Week 10: Hats Off!  Mater Dei’s John Joyner!

Mater Dei is rolling with coach John Joyner, the County’s most recent 100-game winner.

A significant accomplishment was overlooked for a few weeks. Mater Dei’s John Joyner became the 49th San Diego Section coach to win a career 100th game.

Fast-finishing for a second straight year, the Crusaders coach’s team defeated Eastlake, 36-7, for its fifth straight win after an 0-3 start and gave Joyner his 103rd victory.

Victory No. 100 was in Week 6, 23-14, over St. Augustine.  (thanks for the reminder, East County stat maven Adam Paul.)

Mater Dei lost its first four in 2022 and roared to a 11-4 finish and a state Division II-AA championship, 26-18, over Oakland McClymonds.

Knock off 2-7 Otay Ranch this week and the Crusaders and Joyner (103-68 overall) can claim their third consecutive Metro Mesa title.

NOT OVER TILL IT’S OVER

Of the 19 leagues in the San Diego Section, all but the Western  still have some unfinished business.

Lincoln, which completed its first 10-0 regular season in the school’s 70 varsity seasons, has won the league and will sit back with the assuredly No. 1 seed in the Open Division playoffs.

Several teams have clinched ties for loop titles, but losses this week could affect playoff pairings.

AVOCADO

Carlsbad (4-0) has a tie for crown and closes at home against El Camino.  Stumble against the Wildcats and see Torrey Pines (3-1) beat La Costa Canyon would mean a 4-1 deadlock with the Falcons.

The tie should be easily resolved.  Carlsbad scored a 17-7 victory over the Falcons in Week 8.

CENTRAL

San Diego is 3-0 and Hoover 3-1.  The Cavers must beat Clairemont or fall into a tie.  Hoover is done with league play.  San Diego has the edge in a tie-breaker, having topped the Cardinals, 56-45, in Week 8.

CITY

Mission Bay (2-1) visits Scripps Ranch (3-0).  The Buccaneers need a win after stumbling last week, 26-14, to Crawford, which lost to Scripps Ranch, 37-7, in Week 6.

COASTAL

The Bishop’s (5-0) and host Santa Fe Christian (5-0) will determine seaside bragging rights from Bird Rock to Moonlight Beach.

EASTERN

La Jolla (3-0) clinches with a win at Christian (0-3).  The Vikings beat Point Loma (3-1), 48-29 in Week 8.  The Pointers, 6-4 overall, are waiting for the playoffs.

GROSSMONT HILLS

Granite Hills (4-0) has taken charge in a circuit ruled for years by Helix (3-1).  The Eagles’ double-overtime, 44-43 win over the Highlanders last week was their third in the last four seasons over the Scots, who lost a four-overtime, 47-44 crusher to Granite in 2022.

Birds of prey and defending State Division II-A champion, the Eagles face in-and-out Grossmont (2-2) this week, while Helix takes on similarly mediocre Steele Canyon (2-2).

GROSSMONT VALLEY

Mount Miguel (3-0) closes with a visit from Monte Vista (2-1) and holds a 46-20 victory over El Capitan (2-1).

IMPERIAL VALLEY

El Centro Central (5-0) and Brawley (5-0), blood rivals 15 miles apart and at each other’s throats since 1921, meet for the 173rd time, Brawley holding an 82-80 advantage with 10 ties.

Central, Brawley, and Calexico are the only schools in California that have met every year for 102 years.

“The High”, as El Centro locals know the Spartans, played two games every season through 2005 against Brawley and some time in the ‘seventies the rivals began playing for a perpetual Bell trophy, which can be heard from Plaster City to Glammis, according to legend.

MANZANITA

The Dragons of San Pasqual Academy (5-0) defeated Borrego Springs (4-1), 60-20, a month ago and finishes against Salton City West Shores, while the Rams meet Ocean View Christian.

METRO MESA

Bonita Vista (1-1) and Eastlake (1-1) will battle at Southwestern for runner-up honors to Mater Dei (2-0), a virtual lock versus Otay Ranch (0-2).

METRO PACIFIC

CalPreps.com gives Chula Vista (3-0) a 99 per cent chance of victory against San Ysidro (0-3).

Castle Park (2-1), 49-13 loser to the Spartans in Week 9, plays for second place against San Diego Southwest (1-2).  A victory by the Raiders would create a three-way tie with Mar Vista and the Trojans.

METRO SOUTH BAY

Olympian (2-0) can avoid a  tie by defeating Montgomery (1-1).  Sweetwater (1-1) takes on Hilltop.

OCEAN

St. Joseph (3-1) is at Calvin Christian (3-1) and the winner hopes that Foothills Christian (4-0) stumbles at San Diego Jewish (0-4).

PACIFIC

Orange Glen (4-0) goes to Tri-City Christian (4-0) in Vista, looking for its first title since Rob Gilster’s Patriots club went 7-0 and won the Palomar League in 1995.   The Eagles won the Pacific in 2018.

PALOMAR

This is rarefied air for Del Norte (4-0) as it awaits San Marcos (4-0).  The Nighthawks tied for a Valley League championship in 2013 but in other seasons have not done better than third place since opening in 2010.

San Marcos is 8-0 against Del Norte since that inaugural campaign, but the Nighthawks have come on this season, 8-1 overall.  They have a 32.6 CalPreps.com rating to the Knights’ 27.6.

VALLEY

Oceanside (5-0) has found the surroundings much more agreeable after 64 of the previous 69 years in the Avocado League or Avocado West League.  The Pirates know the Valley, having posted an overall record of 64-8-2 during a couple stints in the early 2000’s.

Valley Center (4-1) can tie for first by defeating the Pirates and San Pasqual (4-1) also would garner a slice of the pie if the Golden Eagles top Escondido and V.C. pulls a surprise.

WESTERN

Cathedral and St. Augustine, each 3-1, collide in the Holy Bowl, while Lincoln, having clinched the title, takes it all in.  The Hornets beat both teams, 40-14 and 42-7, respectively.

John Maffei’s Week 11 Union-Tribune Poll:
Points awarded on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.*First-place votes.
NR–Not ranked.
Last entries in columns are previous rankings.
Max Preps‘ and Cal-Hi
Sports‘ are state rankings.

RANK TEAM/RECORD POINTS MAXPREPS.COM CALPREPS.COM CAL-HI SPORTS
1. Lincoln (10-0) *27/297/1 8/9 61.3/59.9 6/6
2. Carlsbad (9-0) *3/269/2 12/14 59.5/58.9 7/7
3. Granite Hills (9-0) 244/3 27/36 50.3/42.7 14/18
4. Helix (8-1) 210/4 28/18
50.1/54.3 18/16
5. Torrey Pines (6-3) 165/6 47/59 39.6/35.1 On Bubble/On Bubble
6. Mission Hills (6-3) 146/7 40/47 42.3/31.6 On Bubble/On Bubble
7. El Camino (6-3) 103/5 68/68 35.1/34.3 NR/NR
8  Del Norte (8-1) 79/8 85/83 32.6/29.8 NR/NR
9 La Costa Canyon (5-4) 52/9 72/80 34.8/34.6 NR/NR
10. Cathedral (3-6) 45/10 67/63 35.6/30.7 On bubble/On Bubble

OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES
Mater Dei (5-3, 18 points),  Mount Miguel (8-1, 9), San Marcos (7-2, 6), St. Augustine (5-4,3), La Jolla (7-2, 2), Brawley (8-1, 1).

VOTING PANEL

Twenty-nine sportswriters, sportscasters, administrators from San Diego County, plus Max Preps.com.

  • John Maffei (San Diego Union-Tribune).
  • Don Norcross, Steve Brand, Rick Hoff, Eric Williams, Thomas Gutierrez , Freelance contributors.
  • Brandon Stone, Allison Edmonds, John Carroll (KUSI, Channel 51).
  • Rick Smith (partletonsports.com).
  • Adam Paul (EastCountySports.com).
  • Bodie DeSilva (ScorebookLive.com). 
  • John Kentera, Braden Suprenant (97.3-FM The Fan).
  • Steve (Biff) Dolan (Mountain Country 107.9-FM). 
  • Christian Pedersen (San Diego Sports Association).
  • Troy Hirsch, Nic Pollino (Fox 5 San Diego). 
  • Joe Heinz, Todd Cassen, Ron Marquez (CIF San Diego Section).
  • Mike Dolan, Rex Johnson, Bruce Ward (CIF Advisory Committee).
  • Joe Evangelist (San Diego Coaching Legends Committee).
  • Will Torrez (Valley Sports Network).
  • Tom Ronco  (Imperial Valley Press).
  • Raymond Brown  (SDfootball.net).
  • Tom Helmantoler (Southern Conference Advisor).
  • Max Preps.