1939-40: Outdoor Inconvenience Becomes Indoor Comfort

There would be raised eyebrows and at least one exclamation of “Really?” and another of “No Way!” should a copy of Charles Byrne’s Jan. 4, 1940, article in The San Diego Union have been placed in a time capsule and opened 20 years later.

Basketball was evolving and moving indoors, although the game still was a primitive sport in most corners of San  Diego’s tiny hoop universe.

“Metropolitan League basketball, which used to be played almost entirely on outdoor courts of asphalt, decomposed granite, or plain dirt surfacing, with only a few students on the sidelines, is growing up,” wrote Byrne.

Most of the league’s seven teams were getting out of the sun and rain, said Byrne.

Grossmont, Coronado, and Escondido had opened new facilities and Oceanside would play games at the Oceanside Community Center basketball pavilion, according to the writer.

Point Loma and Sweetwater still had only outdoor courts but would be able to schedule some home games at San Diego High and San Diego State, Byrne said.

It would be about 10 years before La Jolla and Point Loma had their own gymnasiums, but Sweetwater would play some home games on its outdoor layout into the 1950s.

CARDINALS IN FOREFRONT

The city’s Hoover High also had a new home, a 1,200-seat, balcony-included edifice, capacity of which promised to be taxed whenever the Cardinals played San Diego High.

Hoover’s game with Alhambra “won’t be the first game in the new gymnasium but it will be the first since installation of especially constructed folding bleachers capable of seating more than 1,200 along the sidelines (and upper level),” gushed Byrne.

“The new bleachers combined with a big court and spacious ceiling—for ventilation purposes—gives Hoover as good a layout as any….”

Hoover, with a 2-6 record, upset Alhambra, 27-24.

Byrne also praised the new Grossmont facility, with “modern, ‘telescoping’ bleachers that seat 500, with room for more on collapsible chairs.”

Telescoping?  Meaning seats that are pushed or rolled back when not in use? Yes.

RAINED OUT

Basketball under the sun, not.

Persistent precipitation interrupted play at Point Loma, prompting delay of the Pointers’ Class B game against La Jolla.

The solution was simple:  Move the action to Municipal Gym.

The B teams finished their game at the Balboa Park facility and then the varsities took the floor.  Point Loma defeated La Jolla, 53-29.

COUNTY RECORDS?

Bob Ingle of Coronado scored 35 points in a 57-16 win over La Jolla, giving the Islanders’ the highest scoring output for the season and a reported County, single-game record for Ingle.

Diminutive Bud Farmer of Julian had scoring total unheard of for era.

Ingle converted 15 of 29 shots from the floor, many on easy, “cherry-picked” baskets when Ingle and teammate Art Blaisdell retreated to the Coronado end of the court when La Jolla had the ball.

Teammates easily found Ingle and Blaisdell with uncontested passes even while patrolling the visiting Vikings with a three-man defense.

Bud Farmer, a 5-foot, 7-inch junior forward for Julian, led all scorers with 294 points in 20 games for a 14.5 average and had a 13.8 average for 12 Southern League games.

Farmer’s total for the season was believed to be an all-time County record.

WHO’S GOT IT?

No one.

During a scramble under the basket a loose ball bounced on the floor so forcefully that it took flight, soaring above the hoop, and then descended through the net.

Two points for Hoover.

Game officials did not know who last touched the ball and was responsible for the score. After some discussion the refs awarded the basket to Rupert Crosthwaite, captain and floor general of the Hoover squad.

The two points helped but were not enough.  The Cardinals were on the short end of a 33-26 score to San Diego.

SPORTSMANSHIP?

Some in the Oceanside cheering section took boos and jeering to dangerous extremes.

Writer Charles Byrne said referees at a recent Pirates home game stopped play and cleared the floor of paper wads that were launched by rubber bands from the stands.

The wads were meant to pester opposing players.

Game officials had enough and warned Pirates coach Dick Rutherford that a technical foul would be assessed for every wad found on the court during remainder of the game.

According to Byrne, not naming his source, “The paper wads stopped, but the visiting players began to be stung by BB shot and after the game one player’s back and legs were covered with welts.”

The latter is hard to believe, but Oceanside’s free-wheeling program was a constant headache during this era for CIF honcho Seth Van Patten, with eligibility issues and other complaints often landing on his desk, according to historian John Dahlem.

CORONADO “BACKS IN” TO CHAMPIONSHIP

Coronado, with a 20-3 record and enjoying one of its finest seasons under Coach Hal Niedermeyer, was primed to play  for the Southern Section’s Southern Group (small schools) championship after eliminating Ramona, 34-12, in a first-round game.

The Islanders were scheduled to play Imperial Valley League champion Calexico, but the schools couldn’t agree on where or when to meet.

As often out of necessity, commissioner Seth Van Patten allowed the schools to make arrangements.

Calexico wanted Coronado to come to the valley on March 8, but the Islanders said that was impossible because of the opening of Metro League track competition.

Almost all Coronado athletes and those at virtually all others played three sports, including track or baseball in the spring.

Coronado invited the Bulldogs to visit on March 9, but Calexico declined.

The Islanders felt they were the premier squad among the Southern Section’s less-enrollment members.

Coronado had defeated the Southern League champion, Ramona, in a playoff and held a victory over El Centro Central, which tied Calexico for the Imperial Valley League  championship.

Most significant was a ballyhooed win over Hemet, the Riverside League titlist, which defeated Needles for the small school’s Eastern group championship.

All’s well that ends well. Van Patten must have agreed with the Islanders, for they were  declared Southern Group champions, their victory over Ramona considered the deciding game.

BIG ONE ON PENINSULA

The Coronado gym was almost filled to its 500-person capacity when ex-San Diego High and San Diego State star Kendall (Bobo) Arnett brought the Hemet Bulldogs south for a late-season contest that was billed incorrectly as a playoff but had a postseason atmosphere.

How things happen:  Niedermeyer was called to the telephone for a long distance call at halftime of a Coronado B game.  The coach and Arnett, on the other end of the line,  agreed to terms in a brief conversation and the game was on.

Hemet had won 16 in a row, including victories over big brothers Riverside Poly, San Bernardino, and Corona, and took an 8-7 lead at the end of the first quarter.

Coronado suddenly found the range, going on a 23-0 explosion that covered the second and third quarters and propelled the Islanders to a stunning, 39-21 triumph.

Bob Carrothers (second left with school leaders) also was Associated Student Body President at Coronado.

TRAGEDY 

Bob Carrothers, who scored 13 points in the rout of Hemet, also was a national junior tennis champion in singles and doubles, Coronado’s student body president, and was headed to USC after graduation.

Months later in October, Carrothers was killed in an auto accident southbound on U.S. 101 in the Rose Canyon area of northern San Diego.

The car in which Carrothers was riding blew a tire, sending the vehicle across a center divider and down a steep embankment.  The car struck a railroad signal post and then turned over several times before coming to rest upright.

Carrothers, sharing the rumble seat with a USC classmate while two other Trojan students were in the front seat, was thrown from the car and died without regaining consciousness, according to the Coronado Eagle and Journal.

Hours after hearing of Carrothers’ death, his aunt and uncle immediately began driving to San Diego from Pocatello, Idaho.

The car driven by Harry Collins went off the highway about 25 miles south of Pocatello.  Mr. Collins was critically injured and his wife was killed.

Coronado High would name its basketball facility “Carrothers Gym”.

SCHUTTE EXITS

Bill Schutte replaced Ed Ruffa as coach at San Diego High and directed a 14-4 season, the Hilltoppers’ best since the 15-1, Southern California championship campaign of 1935-36.

The Hillers had won the 32-team, Southern Counties’ Invitational at Huntington Beach in December and came within a basket of taking the inaugural Chino Tournament after Christmas in a 26-24 loss to Long Beach Poly.

San Diego split two Coast League games with Poly but the Jackrabbits earned the postseason berth with a 27-12, elimination game win at Poly.

Location of the Poly-San Diego contest was determined by coin flip.

Schutte, an all-Southern California lineman for the Hillers in 1928, surprised many when Schutte announced he was leaving the Hilltoppers as soon as the basketball season ended.

Schutte suddenly announced departure from San Diego high.

Schutte accepted a position on the staff of Kansas State coach Hobbs Adams, who was the Hillers’ head coach from 1929-34 but did not coach Schutte, who had graduated from San Diego High.

The departing coach returned to San Diego after World War II and was head coach at San Diego State from 1948-55.

MID-YEAR GRADUATION

It never seemed to fail.  San Diego lost a leading player to graduation in February, at a crucial point in the season.

Bob Carson, who led the Hillers with 178 points in 16 games, scored 17 as a turnaway, home crowd of 1,200 persons witnessed the Hilltoppers’ 42-27 win over Poly.

Carson was gone when the team met again later and the result was a 15-point loss for San Diego after the 15-point win.

SET SHOTS

Coronado was a 35-25 loser in the finals to Tustin in the Huntington Beach event for schools with less than 1,000 enrollment…its only other losses were 21-17 to the Coronado Merchants and a late-season, 29-27 upset by Escondido that snapped a 17-game league winning streak…San Diego coach Bill Schutte abandoned his man-to-man defense for a zone to counter Long Beach Poly’s “Figure 8” offense in the Cavers’ Coast League victory…as soon as Bob Carson graduated, the ex-Caver enrolled at Fullerton Junior College and joined the Hornets’ basketball team…Ramona won a third straight Southern League title with a 34-28 win over San Dieguito…George Marshall, a starting guard for Hemet, was unavailable for the game with Coronado because he was one of the stars in a school play…the preliminary game to Coronado-Hemet saw the Coronado Merchants defeat a Marine Aviation team, 34-32…Ollie Mathis of Point Loma led Metro League scorers with 121 points in 12 games…Coronado’s Bob Carrothers was the only repeater on the all-league squad that was determined in a vote by five Metro League coaches, officials who refereed league games, and sports writers…Grossmont won 5 of 6 games during an Imperial Valley-Yuma, Arizona, tour before Christmas…Escondido barnstormed to three victories at the same time in Riverside County…




1963-64: La Jolla Gets All the Way to the Final Game

La Jolla, winner of 30 in a row, including 28 consecutive this season, was on the cusp of getting to a place no other team had gone.

A 29-0 season was unprecedented.

The only San Diego County team to come that close was the 1959-60 Hoover squad that won its first 26 (most reports say the Cardinals won 27 in a row; search 1959-60 “Cardinals Come Up Short…”).

No major school varsity had traversed a full season without a loss, dating to the days of dirt courts and chain baskets.

And it wouldn’t happen this year.

The Vikings returned three starters from the 1962-63 club that won all 17 nonleague games but then ran aground on the rocky shoals of the Western League.

Not always composed, the seaside club staggered to a 5-5 loop record, finishing at 22-5 and out of the playoffs.

Rick Eveleth, Charlie Buchanan, and Bill Canning, three solid starters, plus John Walters and future pro tour golfer John Schroeder, were on hand for another run this season.

The Vikings (from left): coach Bill Reeves, John Schroeder, John Walters, Rick Eveleth, Bill Canning, Charlie Buchanan.

The Vikings won the Kiwanis Tournament Limited Division and Mustang Optimist event in December, and then swept the Western League with a 10-0 run and set a single-game scoring record in a 94-66 triumph over Mission Bay.

Averaging more than 65 points a game, La Jolla swarmed opponents and rebounded, although Eveleth, at 6 feet, 3 inches, was its tallest player.

CLASS AA PLAYOFFS 

The Vikings proved the correct antidote to Monte Vista’s runners and gunners, winning the first-round game, 60-49, days after the Monarchs (20-7) had set a County record in a 120-77 victory over Granite Hills.

The Vikings had rallied from a 49-31 deficit in the third quarter to nose out the Spring Valley team, 62-58, in the fourth game of the season and repeated with a 68-50 victory  (“I think their press hurt them; their tongues were hanging out in the second half,” noted  La Jolla coach Bill Reeves) in the Kiwanis finale.

La Jolla’s first test since a mid-season, 44-41 escape from Kearny (15-13) came against dangerous Lincoln (17-8) in the semifinals.  The Hornets strived mightily, but the Vikings stayed in front throughout and won, 78-70.

HIGHLANDERS IN WAY

With 6-foot, 7inch Al Skalecky, 6-3 Jim Sunderman, and 6-2 Ron Slocum patrolling inside, Helix (27-3) had lost to only one team in San Diego and removed that blotch in a succeeding meeting with Chula Vista.

Trailing 18-17, after the first quarter, Helix staggered La Jolla with a 15-2 run, led, 33-24 at the half, 50-39, after three and closed out a 76-56 victory that marked the first time a school outside the city limits had won the title.

Skalecky had 24 points and 13 rebounds, Sunderman 14 and 17.  The 5-foot 10-inch Buchanan, who would be named CIF player of the year, led the Vikings with 8 rebounds.

Helix with a 46-22 edge on the backboards, had little trouble with the Vikings’ press, and shot 50.8 per cent from the field to 38.6 per cent.

The Highlanders had raced through the Grossmont League with a 12-0 record including a pair of wins against 10-2 Monte Vista, 77-72, and 65-59, the latter for the league clincher.

FUTURE AZTECS

Skalecky would team with La Jolla’s Rick Eveleth, Castle Park’s Ralph (Rip) Barrett, and Crawford’s Dave Miller on San Diego State’s 1966-67 team that played in the national collegiate College Division championship tournament in Evansville, Ind.

Lincoln’s Steve (Cord) Rippe, Joe Logan, and Frank Boone (from left) chatted up Vicky Anderson and Adele Yoshioka before Hornets’ game with Crawford. Ms. Yoshioka co-starred with Clint Eastwood in movie “Magnum Force”.

ALMOST STRANGER THAN FICTION

–Mar Vista scored the only points by either team in the fourth quarter to edge Sweetwater, 36-34.  Mike Clark’s two free throws with 50 seconds remaining was the difference.

–Down 26 points with 14 minutes to play, Helix caught St. Augustine and then stole a pass and scored to defeat the Saints, 55-54, for the Kiwanis Tournament Unlimted Division title.

–Lincoln shot 57 per cent in a 77-66 win at Crawford and then shot 32 per cent in a 49-43 loss at home to the Colts, who claimed the Eastern League championship.

–Six Castle Park and Mar Vista players, three on each side, fouled out in the last five minutes.

–Rick Eveleth, 6-feet-3 inches, of La Jolla scored 26 points and held Mission Bay’s 6-8  Mike Kinkki to 4 points.

–Clairemont held on for a 74-70 victory over Granite Hills, despite giving up 35 points in the fourth quarter, after leading, 57-35.

–Hoover’s 2-4 start was its poorest since the 11-12, 1952-53  team.

SURPRISING COLTS

With a starting lineup comprised mostly of graduates of a junior varsity team that was 8-8 in ’62-63, Crawford coach Jim Sams found out quickly what potential opponents had on their minds.

“You get an idea of what the other clubs think of you when they try to schedule a game,” said Sams after the Colts won their first six.  “They’ll call and ask how many letterman you have and you say, ‘None’, and they want you on their schedule.”

Crawford’s 25-5 record was better than the 24-6-1 of the championship 1962-63 squad.  6-4 sophomore Von Jacobsen joined 6-7 senior Dennis Grey, 6-3 junior Bob Boone 5-11 senior Ronnie Layton, and 6-3 senior Dave Miller, who saw action the previous year, in the starting lineup.

CANTANKEROUS

Taciturn Paul Pruett, who didn’t like the setup while at San Dieguito, sounded off about Kiwanis Tournament venues.

“The people running this thing know how big a home court advantage is but nothing is ever done about it,” said the Hilltop mentor.

“They shove the County teams into any old gym and let the city teams play their first two or three games at home.”

Pruett said he would continue to enter the Kiwanis because there aren’t any other pre-Christmas events of significance, “but if they start another one somewhere, we’ll be in it.”

Hilltop didn’t have to go to Hoover or San Diego for its second-round game with Grossmont, but the Lancers were bounced, 58-44, at Sweetwater.

INTRANSIGENT

Castle Park was awarded a forfeit victory over Morse in the San Dieguito Mustang Optimist, post-Christmas tournament.

Tigers coach Tom Williams refused to leave the court after referee Jimmy Spurling assessed a second technical foul against Williams, who was unhappy with the way the game was being called.

Morse outnumbered Castle Park in personal fouls, 15-7, when the game ended with the Trojans ahead, 40-23, in the third quarter.

IRATE

“This was the worst performance by a team of mine in fourteen years of coaching; the kids have got no pride in defense and don’t care if the other guy scores,” said  Bill Standly of San Diego (13-15) following a 69-46 loss to La Jolla.

La Jolla’s Rick Eveleth clears rebound in title game versus Helix. Bill Canning (51) and Helix’ Jim Sunderman got out of the way.

BALANCE

La Jolla oozed  it.  Charlie Buchanan, the CIF player of the year, scored 436 points, Bill Canning 390, Rick Eveleth 374, and John Walters 318. Skalecky led Helix with 440, followed by Jim Sunderman, 421, and Ron Slocum, 319.

Guards Lynn Lowder (217) and Bob Grundstrom didn’t score as much (“I’ll bet some of the opposing coaches don’t know their names,” said Helix coach Bob Speidel), but they were essential in breaking down La Jolla’s defense.

Grundstrom’s looper with one second left pushed the Highlanders past 15-13 Kearny, 57-55, in the opening round of the playoffs.

POLITICS ELIMINATED

The CIF board of managers announced that leagues could break ties for playoff spots with an elimination game.  Previously administrators in respective leagues voted for postseason representatives.

SCORING LEADERS

Name Team Games Points Average
Barrett Castle Park 30 537 17.9
Landis Monte Vista 26 529 20.3
Leininger Morse 25 518 20.7
Fitzmorris Madison 28 480 17.1
Rippe Lincoln 24 442 18.4
Skalecky Helix 30 440 14.7
Gray Monte Vista 27 439 16.3
Buchanan La Jolla 29 435 15.0
Syverson Mar Vista 30 430 14.5
Henderson Clairemont 23 421 18.3
Sunderman Helix 30 421 14.0
Grey Crawford 30 394 13.1
Canning La Jolla 29 390 13.4
Vera Mission Bay 24 384 16.0
Renwick Grossmont 22 374 17.0
Queen El Cajon Valley 23 370 16.1
Wilkins Granite Hills 30 362 12.1
Eveleth La Jolla 29 374 12.9
Paddock St. Augustine 28 359 12.8
Jacobsen Crawford 30 359 12.0
White Chula Vista 26 353 13.6
Spence St. Augustine 16 350 21.9
Howe Grossmont 25 345 13.8
Kinkki Mission Bay 24 328 13.7
Chandler Mar Vista 30 328 10.9
Hallien Kearny 26 327 12.6
Hanchett Monte Vista 27 322 11.9
Dunne St. Augustine 28 321 11.5
Reina Kearny 24 320 13.3
Slocum Helix 30 319 10.6
Calvin San Diego 28 318 11.4
Walters La Jolla 29 318 11.0
Shaulls Madison 29 317 10.9
Lott Point Loma 26 314 12.1
Boone Crawford 30 312 10.4

 BIG LEAGUERS

Clairemont’s Kenny Henderson (18.3) and Madison’s Al Fitzmorris (17.1) were elite scorers in the Western League but made their marks in major league baseball.

Henderson played 16 seasons for seven teams and peaked with the San Francisco Giants in 1970, batting .294 with 104 runs, 17 home runs, and 87 runs batted in.

Fitzmorris pitched 10 seasons, mostly with Kansas City, and posted a 77-59 record.  He was 44-29 from 1974-76 with the Royals.

Helix’ Ron Slocum played parts of three seasons with the expansion San Diego Padres, 1969-71, and Bob Spence of St. Augustine in the same time frame was with the Chicago White Sox.

INJURY SLOWS SAINTSMAN

St. Augustine was 9-0 and had just defeated Hoover, 78-63, as Bob Spence scored 22 points, Mike Paddock 20, Jimmy Antl 10, and Dennis Dunne 13, including 11 consecutive free throws.

St. Augustine’s John Estrada and Mike Paddock (30) battle Hoover’s Rick Shaw for rebound, as Bob Spence (54) and Hoover’s Lyle Hull witness in the Saints’ 78-63 Kiwanis victory.

It was a pyrrhic victory.  Spence’s eye became inflamed from a foreign substance on a towel that Spence used to wipe sweat during a time out.

Spence missed 5 games because of that injury plus seven others. The Saints flattened out to 2-8 in the Eastern League and 16-12 overall.

Spence still led the County with a 21.9 scoring average with 350 points in 16 games.

LIVING LARGE

George (Bud) Milke had seen or played on all manner of basketball courts from his days at San Diego State to when he first took over the Mar Vista program in 1953-54.

“We used to play home games at Muni Gym, State College, and Point Loma, and practiced on asphalt,” said Milke, marveling at the beautiful facility he inherited when Milke began the Castle Park program this season.

Rip Barrett, rebounding in 53-40 victory against Chula Vista and defender Bill Ennis, led County in scoring and first-year Castle Park to Metropolitan League co-championship with Spartans.

With Rip Barrett, the only player with varsity experience, leading the County with 537 points, the Trojans surprised by tying Chula Vista for the Metropolitan League championship and posted a 23-7 record, stunning for a first-year school.

Castle Park made a quick exit from the playoffs, beaten by Lincoln, 78-55, which featured 6-5 Steve (Cord) Rippe, whose 23 points helped offset the 30 by Barrett.

BASKETS GALORE

San Diego teams were busy after Christmas, playing in the San Dieguito Mustang, Chino, Banning, Fillmore, Covina, San Bernardo Kiwanis, and Newport Optimist events.

Crawford was whacked by Downey Pius X, 76-54, in the third place game at Covina.  Pius X got to the finals of the Southern Section playoffs but bowed to Long Beach Poly, 60-58.

Yucaipa defeated St. Augustine, minus Bob Spence, 56-50, for the consolation championship at Banning after the Saints lost to Palmdale, 74-65, in the quarterfinals (the Saints were called for 30 personal fouls to their opponents’ 16). La Jolla beat Castle Park, 61-53, for the Mustang championship.

San Diego outscored Antelope Valley, 44-39, in the second half but could not overcome a 21-point halftime deficit and was beaten, 76-60, in the San Bernardino consolation finals.  Helix, after a 71-53 loss to Ventura and 64-47 win over Buena Park, bowed in the consolation finals to Burbank Burroughs, 71-69, at Fillmore.

CLASS A

Carlsbad (16-6) stretched its Palomar League streak to 30 wins in a row and beat Marian, 50-32 in the playoffs before losing to University (13-8) in the championship game at La Jolla, 48-44.

Helix’ Al Skalecky was on the floor during this play but commanded the backboards with 15 rebounds in Highlanders’ 65-59, Grossmont League championship-deciding win against Monte Vista. Monarch Don Hanchett made like acrobat in action around basket near Jim Sunderman (45) and Ron Slocum.

JUMP SHOTS

Morse’s Kenny Leininger set the single-game scoring pace with 49 points in a 73-71, overtime victory against El Capitan…Leininger, who scored 24 of the Tigers’ 25 fourth-quarter points, tied St. Augustine’s Tom Shaules (1956-57) for the third-highest-ever total, behind the 60 and 53 Shaules scored in 1957-58…Steve (Cord) Rippe scored 23 as Lincoln tied a school record in an 81-57 win over Granite Hills…the Hornets had 81 against La Jolla in 1958-59…a week after playing four games at Bing Crosby Hall in Del Mar in the Mustang event, Kearny went back to that venue and beat San Dieguito, 57-42, as erstwhile football stars Steve Reina (25) and Jim (Yazoo) Smith (11) paced the Komets…Reina was MVP of the Mustang but Madison’s Al Fitzmorris set the scoring record with 118 points…Al Skalecky’s 24 points led Helix to a 60-46 win over Granite Hills and his 23 rebounds were double that of any other player on the floor…after tying the school record with 32 points in a 84-66 win over Grossmont, Monte Vista’s Paul Landis broke the record with 40 in an 84-58 win over Granite Hills…led by Landis’s 27 points, 11 Monte Vista players scored in their record, 120-77 win over, you guessed it, Granite Hills…the Monarchs led at the quarters, 35-15, 61-38, and 89-57…Dennis Dunne’s basket with 5 seconds to play elevated St. Augustine past Morse, 68-66…a 74-50 victory was La Jolla’s first in 11 tries versus Clairemont…Lincoln’s 58-47 win against San Diego in the Eastern League opener was the Hornets’ sixth against 18 losses to the Cavers dating to 1953-54…Fallbrook had the highest point total of any Avocado League squad when it beat Ramona, 91-37….

 




2018: Oscar Foster, 69, San Diego High’s Big O

Oscar Foster never won an individual scoring championship at San Diego High, but Foster finished his legendary prep career with the San Diego Section record for most points.

Consistent, often brilliant, Foster’s record was testimony to the popular, team player that he was.

Foster passed away recently in Los Angeles at age 69, a victim for at least his last 40 years of internal demons that robbed the friendly, gentle man of his great promise.

A lithe, 6-foot, 7-inch forward, Foster scored 1,766 points in three seasons and 91 games during an era in which the Cavers posted a 77-17 record and won two San Diego Section championships.

“The Big O was an unbelievable player, intimidating and competitive,” remembered Brent Strom, now the pitching coach for the Houston Astros and Foster’s teammate at San Diego High.


Player-of-the-year Foster was joined on 1966-67 all San Diego Section first team by (clockwise from upper left) Morse’s Monroe Nash, Madison’s Steve Rostoker, Kearny’s Russ (Whimpy) Northcutt, and La Jolla’s Steve Haskett.

Foster averaged 14.7 and scored 457 points in 1964-65, his sophomore season, as San Diego, 24-8 overall after being a tied-for-second-place entry in the Eastern League, got hot in the playoffs and defeated Chula Vista, 62-40, in the championship game.

The Cavers were 24-7 in 1965-66, won the third-place game in the playoffs, and Foster averaged 21.4 points and scored 667.

The 29-2 championship team of 1966-67 was beaten only by Long Beach Poly, 67-62, and St. Augustine, 55-53, in the regular season.

Foster averaged 20.6 and scored 642 points and led coach Bill Standly’s squad a 54-53 victory over Mount Miguel in the championship game.




1960-61: Laurel & Hardy Could Not Top This

Hoover’s 24-3 Cardinals, from left: Rich Keeley, Rick Potter, Dave Sickels, Nick Barkett, and Dave Morehead, with Coach Charlie Hampton.

Evening Tribune writer Roger Conlee said the Grossmont-Helix game was more a circus carnival (of errors), with everything but a pie-throwing contest.

Conlee covered the Metropolitan League Southern Division contest that attracted about 1,200 persons to Grossmont’s “ancient, creaky arena.”

Taking them one at a time:

–The game started at 8:45 p.m. after a longer-than-usual junior varsity preliminary. The gymnasium was overflowing by 7:15 p.m.

–The lead changed 12 times in the first half.

–Officials made conflicting foul calls three times in the first half.  Unable to agree, the zebras each time ordered a jump ball.

–Play temporarily was halted when a puddle of water appeared on the floor.

–The gymnasium public address announcer pleaded with the crowd to be quiet during the shooting of free throws.

The announcement came during the shooting of a free throw.

–Twenty-one fouls were called on plays that involved driving to the basket.  None of the fouls were for charging on the player with the ball.

–Seven timeouts were called in the fourth quarter.  The eight-minute session of playing time began at 9:47 p.m. and did not end until 10:31 p.m.

–Spectators, restless after sitting for almost two hours-plus, engaged in three separate fights in the stands, all broken up quickly.

–Fourteen free throws were attempted in the frenzied, final three minutes.

–Officials attempted to quiet the crowd with no success when the game entered its final 1:55.

“That the scoreboard clock didn’t work and time had to be called out from the scorer’s table seemed to fit in perfectly, Conlee concluded.

Oh, the game. Helix took a 28-27 lead in the third quarter and hung on to win, 51-49.  Ed Vitale had 16 points for the Highlanders and Neil McClellan 15 for the Foothillers.

Top 10 scorer Ed Vitale led Helix to victory in wild game.

CARDINALS FLY AGAIN

Nick Barkett was the fifth of five guards on Hoover’s 26-2 squad of 1959-60, but he moved to forward this season and led the Cardinals to another Eastern League championship and to the inaugural CIF San Diego AA title.

“He lived at Muni Gym with (John) Bocko all summer,” said Coach Charlie Hampton, acknowledging Barkett’s commitment and reference to just-graduated Cardinals star John Bocko.

Barkett joined a lineup that included only one starter from 1959-60, guard Dave Morehead.  Dave Sickels, a 6-6 center had seen limited action.

The Cardinals’ record for the last two seasons was 50-5.  The only defeats for this year’s 24-3 squad was 65-60 in an early-season encounter at Hilltop, 63-59 in a stunning upset by Kearny, and 36-30 in a ragged contest at Lincoln.

Barkett was joined in the starting lineup by 6-1 Morehead, 6-foot junior guard Rick Potter, the 6-6 Sickels, and 6-2 Rich Keely, a junior varsity graduate who came within two points of the school record when he had 34 points in a December game against Glendale Hoover.

Barkett had 24 points in a 66-53 win over Point Loma in the regular season and 20 in the AA championship, a virtual repeat of the first game, Hoover winning, 66-54.

LINCOLN FOILED

Hoover enjoyed its usual late-game dominance of Lincoln, overcoming a 37-35 halftime deficit to win the Kiwanis Tournament, 55-51, the fifth Cardinals victory by four points or less in the last four years over their South 49th Street rival.

Lincoln felt good when it took a 30-22 halftime lead in the teams’ first league meeting, but the Cardinals outscored the Hornets, 21-7, in the fourth quarter for a 59-48 win.

“This may be the best basketball ‘team’ I’ve had,” said Coach Charlie Hampton.  “They may not be the best players, but as a team they can’t be beat.”

Hoover’s Rich Keeley outrebounds Lincoln’s Jim Eskridge.

CLAIREMONT BLOWS

Leading Point Loma, 35-34, with 11 seconds left in the game and in possession of the ball, Clairemont liked its chances.

But the Chiefs’ Joe Michael launched a shot that Point Loma’s Joe Soares rebounded, and got the ball to Dave Elliott, who was fouled.

Elliott made two free throws for a 36-35 victory and the Western League championship before a capacity crowd of 1,800 at Point Loma.

“I don’t know why (Michael) took the shot,” said Clairemont coach Dick Eiler.  “The poor kid is crying his eyes out about it.  It was just one of those things.”

Hilltop was 40-15 in its first two seasons, including 20-6 this year, as Lancers rolled with Robbie Hewitt (left) and Charlie Schneider.

T’D OFF

Leading Hilltop, 44-43, Escondido was assessed a technical foul when a substitute did not report  properly.  Robbie Hewitt then sank a free throw to tie the game and Tom Lee scored seconds later for a 46-44 Hilltop victory.

After much discussion, the T was upheld.

Escondido coach Don Hegerle argued with officials that the official scorer was not an adult and did not wear a jersey or shirt that indicated his position at the table.

“There was some question about it all right,” said Lancers coach Paul Pruett, “but we got our share of bad breaks, too. We’ll take the victory.”

NAME TEAM GAMES POINTS AVERAGE
John Fairchild San Dieguito 26 428 16.5
Charlie Schneider Hilltop 26 416 16.0
Brian Ross El Capitan 21 393 18.7
Bob Hoss El Cajon Valley 22 374 17.0
Dennis Henry Kearny 25 367 14.7
Nick Barkett Hoover 27 356 13.2
Robbie Hewitt Hilltop 26 339 13.0
Steve Ojetti Lincoln 24 327 13.7
Ed Vitale Helix 23 319 13.9
Larry Meek Escondido 22 318 14.4
Don Sada Point Loma 25 317 12.7
Paul Hagen Helix 26 312 12.0
Joe Soares Point Loma 25 300 12.0

HIGHS

Army-Navy’s Bill Froehling had the season’s highest individual point total, 47, on 23 baskets and one free throw. as the Warriors also scored the most points in a 91-47 win over San Diego Military.

Froehling’s total tied Fallbrook’s Paul Lockridge for the fourth highest in San Diego County History.

Lockridge’s 47 came in a 90-31 win over Brown Military in 1950-51.  St. Augustine’s Tom Shaules, with 60- and 53-point outbursts in 1957-58, ranks first and second.

El Capitan outscored El Cajon Valley, 77-75, the teams’ combined 152  leading the County.

San Diego Military served up the lowest, outscored by University, 59-14.

Steve Ojetti (left) and Al Catlin carried Lincoln’s hopes.

SMOKING

Al Catlin was a starter for three straight seasons at Lincoln and one of the school’s all-time top players, an accolade later to be duplicated at San Diego City College and San Diego State.

Catlin, in a stunning turn of events, was forced to learn how to shoot from his opposite hand this season because he was wearing a cast on his right arm.

The 6-foot, 2-inch forward unknowingly played his entire junior season with a broken bone in his right wrist, an injury sustained in the 1959 football season.

Catlin had experienced continual discomfort, finally forcing a visit to a physician who discovered the injury. The Hornets’ senior remained the area’s best rebounder and was a more-than-adequate shot maker on a contending squad.

Like many of his generation Catlin took up smoking, a habit he says he never indulged on the school campus.  Someone, Catlin believes a member of the Lincoln faculty, saw Catlin smoking at the Campus Drive-In Theater on El Cajon Boulevard.

The faculty snitch reported what he saw to Lincoln coach Warren Barritt, who summarily cut Catlin from the squad.

“Steve Ojetti and I both used to smoke a cigarette before a home game,” Catlin remembered years later.  “It wasn’t a crime, but I got called into Barritt’s office and he told me I was off the team for disciplinary reasons.”

Despite the loss of Catlin, Lincoln rallied behind Ojetti’s 27 points and walloped Crawford, 75-60, to secure the Eastern League’s second playoff spot in the final regular-season game.

Coach Jim Poole, a national badminton champion and future NFL game official, guided Kearny lineup of, from left, Dennis Henry, Billy Cesena, Doug Ogilvie, Elliott Reaves, and Mike Stremlau.

PLAYOFFS

Two divisions and 16 teams comprised the one-week posteason.

CLASS A

John Fairchild and San Dieguito couldn’t get a seat at the Class AA table (search 1960-61: “Where’s Aretha? Mustangs Want Respect”), so they rolled to the Class A title, capping a 25-1 season with victories of 73-57 over El Cajon Valley (8-14), 66-53 over Kearny (13-11), which had eliminated University (13-11), 43-38,  and 54-46 over Sweetwater (11-12).

Ramona, 21-1 in the regular season behind the scoring thrusts of Allen Brown and Mike Walters, was up against schools much larger, even though the Bulldogs were in the small schools class.

Ramona was beaten in the first round, 50-47, by Sweetwater, which got to the finals after a 48-46 win over Vista (12-8).

Vista had advanced with a 46-45 win over St. Augustine (4-17), fueled by the temper of the Saints’ Hugh (Hudge) McConnell, who threw a ball into the stands at Vista after a foul call with three seconds remaining in the game.

The Panthers’ Fred Boyer converted the resulting personal and technical foul free throws, giving Vista the come-from-behind victory.

Larry Meek led Escondido with 14.4 average.

CLASS AA

Lincoln (17-8) topped Grossmont (12-9), 46-45, in the first round but was eliminated in the semifinals as Point Loma (15-10) won a wild, 66-60 struggle at Lincoln. Pointer Joe Soares’ 24 points offset a 34-point performance by Steve Ojetti. Point Loma earlier eliminated Escondido (13-10), 61-44.

Hoover avenged an early-season loss with a 56-49 win over Hilltop in the semifinals after dismissing Chula Vista (10-11), 63-34. Hilltop (20-6) had polished off Clairemont (12-11), 71-48.

JUMP SHOTS

San Diego’s 10-14 record was the Cavemen’s poorest since the 1933-34 team was 6-9 and the ’34-35 squad was 6-8…Hoover coach Charlie Hampton said Glendale Hoover had the tallest high school lineup he ever saw: 6-foot, 4-inch and 6-3 guards, 6-2 and 6-5 forwards, and 6-5 center…Kearny presented a front line of 6-7 Doug Ogilvie, 6-5 Lon Swank, and 6-3 Elliott Reaves…Hilltop and Escondido each reached the semifinals of the Chino Tournament, losing to Anaheim Western, 56-51, and Chino, 58-46, respectively…San Dieguito topped Ramona, 58-47, for the Kiwanis Tournament Limited Division title…the Hoover-Lincoln Unlimited final was played in San Diego State’s Men’s Gym… Ventura whipped Helix, 80-47, for consolation honors at Fillmore…Fritz Ziegenfuss set  a Crawford record with 28 points in a season-opening, 73-57 win over El Cajon Valley…La Jolla’s Chet Guthrie set a school record with 35 points in one game…until the playoffs, Hilltop was 2-0 against Hoover…the Lancers also beat the Cardinals, 53-52, in Pepsi Summer League competition at Muni Gym….

Hoover’s Nick Barkett is tied up by Lincoln’s Steve Ojetti (right) and  C.D. Lowery in Lincoln’s 36-30 win. Courtesy, Doug Johnson.

Crawford felt good about itself with, from left: Larry Willis, Denny Bishop, Fritz Ziegenfuss, Bobby Remelin, Paul Janicki, and Don (Ross) Furrow.




2017-18 Week 17: Barry 3rd All-Time in Scoring; Bucs 17th in State; Clark All-Time No. 1.

West Hills’ Cameron Barry led the San Diego Section, was tied for second in the state, and 10th nationally in scoring average, and 22nd in total points, according to Max Preps.

Barry scored 866 points in 26 games.  His 33.3-point average is No. 3 all-time in San Diego County. Jc Canahuate of Army-Navy was second to Barry locally with a 27.8 average in 23 games.

The national leader in points was Qwan Jackson of the Conservatory of Lifelong Learning in Milwaukee with a 42.3 average in 18 games.

Barry, who followed state leader Ryan Turell of Valley Village Valley Torah’s 34.3 average and 1,031 points, was tied  with Landis Spivey of Aspire Langston Hughes Academy in Stockton, although Spivey was limited to 17 games and scored 566 points.

Barry is behind only Tony Clark’s 43.1 and Tyrone Shelley’s 34.9 in scoring average.  See below.

SHAYLA LEADS

Bonita Vista’s Shayla Latone was first in San Diego and in California and third nationally with a 36.9 average with 1,290 points in 35 games.

Latone’s  closest challenger in California was Hannah Hurley of Lake Isabella Kern Valley, with a 30.9 average in 22 games. Shemera Williams of Milwaukee Science led the nation with a 39.9 average and 1,038 points in 26 games.

San Diego Section 2017-18 boys leaders in average and all-time season leaders:

HIGHEST AVERAGE

Name Team Games Points Average
Cameron Barry West Hills 26 866 33.3
Jc Canahuate Army-Navy 23 639 27.8
Kibru Sugebo Preuss UCSD 27 695 25.7
Hassan Hunt Chula Vista High Tech 26 593 22.8
Tiberus Ballard Guajome Park 13 291 22.4
Bryce Pope Torrey Pines 32 713 22.3
Taeshon Cherry Foothills Christian 25 556 22.2
DeAndre Andrews Kearny 21 464 22.1
Phillip Willis Maranatha 27 592 21.9
Jayden Holloway Patrick Henry 23 464 20.2

SEASON HIGH  ALL-TIME

Year Name Team Games Points Average
1989-90 Tony Clark Christian 31 1,337 43.1
2006-07 Tyrone Shelley Crawford 27 941 34.9
2017-18 Cameron Barry West Hills 27 866 33.3
1998-99 Kemmy Burgess El Cajon Valley 33.1
2010-11 Johnny Dee Rancho Buena Vista 30 982 32.7
1976-77 Mitchell Lilly Madison 28 893 31.9
1995-96 Jeremy Killon Rancho Bernardo 31.9
1995-96 Jorge Salazar Bonita Vista 20 629 31.5
1988-89 Clark Valhalla 28 847 30.3
2004-05 Chase Budinger La Costa Canyon 30.1

CAL-HI SPORTS HAS BUCS AT NO. 17

Mission Bay (27-6), whose record included a win over No. 8 Oakland Bishop O’Dowd, finished 17th in trhe final Cal-Hi Sports Top 40.

Fioothills Chridtian (26-7) is 20th, although the up-and-down Knights, defeated No. 5 Los Angeles Westchester and No. 11 L.A. Fairfax.

Torrey Pines (28-4), is 33rd.

 




1961-62: Cardinals Challenged But Prevail

Hoover’s 25-2 record and second consecutive San Diego Section Class AA championship did not reflect a season-long struggle to stay ahead of the Eastern League posse.

Back-to-back league losses for the first time since 1957-58 and top-to-bottom league challenges, including one from rising Crawford, tested the Cardinals’ mettle.

Coach Charlie Hampton’s team showed its grit, rebounding in tough games down the stretch, led by a fiery guard and floor leader, Rick Potter.

A 50-49, overtime victory over San Diego before 1,800 persons at Cal Western University’s new, Golden Gym, including one girl on the San Diego side who fainted during the frenzied final moments,  would mark the last championship in Hampton’s career.

Hampton would coach the Cardinals one more season before becoming head coach at San Diego City College, leaving behind six league championships and three ties for second in his 11 years.

Hoover started the season with 14 consecutive wins, including 51-41 over Grossmont, thought by many to be the Cardinals’ most imposing threat.

The Redbirds defeated San Diego, 62-49, in the Kiwanis Tournament Unlimited Division final but were upset in Eastern League play by Crawford, 43-34 (the Colts’ first win in against their neighborhood rivals since the school opened in 1957), and then lost at San Diego, 57-54.

His players listened when coach Charlie Hampton spoke to Hoover lineup of Rick Potter, Bob Powell,  Albert Bocko, Nick Alessio, and Jim Surber (from left). Fred Carbone (rear), was “sixth man”.

San Diego’s win exhausted a San Diego standing room crowd of 1,600, which nervously watched a back-and-forth game that was tied 16 times.

Elburt Miller scored 10 of his 20 points in the third quarter and Graig Nettles eight of his 15 in the final quarter as the Cavers, trailing, 48-43, moved ahead, 55-52, and held on.

San Diego, at 3-0, held a 1½-game edge on the Cardinals, 2-2.  Hampton considered the prospect of running the table in the final 4 league games.  “It’s possible, but not probable,” he said.

The Cardinals won their last 11, including a last-second, overtime, 56-55 battle at Crawford (15-7), a return match with San Diego, and a 38-36 close shave with Chula Vista (17-7) in the playoffs.

CAVERS CAVE

The Cavers were 19-8, with five of their defeats by no more than two points. A late, regular-season, 37-33 loss at Hoover was the most galling, especially to guard Graig Nettles.

An all-Southern California second-team selection and future 21-year player in the major leagues, many with championship New York Yankees clubs and the San Diego Padres’ 1984 World Series participants, Nettles had the worst night of his career.

Baseball was in Graig Nettles’ future, but he also was a star in basketball at San Diego, scoring two of his 29 points in playoffs versus Grossmont.

The 6-foot guard, who launched jump shots from beyond the future three-point arc, was zero for 19 from the field.

After the final buzzer and in frustration, Nettles drew aim one more time.  He fired a shot that appeared to be going through the hoop, but rolled around and out.

“Zip, zero, nada?” smirked a colleague of mine in the Evening Tribune sports department.

“Nettles was colder than last week’s potatoes,” noted Chuck Sawyer in The San Diego Union,

ZEBRAS HEAR IT

San Diego coach Bill Standly held his tongue after the Cavers dropped a 72-70 decision to St. Augustine (“We played lousy defense in the first half, but there were some things going on out there I’d rather not talk about”) but Standly went Code Red after a 70-69 loss at Crawford.

St. Augustine’s lineup, from top to bottom: guards Richard Verlasky and Mark Yavorsky, forwards Ed (Arrowhead) Applegate and Hudge McConnell, and center Mike (Zeke) Shea.

“I may get a bad name with the officials over this, but they choked; they blew that ball game for us,” said Standly, referring to referees Jerry Tooze and Bert Nichols.  “Officials don’t (usually) beat you in this game, but they beat us tonight.”

The Cavers led, 69-66, when Crawford’s Paul Janicki drained a long looper from the side with 39 seconds left.   Ron Kroepel followed with a steal, was fouled, and converted two free throws for a 70-69 Colts advantage.

San Diego’s Elburt Miller drove down the middle of the court and crashed into Crawford’s Dick Woodson.  Miller was called for “progress”, charging in more conventional nomenclature.

Crawford took possession and stalled the last 16 seconds. Standly paced and raged inside the Cavers’ dressing room that Woodson should have been cited for a blocking foul.

CANDID COACHES

Point Loma coach John Early led the Pointers to a tie for the Western League title, sweeping favored Clairemont, 35-32, and 49-44. The Pointers actually made it three in a row, including a 39-33 victory over the Chieftains in the Kiwanis Tournament consolation finals.

“Eiler can’t beat me,” the outspoken Early announced before the regular-season finale.

Early was more comfortable in a rumpled suit than the button-downed, upwardly mobile Clairemont mentor Dick Eiler, who brought attention to himself by periodically chugging from a quart of milk positioned next to Eiler’s seat at home games.

“There never was a doubt in my mind,” Early said amid the Pointers’ five-point-victory celebration  on the Chieftains’ floor.  “I’ll beat him every time.  He fools around with his defense too much.”

Early said Eiler employed a man-to-man defense, 2-1-2 zone, and a 1-3-1 zone “and we still scored 24 points on layups and stuff under the basket.”

Early, who played football at St. Augustine in the ‘forties and at San Diego State in the early ‘fifties, had a final zinger.

“Also, you may put this in print:  I told that referee (Arch Dugan) that if he was going to let Eiler call the game for him, why didn’t he wear Eiler’s shirt?

PRINCIPAL NOT AMUSED

Early was referring to a goal tending call on his 6-foot, 5-inch center Joe Soares at the end of the third period.

“They had a little too much size for us, with Soares and (Glen) Willardson,” said Eiler. ”I hope Point Loma does well in the playoffs.”

Both teams, tied in the league with La Jolla, each with a 5-3 record, were voted into the postseason.

Early, meanwhile, was called on the carpet by principal Don Giddings, who took a dim view of the coach’s remarks.

Point Loma’s Glen Willardson appears to put hammer on La Jolla’s Bill Rauth but is just going for loose ball.

HIGHLANDERS’ COACH RIPS

Helix’ Bob Speidel, after his team made 6 of 51 shots from the field for 12 per cent in a 58-20 loss to Grossmont, also was not at a loss for words.

“If we had really fought and got beat by 30 points we could hold our heads high, but we were scared,” Speidel said to Roger Conlee of the Evening Tribune.  “We choked.  We talked ourselves out of our shots.”

Bow-tied Bill Reaves was vocal coach on La Jolla bench.

FOOTHILLERS THE BEST?

“When we play up to our capabilities we’re the best team in the area,” Grossmont coach Locke Olson told Conlee at the season’s midpoint.

“We could be head and shoulders above all of ‘em,” said Olson.  “We just clutched up against Hoover and San Diego,” referring to two December losses.

Olson said Grossmont’s problem was at the guard position.  “If we had a backcourt man like Rick Potter at Hoover, we’d be extremely tough.”

Dick Baker led Grossmont to 22-3 record and County in scoring with 490 points,

The Foothillers rolled with Dick Baker, a 6-foot, 7-inch center with a nice touch around the rim.

“Richard just wipes off the boards,” Olson said.  “When he’s working we really go.  When he loafs, the team can’t do a thing.”

Grossmont averaged 71 points a game in a 12-0 Grossmont League campaign.

ARE WE BACK?

Convinced they were relevant again after seasons of 10-12, 9-10, and 4-17 following the departure of Tom Shaules and Sammy Owens after the 1957-58 season, St. Augustine, off to a 4-1 start, held its first basketball rally in several years.

“We just hope the student body and team can keep their heads,” first-year head coach Hal Mitrovich said on the eve of the Saints’ Eastern League opener at Hoover.

The Cardinals defeated the Saints, 48-47, in overtime to move to 11-0.  “I’d rather be good, but I’m glad to be lucky,” said Coach Charlie Hampton.

THAT KIND OF GAME

Hoover Edges Lincoln But Was It Basketball?” That was the headline the day after in the Evening Tribune.

A sloppy, physical, 48-43 win at Lincoln (10-12) saw a Hoover player, Jim Surber, sustain the team’s first technical foul since 1956, although Lincoln was whistled for 25 fouls to the Cardinals’ 12.

Ever diplomatic, Charlie Hampton observed that “they upset us and I guess that’s what made us play their game.”

Lincoln coach Warren Barritt, a football coach by trade, predicted that 48 points would win the game and used 11 players.

“We outplayed them; we outscrapped them,” said Barritt.  “We platooned, because we thought it would run ‘em out, and I think we succeeded there.  They aren’t invincible.”

A small group of Hoover supporters jeered so loudly at one point in the game that Lincoln’s Mickey McFarlin walked off the free throw line three times before shooting.

DECEMBER SOUTH VS. NORTH

San Diego lost at Inglewood Morningside, 46-45, but won at Inglewood, 58-46.  Point Loma won at Inglewood, 50-49, and at Morningside, 51-37.

Hoover defeated visiting Burbank Burroughs, 46-34, and Glendale Hoover, 55-53, in overtime.  Glendale Hoover topped San Diego, 69-59, and San Diego beat Burroughs, 62-48.

Grossmont beat Redlands, 59-51.

EARLY-SEASON TELL?

Hoover beat Hilltop, 64-57, and Grossmont, 51-41.  After Grossmont slapped Hilltop, 70-47, Lancers coach Paul Pruett said of Locke Olson’s Foothillers:  “Grossmont’s as good as Hoover.  They have better material.”

Hoover and Grossmont were in different brackets at playoff time, with most experts seeing them in the finals, but San Diego, which edged Grossmont, 50-44, in the Kiwanis Tournament, repeated against the La Mesa squad, 65-62, in the semifinals as Graig Nettles scored a career-high 29 points, offsetting 30 by Grossmont’s Dick Baker.

Hilltop sharpshooter Dennis Biletnikoff’s last name may have been a good description of a Russian artillery piece, according  to Evening Tribune writer Roger Conlee.

Grossmont’s 22-3 season was the best since Ralph Chaplin’s 1946-47 team was 15-2.

POINTS

Unofficial leading scorers, based on total points (games played may not be accurate and leading scorers from small school leagues were not always covered):

Name Team Games Pts. Average
Dick Baker Grossmont 25 490 19.6
Joe Soares Point Loma 25 428 17.1
Rick Potter Hoover 27 368 13.6
Lew Riley Grossmont 25 366 14.6
Graig Nettles San Diego 26 360 13.8
Paul Janicki Crawford 21 347 16.5
Bob Anderson Monte Vista 21 341 16.9
Dennis Biletnikoff Hilltop 25 341 13.6
Hugh (Hudge) McConnell St. Augustine 19 328 17.3
Fred Boyer Vista 20 307 15.4
Chet Guthrie La Jolla 22 302 13.7

ONE-GAME BESTS

Point Loma’s Joe Soares scored a school-record 41 points, within one of the record St. Augustine’s Jacob Crawford set in the 1959 Kiwanis Tournament, as the Pointers defeated El Cajon Valley, 86-36.

Point Loma and Grossmont, which slammed El Capitan, 86-42, in a Grossmont League game, shared single-game team highs for the season.

BACK-HANDED COMPLIMENT

Point Loma defeated La Jolla, 47-35, although Joe Soares didn’t score until late in the first half, had four fouls at halftime, and fouled out at 7:11 of the fourth quarter with 11 points.

“For once, Joe didn’t take a shot every time he got the ball,” said Coach John Early.  “He passed off more.  He was more of a team man.”

HARDWOOD PAVING

El Cajon Valley and Helix, the last two Grossmont League schools without gymnasiums, each announced plans for on-campus, 1,500-seat buildings that would be available sometime in the 1962-63 season.

Longtime Helix coach Bob Divine often remarked, “If the playoffs were on asphalt we’d win every year.”

The last two asphalt strongholds, the schools practiced outdoors for years.

Evening Tribune reporter Roger Conlee also noted the gyms would have glass backboards, better than the outmoded fan-shaped backboards.

Hilltop’s Bob Gray was uneasy observer as errant ball appeared aimed at Gray’s head. Teammate Emil Zumstein stood by. Gray was unscathed, but Kearny scored 64-57 win.

TOURNAMENTS

Suburban coaches were not happy and this was reflected in the Kiwanis field’s shrinking from 32 to 24 teams.

The court bosses complained that a majority of games were played on city floors (see Hoover and San Diego), giving the urbans an unfair advantage.

Since there was a CIF rule limiting teams to one tournament, nine schools stiffed the Kiwanis and went elsewhere.

COVINA

Helix opened with a 36-34 win over Covina Charter Oak but then was eliminated by Downey Warren, 56-48.

CHINO

Chula Vista was defeated in the finals by Pomona, 50-39.  Hilltop measured Escondido, 47-40, for third place.

Chula Vista advanced with victories of 45-37 over Upland, 56-48 over Rialto Eisenhower, and 33-23 over Escondido.

Hilltop advanced by nudging Chino, 36-33, and Buena Park, 38-37, before bowing to Pomona, 61-49.

Mar Vista lost to Pomona, 56-31, and was shoved out of the consolation bracket by Santa Ana Valley, 72-25.

Before losing to Chula Vista, Escondido defeated Pomona Ganesha, 39-32, and Garden Grove Rancho Alamitos, 58-47.

SECOND ANNUAL MUSTANG-OPTIMIST

Laguna Beach topped El Capitan, 78-69, for the championship. The Artists opened with a 64-17 win over San Marcos and followed with a 60-53 triumph over Calexico.

El Capitan had beaten Capistrano, 37-29, and Vista, 55-53, after Vista beat El Centro Central, 53-39.

Vista outscored Calexico, 59-51 for third place. Host San Dieguito lost to Calexico, 53-41 and to El Centro Central, 37-34.

PLAYOFFS

Chula Vista’s Wheeler Hubbard got past Hoover defense for basket in San Diego Section semifinal playoff.

Helix and Monte Vista tied for the second place in the Grossmont League and a 7-7 vote, by two administrators from each school, could not choose the league’s second participant, so Helix defeated the Monarchs, 44-38, in a hastily prepared “Play-in” game.

Coming back the next day at Hoover, the Highlanders had no chance, bowing, 65-33.  San Diego won its first-round playoff, 45-36 over Point Loma; Chula Vista sent Clairemont packing, 59-37, and Grossmont ousted Hilltop, 58-32.

Vista (14-6) defeated Fallbrook (15-3), 81-67, for the Class A small school championship at Escondido.

The CIF approved a third-place game and Grossmont edged Chula Vista, 55-54.

San Diego’s Elburt Miller chased loose ball, but Bob Powell, on floor, finished with basket that was difference in Hoover’s 50-49 championship victory.

SIGN OF THE TIME

The Spreckels Building, on Broadway between First and Second avenues, was sold for $1.65 million to a Beverly Hills couple.  The six-story edifice, erected in 1912, for years was the tallest in San Diego.

JUMP SHOTS

San Dieguito’s 25-game winning streak, which started after a loss to Helix in the opening game of the 1960-61 season, came to an end when Helix struck again, topping the Mustangs, 40-29, in the opening game this season at Mount Miguel…Crawford’s Paul Janicki set a school record with 30 points as the Colts outscored Lincoln for the first time in school history, 65-60…the Colts were coming, with three juniors, Larry Blum, Ron Kroepel, and Dick Woodson, in the starting lineup…Robert Anderson set a record for first-year Monte Vista with 31 points in a 61-58 win over Oceanside in the Kiwanis Tournament…maybe it was the intimate surroundings of 700-seat Dougherty Gym, but San Diego coach Bill Standly contended that St. Augustine’s floor was not the standard, 94 feet by 50…”When you try to run, get a fast break going, you’re there before you get started,” claimed Standly….

Grossmont five of Dick Baker, Lew Riley, George Schweer, Sam Thomas, and Carey Rader led Foothillers to playoffs