1962: Someone Forgot To Tell The Zebras

Try playing a game without officials.

Hilltop and Escondido tried, with disastrous results for the visiting Cougars, who were upset, 18-13, by the homecoming-enthused Lancers in the season’s final regular season game.

Twenty minutes before kickoff Hilltop coach Bob Tomlinson noticed that the game referee and his crew, usually already on site, had not checked in.

Tomlinson waited a few minutes and then notified Bob (Chick) Embrey, the coach of Escondido, which was the visiting team for the Metropolitan League contest at Chula Vista High.

The 8 p.m. kickoff time came and went.

Hoover cheerleader Denise Kouns had to “restrain” Cardinals’ Bobby Smith (left) and St. Augustine’s Don Carlos Stafford before Eastern League title-deciding game. Hoover won, 7-0.

VOLUNTEERS, ANYONE?

School officials from Hilltop began hurriedly searching the stands for anyone with flag-throwing experience.

Two “neutrals” in the pro-Hilltop crowd agreed to help.  An assistant coach from each team also was pressed into service.

Kickoff started about 30 minutes late.

And controversy quickly followed.

Hilltop scored when no one was looking.

There also was no one in capacity to fairly judge the play involved and make a decision.

By halftime word somehow had reached Bob Kirchhoff (this long before cell phones), president of the San Diego County Football Officials’ Association.  Kirchhoff left a game at nearby Sweetwater and headed for Hilltop.

But the damage had been done.

Following a Cougars touchdown in the first quarter and the Lancers’ return of the ensuing kickoff, Hilltop had first down on its 27-yard line.

Tomlinson’s team did not huddle but quickly lined up.

Quarterback Joe Stetser passed to end Don Parish, who, according to The San Diego Union reporter Larry Littlefield, was “hiding on the sideline.”

Parish caught Stetser’s pass and raced untouched to the end zone to complete a 73-yard play.

Lincoln’s Nate Shaw was player of the year on the all-Eastern League team,

SLEEPER MUST BE IN PLACE

As Kirchhoff explained after he arrived:  “On such a play the end, or sleeper, must be within 15 yards of the ball.”

Kirchhoff meant in bounds and 15 yards from where the ball would be snapped at the line of scrimmage.

Whether Parrish was within the required distance escaped everyone’s attention, including the “officials” and the stunned and furious Escondido coach.

Embrey (right) was much happier camper when he received congratulatory handshake from Sweetwater coach Nick Uglesich after title victory.
Embrey (right) was much happier camper when he received congratulatory handshake from Sweetwater coach Nick Uglesich after game that ensured league title.

“It was an illegal play,” Embrey stormed.

Nothing like the Oakland Raiders’ “Holy Roller” against the San Diego Chargers years later, but….

Embrey argued that because Hilltop no-huddled, the ersatz “head linesman” in charge of downs and markers hadn’t gotten into position before Stetser played hide and seek with Parish.

A veteran referee would have stood over the ball and whistled for play to begin when he was satisfied that the teams were lined up and officials were in place.

“I don’t know if we’ll protest or not,” said Embrey.  “But we probably should just for the sake of our players. They were robbed.”

Acknowledging that “we played a bad game, there’s no question of that”, Embrey still got in another zinger.

“We could play Hilltop a hundred times and beat them ninety-nine,” he said.

DREADED ADMINISTRATIVE GLITCH

The late Howard Cosell was heard to shout after a production snafu on Monday Night Football, “Who goofed?  I’ve got to know.”

Investigation revealed that no officials were assigned to Hilltop-Escondido by the association’s appointment secretary.

But was that the fault of Bob Stephenson, the San Diego Fire Department Captain and long-time official who routinely sent groups of three to four rules enforcers to more than 20 games every week?

It turned out that the schedule Hilltop sent to Stephenson at the start of the year listed only a junior varsity game for the date in question.

The schedule Escondido entered did not list a game at all.  Nor was there an Escondido-Hilltop game on the master schedule for November in San Diego Section commissioner Don Clarkson’s office.

Evening Tribune reporter Roger Conlee pointed out that Hilltop’s schedule, mailed to the newspaper, listed a varsity game between the schools that night. Escondido had not sent the newspaper its schedule.

Although not official, the Union and Tribune grid log published each Tuesday also showed an Escondido-Hilltop contest in the last week of the regular season on the undated schedule for both teams.

The 18-13 result and Lancers victory was not “officially” challenged by Escondido.

NO HARM, NO FOUL?

Despite the loss, the Cougars still won the Metropolitan League championship.  Their 3-1 record was matched by Sweetwater, but Escondido had won the head-to-head meeting with the Red Devils, 25-14, weeks earlier.

The Cougars upset Hoover, 28-26, in the first round of the playoffs and defeated Clairemont, 28-14, for the large-schools championship, their second in the three years since the San Diego Section was formed.

It was not a season of powerhouses in the CIF.

Clairemont and Escondido entered the game with 6 losses between them.  Escondido also had been beaten, 35-6, by Point Loma and 26-7 by San Diego, and tied by Oceanside, 13-13.

Hoover backup quarterback Rick Shaeezes between defenders John Brown (34) and Sylvester Williams for touchdown. Cardinals' Bob Bishop (67) pulled confuse San Diego defense.
Hoover backup quarterback Rick Shaw eases between defenders John Brown (34) and Sylvester Williams for touchdown. Cardinals’ Bob Bishop (67) pulled to confuse San Diego defense.

Clairemont had won one league game in its history, which dated to 1959, and was 1-3 before getting untracked behind sharpshooting quarterback Bill Casey.

POINT LOMA AMBUSHED

The Chieftains startled Point Loma, 19-0, in a Western League showdown before 5,000 persons at Hoover.

The Pointers, who finished with a 7-1 record, were at least one touchdown favorites, but Casey, improving each week under the guidance of assistant coach and former Hoover and San Diego State signal caller Joe Duke, completed 11 of 20 passes for 125 yards and a touchdown and ran for two others.

End Bill Peterson, who played six years as a linebacker and tight end in the pros for Cincinnati and Kansas City, caught 5 of Casey’s throws for 63 yards.

Kenny Rizzo gained 93 yards in 15 carries and caught 4 passes for 40 yards and Dan Gurley added 41 yards in 11 carries as the Chiefs kept the Pointers backing up.

Casey’s 23-yard touchdown strike to Larry Rose with 35 seconds left in the game pushed Clairemont past Helix, 6-0, in another surprise in the first round of the playoffs.

Cliremont quarterback Bill Casey was player of the year on all-Western League squad.

COUGARS IN CONTROL

Clairemont’s run came to an end as Escondido led the Chiefs all the way in the finals before about 10,000 persons in Aztec Bowl.

It was what the Cougars did the week before that had the most currency.

Hoover was the favored team from the city’s seemingly omnipotent Eastern League, but Embrey’s team, overcame a 26-14 Hoover lead as Bob Blunt caught a 15-yard touchdown pass and raced 64 yards for another score

CAVERS NEVER RECOVER

The Cardinals were 7-1 going into the playoffs and had scored one of the school’s greatest victories when they upset San Diego, 6-0, in the season’s fourth week, after the Cavers had outscored their first three opponents, Santa Barbara, 32-12, Santa Monica, 46-19, and Escondido, 26-7.

The defeat so flattened San Diego that the Cavemen did not win another game and coach Charlie Popa was released at the end of the season.

Hoover lost starting quarterback Art Howard with a broken leg early in the San Diego game, played before a crowd estimated at 7,000 in the Cardinals stadium.

The Cardinals were  outgained, 303-118, and needed 10 plays to move 28 yards, with benefit of a 15-yard penalty, to score the game’s touchdown.

Hoover won with an epic defensive performance:

1—Hit San Diego runners so hard the Cavers lost two fumbles in the first quarter.

2—Blocked a punt in the second quarter that set in motion the winning score.

3—Defended on third down and two yards to go at the Cardinals’ eight, and stopped San Diego on two line thrusts, taking over on the seven late in the second quarter.

4—Held the Cavers to four yards on three plays in the third quarter, forcing the Cavemen to attempt an unsuccessful field goal from Hoover’s 15.

5—Stopped the Cavers on fourth down and inches from the goal line in the fourth quarter.

The Cardinals had other good fortune.

On a fourth down from his 20-yard line, the snap from center went over the head of punter Gene Cowell, who recovered the ball and advanced it out of the end zone to the two-yard line.

But San Diego was out of time outs and could not regroup and run a play before time expired.

Game over.

Hoover defenders who stopped San Diego, top (from left): Bobby Smith, Bill Boone. Middle (from left): David Carr, Gary Weide, Jiom Foster, Ron Flisher. Bottom (from left) Dale Twombley, Roger Seeman, Richard Gauthier, Bill (Sledge) Homik, Bob Bishop.
Hoover defenders who stopped San Diego, top (from left): Bobby Smith, Bill Boone. Middle (from left): David Carr, Gary Weide, Jim Foster, Ron Flisher. Bottom (from left) Dale Twombley, Roger Seeman, Richard Gauthier, Bill (Sledge) Homik, Bob Bishop. Coach is Roy Engle.

The San Diego Union, on the following Tuesday, selected Hoover’s starting 11 on defense as the prep players of the week.

MISCHIEF

A student from University called The San Diego Union late one Friday night to report the score from the Dons’ game at Brawley.

The student told the sports desk reporter that the Dons had beaten the host Wildcats, 49-7.  That score was reported in Union editions the next day.

Hold the phone!

Actual score was Uni 14, Brawley 13.  The Wildcats missed a tie when a point-after attempt hit the crossbar and fell short.

The Union printed a retraction the following day after people began calling the newspaper and facts surfaced.

“The student’s identity was made known to University officials, who promised action,” wrote Union prep honcho Chuck Sawyer.

Ken Henderson (36) and teammates are rapt observers as Clairemont nears upset win over Helix.
Ken Henderson (36) and teammates are rapt observers as Clairemont nears upset win over Helix.

CHIEFTAINS OF NOTE

Bill Peterson wasn‘t the only Clairemont standout with a professional career in his future.

End Ken Henderson was an outfielder and played for seven teams in a 16-season major league career, with career bests of 20 home runs and 95 runs batted in and hit .292 for the 1974 Chicago White Sox.

Henderson was on pennant-winning teams with the San Francisco Giants in 1970 and Cincinnati Reds in 1979 and hit .294 with 17 homers and 88 RBI in 1970.

Henderson’s career totals included 122 home runs and a .257 batting average.

LIKED BASKETBALL MORE

Helix’ Gary Hafner (dark uniform) and Clairemont’s Larry Rose each came up empty-handed on this pass, but Clairemont didn’t winning, 6-0, in playoffs.

Quarterback Bill Casey, who nixed football as a junior to concentrate on basketball, was the Western League player of the year and the best passer in the area.

Casey had pedigree.  His uncle, Davey O’Brien was an all-America passing phenom at Texas Christian University in the late 1930s. Casey’s father, William Casey, was a lineman decades before for the Hobbs Adams-coached San Diego High team.

MEANWHILE

Madison, 2.9 miles east of Clairemont, defeated the San Diego High junior varsity, 33-0, in its inaugural game as Brandt Crocker scored two touchdowns.

The Warhawks’ quarterback, Al Fitzmorris, also was a baseball player of note.  Fitzmorris had a won-loss record of 77-59 in 10 major league seasons, mostly with Kansas City.  He was 16-12 in 1975 and 15-11 the year before.

HONORS

Hoover tackle Bill (Sledge) Homik and Lincoln quarterback Nate Shaw were second team all-Southern California and Escondido halfback Bob Blunt third team in the last year San Diego Section athletes were honored by the Helms Athletic Foundation.

Shaw became an all-American safety at USC.  His nephew, David Shaw, would become head coach at Stanford.

Carlsbad guard Greg Anderson was on the all-Southern California lower division second team along with teammate Charlie Coad.  Tackle Mike Baker  of Coronado and back Daro Quiring of Poway were on the third team.

 A TIE FOR THE AGES

Coronado and Sweetwater set an admittedly obscure record.

Their 26-26 tie game represented the most combined points by two tied teams from  all but San Diego Section smallest schools.

Oceanside and Vista, 20-20 in 1951, and San Diego and Anaheim, 20-20 in 1955, was the previous record.  Poway and Marian then bettered the 52-point total when they deadlocked, 39-39, in 1966.

On the smallest school level, San Miguel and North Hollywood Harvard Military tied, 33-33, in 1961.

Oceanside quarterback Terry Scott gets a pointer from head coach Herb Meyer before Class A championship game against neighboring rival Carlsbad.

COACHING CAROUSEL

There had been nine head coaching appointments and three schools opened their doors for the first time.

Madison, Morse, and Orange Glen fielded teams against mostly junior varsity competition.

Chuck Coover moved from Mission Bay to Morse, Dick Disney from San Marcos to Orange Glen, and George Hoagland, San Diego High assistant, to Madison.

School New Coach Previous
Crawford Frank Smith Walt Harvey
Grossmont Sam Muscolino Ken Maynard
Madison George Hoagland
Marian Jan Chapman John Strub
Mar Vista Verne Dodds Art Filson
Mission Bay Gerry Spitler Chuck Coover
Morse Chuck Coover
Orange Glen Dick Disney
San Marcos Bob Woodhouse Dick Disney

 HE’S AN EINSTEIN!

Richard Einstein, a senior at Point Loma, was in a unique position.   Einstein was the Pointers’ official motion picture shooter, in a position usually occupied by older professional photographers.

Einstein shot 16 millimeter film of Pointers games for head coach Bennie Edens.

“He doesn’t say much about my films,” said Einstein, “but he gets mad once in awhile when I miss a play during a reel change.”

POINTER ON POINT

Point Loma coach Bennie Edens got a kick out of Steve Soares, who also played quarterback.
Point Loma coach Bennie Edens got a kick out of Steve Soares, who also played quarterback.

Point Loma quarterback Steve Soares made his first 21 point after kicks and had a streak of 26 dating to the 1961 season.

Soares was 9 for 9 as the Pointers rushed for 358 yards in a 63-0 rout of Mission Bay that was the highest point total in the area since Hoover’s 66-0 win over St. Augustine in 1954.

Soares’ streak came to an end when his first two attempts at La Jolla were blocked.

TRUE GRID

Future Heisman Trophy winner Mike Garrett of Los Angeles Roosevelt led the L.A. City squad to a 20-6 victory over the San Diego County team before 12,500 persons at Aztec Bowl in the 14th annual Breitbard College Prep all-star game in August…the Eastern League crushed the Western League, 52-14, in the 24th City Schools carnival before 14,000 at Balboa Stadium…San Diego outscored Mission Bay, 21-0, in one quarter…Lincoln was 19-7 over Point Loma, and Crawford 12-7 over Kearny…Hoover and Clairemont and La Jolla and St. Augustine were scoreless…an overflow crowd of 13,000 at Aztec Bowl saw Monte Vista, El Cajon Valley, Granite Hills, and El Capitan defeat the Helix Green team, Helix White team, Mount Miguel, and Grossmont, 13-6…San Diego and Santa Monica met for the first time since Samohi came from behind to beat the Hilltoppers, 13-12, in the 1947 Southern California finals…Marty (the Mop) Jensen of Coronado led the Metropolitan League with 88 points including all of his team’s in a 26-7 win over San Dieguito…Carlsbad defeated Oceanside, 13-6, for the Class A title…Point Loma rushed for 352 yards and slammed defending San Diego Section champion Escondido, 35-6…after two games, 31-0 and 39-0 wins over Chula Vista and Sweetwater, respectively, Lincoln was averaging 470 yards offense and 9.3 yards a play, according to coach Shan Deniston ….

Carlsbad's Charlie Coad, the County's leading scorer with 114 points, earned his 19th touchdown of the season on this play as he ran through Bob Norgard (51) and Jim Valdvogel (80).
Carlsbad’s Charlie Coad, the County’s leading scorer with 115 points, earned his 19th touchdown of the season on this play as he ran through Oceanside’s Bob Norgard (51) and Jim Valdvogel (80).

Hoover's Bobby Smith (24) jars Escondido's Bob Blunt into rare fumble, but Cougars knocked out Hoover, 28-26 in playoffs.
Hoover’s Bobby Smith (24) jars Escondido’s Bob Blunt into rare fumble, but Cougars knocked out Hoover, 28-26, in playoffs. Bill Boone (23) and Jim Foster (68) converge.

St. Augustine's Jimmy Antl goes low to stop Lincoln's Marvin Lowery as Eastern League team battled to 6-6 standoff.
St. Augustine’s Jimmy Antl goes low to stop Lincoln’s Marvin Lowery as Eastern League teams battled to 6-6 standoff.




2015-16 Week 7: No Change Among Poll Top 4.

Foothills Christian blew past a couple Coastal League opponents last week and retained its ranking as No. 1 in San Diego, No. 4 in California, and No. 17 in the United States.

The rankings are from the Union-Tribune, Cal-Hi Sports, and USA Today, respectively.

Foothills Christian, which defeated La Jolla Country Day, 68-42, and The Bishop’s, 69-37 days ago,  has a league game at Cuyamaca College tomorow night with Army-Navy, ranked sixth in San Diego.

Cathedral, Torrey Pines, and St. Augustine are 2, 3, and 4 in San Diego.

San Ysidro hosts a shootout this weekend and may be getting some poll props after writer Don Norcross campaigned for the 74-points-a-game, 17-3 Cougars in a Union-Tribune article this morning.

Coach Terry Tucker, who coached another high scoring Crawford squad that featured future San Diego State Aztecs Tyrone Shelley and Malcom Turner a decade ago, sends his club against Hoover (8-10) in the the Cougars’ City of Angels tournament Saturday night.

The night’s feature game has La Jolla Country Day (18-2) against West Hills (14-3).

Seems odd that San Ysidro is not in the main event against either of those visiting teams.

Records through Monday, Jan. 25.

Rank Team Record Points Last Week
1 Foothills Christian (11) 13-3 110 1
2 Cathedral 11-4 92 2
3 Torrey Pines 15-4* 83 3
4 St. Augustine 15-4 79 4
5 El Camino 16-4 67 6
6 Army-Navy 15-5 60 7
7 Kearny 20-2 39 8
8 la Jolla Country Day 18-2 32 5
9 Poway 18-3 15 9
10 Grossmont 17-3 13 NR

*Forfeited 57-37 victory Dec. 5 over Horizon.                                                                          Points awarded on basis of 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1.

Others receiving votes, including record: Mission Bay (14-5, 9), Rancho Berrnardo (14-5, 5), San  Marcos (12-6, 3).

Eleven media representatives vote, including John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune; Steve Brand (San Diego Hall of Champions), Terry Monahan, Jim Lindgren, Union-Tribune correspondents; Bill Dickens, Adam Paul, EastCountySports.com; Rick Willis, KUSI-TV; Rick Smith, partletonsports.com; Bodie DeSilva, sandiegopreps.com; Lisa Lane, San Diego Preps Insider; Aaron Burgin, fulltimehoops.com.




2016: San Diego’s All-Time Super Bowl Roster

Thirty-three players with San Diego Section or Southern Section connections have played in the 49 Super Bowls.

Denver and Carolina meet in Super Bowl 50 on Feb. 7 in Santa Clara.

Carolina Defensive tackle Nate Chandler from Mira Mesa, who signed with the Panthers as an undrafted free agent in 2012, is the only San Diego-connected player on either team but spent the 2015 season on reserve/injured.

Dave Grayson, Sr., of Lincoln was the earliest Super Bowl representative, for Oakland in game II.

Grayson was a starting defensive back and  reserve halfback for the 1955 San Diego High Cavemen, who won the Southern Section championship and and were acclaimed national champions.

Grayson moved into the Lincoln district and played for the Hornets in 1956.  He was the first of five Lincoln graduates (see table below) to play in the Super Bowl.

Lincoln is tied with Long Beach Poly, Compton, Los Angeles Crenshaw, Los Angeles Dorsey, and L.A. High for the most representation among California schools.

Helix, with 4 Super Bowl players (see table), is tied for fifth  with Los Angeles Hamilton, Berkeley, and Anaheim Servite.

Two head coaches, Mike Martz of Madison, and John Fox of Castle Park, have guided their teams to the big game, Martz for the St. Louis Rams in Super Bowl XXXVI, and Fox for the Panthers in S.B. XXXVIII.

Name Pos. High School Team Super Bowl
Marcus Allen RB Lincoln Oakland* XVIII
Terrell Davis RB Lincoln Denver* XXXII, XXXIII
Saladin Martin DB Lincoln San Francisco* XVI
Wally Henry KR-WR Lincoln Philadelphia XV
Dave Grayson, Sr. FS Lincoln Oakland II
Brett Swain WR Carlsbad Green Bay* XLV
Colin Branch S Carlsbad Carolina XXXVIII
Ted Johnson LB Carlsbad New England XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX
Steve Riley T Castle Park Minnesota IX, XI
Michael Booker CB El Camino Atlanta XXXIII
Dokie Williams WR El Camino Oakland XVIII
Glenn Cadrez LB El Centro Central Denver* XXXII, XXXIII
Joe Lavender CB El Centro Central Washington* XVII
Alex Smith QB Helix San Francisco XLVII
Reggie Bush RB Helix New Orleans* XLIV
Leon White RB Helix Cincinnati XXIII
Bruce Walton T Helix Dallas X
Tony Banks QB Hoover Baltimore* XXXV
Bryan Wagner P Hilltop San Diego XXIX
Clifford Hicks CB Kearny Buffalo XXV, XXVI, XXVII
John Richardson T Kearny Miami VI
John Michels T La Jolla Green Bay* XXXI
Lincoln Kennedy T Morse Oakland XXXVII
Michael Pittman RB Mira Mesa Tampa Bay* XXXVII
Joev Salave’a DT Oceanside Tennessee XXXIV
Junior Seau LB Oceanside San Diego, New England XXIX, XLII
Stephen Neal T San Diego New England* XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX
Darren Comeaux LB San Diego Denver XXI
Keith Kartz C-T San Dieguito Denver XXIV
Mike Kozlowski S San Dieguito Miami XIX
Monte Jackson CB St. Augustine Oakland XV
John Lynch S Torrey Pines Tampa Bay* XXXVII
Brad Daluiso K Valhalla N.Y. Giants XXXV

*Winning Team.

 




2016: Eldridge Cooks, Fullback on ’55 National Champs

Eldridge Cooks, the starting fullback on the 1955 San Diego High team that won the Southern California championship and was acclaimed the national high school champion for that season, was at a UCLA basketball game when he passed recently.

The 165-pound blocker and runner was a two-year varsity letterman for the Hillers, whose combined record in 1954 and ’55 was 20-2-1.

Cooks (22) lined up as fullback on San Diego's championship team.
Cooks (22) lined up as fullback on San Diego’s championship team.

Cooks, 78, also played baseball at San Diego State and was a member of Don Coryell’s first San Diego State football teams in 1961-62.

Cooks resided in Santa Ana for many years and was an enthusiastic alumnus of San Diego High and regularly attended sporting events throughout Southern California.

BRAVES’ ORIGINAL QUARTERBACK

Bobby Contreras was El Cajon’s Valley’s first varsity football quarterback when the  school opened in 1955 and also starred for the Braves in basketball and baseball before graduation in 1957.

DRAFTED BY YANKEES

Kerry Dineen, 63, all-San Diego Section outfielder at Chula Vista in 1970, was a fourth-round draft choice of the baseball New York Yankees in 1973.

Dineen got into 16 games over parts of three seasons in the majors and had a .324 batting average. He was inducted into the University of San Diego Hall of Fame in 1997 and had a .409 collegiate career batting average.

 

 




1978: Red Devil Caught in Act of Touchdown

John Saleamua took the handoff, cleared the first line of defense, and cut to the outside.

The Sweetwater running back was running free along the Montgomery sideline when he suddenly went down.

Jack Jackson, a Montgomery player, had left his bench area, came onto the field, and tackled Saleamua, short-circuiting a 79-yard touchdown run.

“I couldn’t believe it,” said the shocked Saleamua.

“I was on my head phones talking to one of our spotters upstairs in the press box, when he yelled in my ear,”  Red Devils coach Al Jacobus told Jerry (Sigmund) Froide of the Evening Tribune.

Game officials huddled briefly at midfield and then signaled touchdown, one of many in Sweetwater’s 44-7, first-round playoff victory.

“It was a weird play,” understated Jacobus.  “I guess they were frustrated over there.”

“I thought I had a touchdown for sure,” Saleamua said.  “I would have been really mad if the refs hadn’t given me the touchdown.”

Longtime observers remembered the nationally televised Cotton Bowl in 1954.  An Alabama player left the bench and brought down Rice’s Dickie Moegel, who was running free for a touchdown.

Game officials also ruled touchdown as Rice won, 28-6.

HELIX TAKES THE HIGH ROAD

Dominated by Grossmont in the annual carnival, beaten by the rival Foothillers in league play, overwhelmed by a Mount Miguel comeback a week later, the Helix Highlanders took a figurative mandatory eight count, had the sawdust wiped from their gloves, and rallied to win the San Diego Section championship.

Arnaiz's team charged down season's stretch.
Arnaiz’s team charged down season’s stretch.

Coach Jim Arnaiz’s Scots knocked out San Pasqual, 17-10, before 8,778 persons in San Diego Stadium to capture the school’s first title and validate Arnaiz’s program as one of the area’s elite.

Casey Tiamalu, a 5-foot-8, 193-pounder rushed for 160 yards in 11 carries and scored on runs of 25 and 40 yards in the  second half as the Highlanders, stung by three turnovers, rallied from a 10-3 deficit.

Tiamalu also got the Highlanders on the scoreboard in the first half with a 38-yard field goal.

Winning the championship was the last thing on Arnaiz’ mind  when he made his way off the field at Helix’ Benton Hart Stadium in mid-season.

The coach would be occupied by nightmares after he put his head down on the pillow that night following a devastating, 41-40  loss to Mount Miguel that saw Arnaiz’s team fall to 3-2.

Helix had leads of 27-0 and 34-6.

Mount Miguel coach Brian Smith admitted to being “in shock.”

“We didn’t panic or scream,” said Smith.  “We just told the players to get rolling.”

A six-yard pass, John Coughlin to Jerome Weatherspoon, with 22 seconds remaining in the game clinched the Matadors’ comeback as they survived a 350-yard, five-touchdown passing effort by Helix’ Jim Oxe.

Helix regrouped, set sights on the big prize, and won its last seven games.

SHOCK AND AWE IN REVERSE

John Shacklett’s Morse Tigers seemed unbeatable.

The team from the 16-year-old school at 69th Street and Skyline Drive was in  beast mode.

The Tigers set a San Diego Section record with 425 points and 47.2 average in a 9-0 regular season.

Morse’s big guns: quarterback Keith Magee (kneeling) and running backs Dino Babers, Billy Ervin, and Mark Kennedy (from left).

”Deep,  talented, quick, awesome,” wrote Steve Brand of The San Diego Union after Morse had put up 50 points a game in a 5-0 start.

But it’s a long way to the finish line.

Morse fought the fog and La Jolla in the playoffs’ opening round, leading only 6-0 at halftime.

Mark Kennedy, the County’s No. 3 rusher, gained only 25 yards in seven carries but the Tigers scored 13 points in the third quarter and pulled away from the pesky Vikings to win, 20-0.

Michael Johnson took up the slack for Kennedy, gaining 151 yards in 15 carries and scored on runs of 62 and 18 yards. Michael’s brother, Jerry, returned a punt 40 yards for another touchdown.

Shacklett told writers that he had a “good talk” with his club at halftime.

DISASTER

Crusty Bob Woodhouse’s San Pasqual Golden Eagles had a top 10 defense yet averaged at least 4 touchdowns a game less than Morse.

Woodhouse led San Pasqual.
Woodhouse led San Pasqual.

But the Eagles made plays.

The squad from east Escondido was wobbling late in the game, clinging to a 21-19 lead with the rallying Tigers on San Pasqual’s  25-yard line.

Allen Dale and Dave Gleason came to the rescue.

Dale stopped Billy Ervin for a five-yard loss and Gleason sacked quarterback Keith Magee on fourth down.

Ball game.

The resourceful Eagles had similarly kept Morse at a distance throughout the quarterfinals contest.

Morse’s first score didn’t come until 3:22 remained in the third quarter when Magee and John Glover connected on a 41-yard scoring pass play.  San Pasqual promptly answered with a touchdown and took a 21-6 lead into the final quarter.

Ervin’s 10-yard run at 7:03 of the fourth made the score 21-12.  Morse stunned the Eagles with an onside kick, Ray Anderson recovering. Magee raced 47 yards for a touchdown on the next play.

Momentum clearly was with Shacklett’s team, but San Pasqual dug in and closed the door.

The last time a 10-0 team had been so shockingly led to the exit was in 1958, when San Diego was beaten, 26-18, in the quarterfinals by eventual Southern California champion Long Beach Poly.

Helix’s Casey Tiamalu was too much for San Pasqual in finals.

RUN THAT BY ME AGAIN

Morse defeated Escondido, 18-0,  in a two-day preseason scrimmage.

No big deal?

Hmm, that was 18 touchdowns to none.

“Was it 18?” wondered first year Cougars coach Denny Snyder, whose team then lost its season opener to Vista, 35-7.

Bring back Chick Embrey?

Snyder admitted to being a little shook,  but “if there was a lynching party, I didn’t hear about it.”

Chick Embrey stay retired and Escondido recovered, advancing all the way to the playoff semifinals before bowing to Helix, 18-16.

Jacobus was wary.
Jacobus was wary.

DON’T LOOK AHEAD

“All season I’ve been telling the kids the story of a farmer who looked so far into the forest he tripped over his hogs,” said Sweetwater coach Al Jacobus.  “What irony. Now we play a team called the Hogs.  That’s Spooky.”

San Pasqual defenders were known as such, cognomens that also would identify Washington Redskins Super Bowl offensive linemen in the 1980s.

Asked how he was going to approach the semifinal contest against the favored Red Devils at Southwestern College, Bob Woodhouse announced,  “We’ll take the 805 South.”

Woodhouse’s glibness was nothing compared to the time he threw a defanged rattlesnake under the Oceanside bench, distracting the Pirates’ players and coaches into an upset loss.

No snakes this time, but San Pasqual reached the finals with another surprising victory, 15-12.

HILLTOP TO MOUNTAIN TOP

Residences of Chula Vista’s upscale east side didn’t know how to react.

Wagner's kicks beat Sweetwater.
Wagner’s kicks beat Sweetwater.

The Hilltop Lancers won their first  Metropolitan League championship since the school opened in 1959 when Mark Armbrust and David Wright collaborated on a 24-yard touchdown pass with 41 seconds remaining in the game to defeat Bonita Vista, 26-21.

The Lancers and Sweetwater each had 8-1 league records. Hilltop won for only the fifth time in 20 tries against the Red Devils but claimed the title by virtue of their 15-7, head-to-head victory after Bryan Wagner kicked field goals of 24, 22, and 21 yards.

 COACHES UNHAPPY

It was one thing for the Grossmont District superintendent in 1977 to suggest a shutdown of interscholastic sports, but coaches this year, especially those who endured the long hours of football,  had enough.

Area school districts enacted policies which forced coaches to begin practices after school.

For years the mentors were allowed to use the final physical education period of the school day for football practice, which would continue after school.

This procedure saved at least an hour in the teacher-coaches’ work day.

Now the coaches were being ordered to coach a full p.e. session first and then begin football exercises.

Twenty-one coaches either stepped down or transferred to other schools. Several retired or got out of coaching or found positions in two-year or four-year colleges.

School 1978 Coach 1977 Coach
Bonita Vista Jan Chapman Larry Fernandez
Castle Park Reldon (Bing) Dawson Gil Warren
Cathedral Dan Ramos Paul Wargo
Christian Dan Henson Rick White
Chula Vista Gary Chapman Bob Korzep
El Cajon Valley Don George Jim Mann
El Capitan Art Preston Joe Rockhold
Escondido Denny Snyder Bob (Chick) Embrey
Fallbrook Tom Pack Chuck Lundquist
Granite Hills Paul Wargo Dan Garcia
Hoover Jerry Varner Roy Engle
Marian Bill Smith Phil Bryant
Monte Vista Bob Korzep Larry Schimpf
Ramona Jack Menotti Mike Cunningham
San Marcos Kenny Broach Ivan Seaton
Santana Phil Bryant Joe DiTomaso
Southwest Bob Arciaga Oscar Mercado
Sweetwater Al Jacobus Dave Lay
Torrey Pines Darold Nogle Cliff Kinney
Valhalla Rick White Russ Boehmke

Coached in previous season at another San Diego Section school.

Brad Steele, turning corner in 1`-A championship game versus Army-Navy rushed for 130 yards in 22 carries in Patriots’ 33-0 victory and finished season with 1,080.

INITIAL RESULTS

Christian’s Dan Henson had the most successful season of the new coaches, posting a 9-0-1 record and defeating Army-Navy, 33-0, for the Class A title.

Sweetwater’s Al Jacobus continued Dave Lay’s excellence, finishing with a 10-2 record and reaching the AA semifinals. Denny Snyder was 10-2 at Escondido.

Paul Wargo (6-4), Darold Nogle (6-3), and Reldon (Bing) Dawson (5-3-1) were others with winning records.

Art Preston, who was 3-4-1 at El Capitan, had retired from coaching after leading the Vaqueros to an 8-2 record and a berth in the championship game against Kearny in 1963.

WORLD, ACCORDING TO HERB

Meyer expounded on career milestone.
Meyer expounded on career milestone.

Herb Meyer was getting philosophical in his 20th season.

“If you stick around long enough you have to win a few by osmosis,” said the El Camino coach, who started at Oceanside in 1959.

Meyer had just tied Birt Slater for second all-time among County mentors with his 132nd victory. Chick Embrey retired with 144 wins and the lead in 1977.

“Part of 132 is longevity,” said Meyer.  “People got pretty excited when I won number 100, but I’m not setting goals like winning 150 or 200.”

Meyer finally pulled the pin in 2003 with a record total of 339 victories.

THE CAVERS’ YEAR?

There was optimism at San Diego High.

Stanley Murphy’s team had won 6 in a row dating to the final four games of the 1977 season and were  looking forward to their first big test against Morse.

Steve Brand of The San Diego Union predicted that the game would be “interesting and probably close”.

Morse didn’t let up after leading 13-7 at the end of the first quarter, 40-7 at the half, and 53-19 after three.  Tigers coach John Shacklett then began substituting and Morse put away a 69-19 victory.

San Diego, 5-3-1 under Murphy in 1977 and full of promise, fell to 3-6 and 1-6 and seventh in the Western League.

I WANT TO COACH

Babers, running against San Pasqual in playoffs, was future head coach in college.
Dino Babers, running for Morse against San Pasqual in playoffs, was future head coach in college.

Four standouts were destined to become head coaches and would be active almost 40 years later.

Escondido tackle Rob Gilster would head programs at Orange Glen and Valley Center.  End Sean Doyle of University became that school’s leader and stayed with the Dons when their campus moved and the school was renamed Cathedral.

Herb Meyer’s son, Joe, eventually took over at Rancho Buena Vista after other stops. And Morse running back Dino Babers went the college route, guiding Eastern Illinois, Bowling Green, and Syracuse.

Morcillo received delayed reaction.
Morcillo received delayed reaction.

AFTER THE FACT

Willie Morcillo of Mira Mesa had to wait before he was credited with  a section record, 50-yard field in a 21-14 victory over La Jolla.

Morcillo originally was determined to have booted a 43-yard placement, but seven yards were added after coach Brad Griffith’s review of game film the following day showed the scrimmage line was La Jolla’s 33-yard line and that the kick was from the 40.

Morcillo bettered the record of 47 yards by Poway’s Denny Miller in 1976 but did not have a long reign at the top.  David Cabral of La Jolla Country Day boomed a 51-yarder later in the season.

TRAGEDY 

A small plane flying East collided with a Pacific Southwest Airlines 727 that was approaching Lindbergh Field to the West, resulting in  more than 135 lives lost.

The mid-air collision, the most deadly in aeronautical history, occurred  around 9 a.m. in  North Park, about two miles from St. Augustine High.

Dougherty Gymnasium on the St. Augustine campus was converted into a temporary morgue.

The original intent was for the gym to serve as an emergency room as more than  75 doctors, nurses, and volunteer medical aides converged on the school site.  When it was determined there were no survivors, the gym played another, tragic role.

Basketball court at St. Augustine served as temporary site for bodies.

Hans Wendt’s remarkable photograph of falling PSA jet.

TRUE GRID

Add Mount Miguel to those who thought the playoff system established in 1976 created a redolent presence…after defeating Grossmont, 35-12 in the regular-season finale, the Matadors were forced to meet the Foothillers again the following week in the first round and lost, 18-17…San Diego  junior Terry Turner gained 87 yards in 12 carries in the Cavers’ season-opening, 12-0 win over Lincoln…Turner had never played in  a game…Patrick Henry quarterback Brent Woods is son of Jack Woods, who was “Charlie” on the popular “Charlie and Harrigan” radio show in San Diego…defending champion Lincoln flattened out to 5-4, but finished with a 4-game winning streak…Coronado made the playoffs for the first time in 17 years and La Jolla shared a piece of the Western League championship, their first since the Vikings and San Diego tied in the City Prep League in 1952…Kearny missed the playoffs for the first time since 1966 and Castle Park for the first time since 1972…the 18th annual Grossmont Carnival “featuring lots of spirit, penalties, and money,” according to Steve Brand, was played before 7,500 at Aztec Bowl as the West beat the East, 14-0…

 




1977: Death Threats for Marcus Allen

The messages were not the garden variety “good luck this week,” or “see you at the game.”

“I got several phone calls threatening my life,” Marcus Allen told writer Steve Brand.  “The callers said I better not be at the game.  They didn’t say what they’d do.  They just said not to be there.  It was obvious what they meant.”

“Some people called my house and told me not to come to the game or I would get hurt,” Allen related to Jerry (Sigmund) Froide of the Evening Tribune. “It upset my mother a lot, but I didn’t really take them seriously.  I just tried to put it out of my mind.”

The attempts at intimidation probably were nothing more than high jinks by rival school students (Patrick Henry, that week’s opponent?), safe in their cowardly anonymity.

Whatever the words, they represented the ultimate compliment to Allen.

The 6-foot, 2-inch, 190-pound senior was a once-in-a-lifetime player,  who ate his Wheaties every morning and performed weekly feats of derring do for the Lincoln Hornets.

The undermanned but talented Hive went as far as quarterback Allen’s running and passing and free safety Allen’s pass interceptions and ground shaking  hits would take them.

THE SEASON

WEEK 1

Allen combined with Fred Montgomery on a 34-yard pass play for the first touchdown in a 12-0 victory over Morse, which was shut down by a defense led by Allen and linemen Itai Sataua and David Allison.

Morse had not been blanked in 52 games, dating to the 1971 season.

The Tigers actually scored in the second quarter when quarterback Keith Magee hooked up with track star Tony Banks on a 74-yard touchdown pass play, but Banks waved the ball crossing the goal line and was flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct.

The penalty nullified the touchdown as game officials were trying to crack down on hot dogging and taunting.

WEEK 2

Allen intercepted a pass and crisscrossed 82 yards for a touchdown that was called back by a penalty.  Lincoln was fined 205 yards and Point Loma 40.

Allen completed 3 of 16 passes for 29 yards with three interceptions.  Lincoln turned the ball over 4 times, Point Loma 6.  Final score, 0-0.

Fifteen minutes after the game, as Lincoln’s buses were leaving the Hoover stadium, the Hornets’ players were silent. Point Loma’s were cheering loudly, rejoicing in a moral victory.

WEEK 3

A 24-0 victory over Mission Bay was punctuated by Allen’s 20-yard touchdown run and 141 yards passing, including an eight-yard touchdown strike to John Green.

WEEK 4                                                                                                                     

Allen and the Hornets were warming to their task.

A 34-point second half put away La Jolla, 48-0.  Allen completed 7 of 14 passes for 160 yards, gained 72 yards in nine carries, and scored on a three-yard run.

When asked about the Hornets climb to No. 6 in the newspapers’ top 10, Lincoln coach Vic Player said, “It’s not so high that we get a fat head like last year, yet we know we’re playing quality football.”

WEEK 5

Lincoln’s fifth consecutive shutout to start the season tied a County record, set by Hoover in 1934 and tied by Ramona, which played a schedule that included junior varsity games, in 1954.

The 28-0 victory over University came after a scoreless first half.

“The coaches kind of got on my case,” Allen told Steve Brand.  “In the second half I decided when I dropped back I’d either pass the ball or run right away.  No hesitation.”

Allen, 2 for 8 in the first two quarters, was 3 for 4 in the second and had touchdown passing plays of 14 yards to Anthony Kelly and 67 to Pat Abernathy.

“I’m more happy with the zero than with the twenty-eight,” said Player.

WEEK 6 

Lincoln set a record with a sixth consecutive shutout and punished St. Augustine, 61-0.

The Hornets, who also dissed Player’s alma mater, 66-0, in 1975 and 55-0 in 1976, had 548 yards total offense, 372 on the ground, 176 in the air.

Allen scored on a two-yard run and passed for touchdowns of 47 yards to Dean Alexander and 48 yards to John Green.

WEEK 7

Allen rushed for 150 yards in 11 carries, raced to touchdowns of 65 and 26 yards, and completed 7 of 9 passes for 169 yards and three touchdowns in a 48-6 win over Serra.

The Hornets had five touchdowns called back because of penalties.

El Camino’s Dokie Williams (left) and Lincoln’s Marcus Allen were recruited by college teams as defensive players, despite their offensive production. Williams played wide receiver at UCLA and was Oakland Raiders teammate of running back Allen in NFL .

WEEK 8

The Homecoming  game with Hoover was dedicated to the memory of  Belinda Robinson, a 17-year-old Lincoln student and former cheerleader whose body was found days before in a vacant field near the school .

Allen, Lamar Parks, and Terry Harvey received most of the credit for the Hornets’ defensive play in the 34-6 victory.  Hoover had minus nine yards rushing and 59 yards passing.

Allen spread the wealth, directing a 347-yard ground attack led by David Green’s 145 yards in 11 carries and Pat Abernathy’s 102 in 11.   Allen passed for touchdowns to Anthony Kelly and Dean Alexander.

WEEK 9

A 35-0 shutout of Mira Mesa closed out the first undefeated season in the school’s 24-season history.  The Hornets were 8-0-1 with a 7-0 mark in the Western League.  Allen returned an intercepted pass 82 yards for a touchdown,  scored on a 12-yard run, and passed for one touchdown.

PLAYOFFS, FIRST ROUND

This was the week in which Allen mentioned the telephone calls.  The Hornets survived their most difficult test to date.

Henry took a 3-0 lead on Dean Baughan’s 40-yard field with 45 seconds left in the third quarter.

The Patriots tenaciously clung to their lead, but Allen, who had 87 yards in 16 carries, drove Lincoln 84 yards in 14 plays in the fourth quarter, twice scrambling for first downs, and passing for 48 yards and running for 36.

Expecting Allen to try to take it in from the three-yard line, Henry bunched at the line of scrimmage.  Allen lobbed a soft pass over the defenders to Anthony Kelly with 3:09 left in the game to finally get the Hornets home free, 6-3.

Pat Abernathy followed a blocker and gained 19 yards in dramatic semifinal playoff battle with Sweetwater. Lincoln won, 26-21.

QUARTERFINALS

The San Diego Section board of managers came under fire from media, coaches, and fans for a playoff format the bosses established in 1976. The first-round games essentially were intraleague contests.

Lincoln played city rival and No. 2 seed Patrick Henry in the first round and the Section’s other playoff teams found themselves playing against teams from their own leagues.

Now Lincoln was matched in a quarterfinals game against top seed Granite Hills. The match was of two teams with a combined 19-0-1 record, ridiculously paired in the second round.

After covering Eagles fumbles at their 4- and 17-yard lines, the Hornets prevailed, 19-12, before a capacity crowd of 5,000 at Mesa College.

Allen passed 37 yards to Anthony Kelly for a clinching touchdown with 6:11 left in the fourth quarter and scored on a 13-yard run and ran 47 yards for a touchdown with an intercepted pass.

Granite Hills made it difficult for Allen, who completed only 5 passes in 15 attempts, with 4 interceptions, and rushed for only 36 yards in 11 carries.

Allen wasn‘t dismayed, pointing to his defensive effort:  “That’s the first game all year that I was really sticking people out there.”

SEMIFINALS

Almost 7,500 persons jammed Southwestern College and witnessed one of the all-time San Diego Section postseason games between schools located only three miles apart near the San Diego-National City boundary.

Lincoln led, 20-7, at halftime but coach Dave Lay’s tough Sweetwater Red Devils battled back to take the lead.

Sweetwater kept the ball for all but 90 seconds of the third quarter and went ahead, 21-20, on George Stoutenburg’s two touchdown passes.

The Red Devils seemingly had the Hornets in their grasp when Lincoln was faced with third down, 35 yards to go, from Sweetwater’s 45 after Allen was sacked for 10 yards, which followed a 15-yard penalty.

The scoreboard clock drifted to under three minutes.

Lincoln didn’t panic.

Allen pitched the ball wide to Johnny Green and the Red Devils’ defense converged to cover what looked like a sweep.

But Green pulled up near the right sideline and lofted a 40-yard pass to Anthony Kelly, who caught the ball between two defenders for a first down at the five-yard line.

Allen put the Hornets in front again with a three-yard pass to Dean Alexander.

Lincoln rode out the final 2:00 of a 26-21 victory and was going to the finals.

Helix’ Phillip Oyos was stopped by Kearny’s David Harris in game that went into books as 7-7 tie. Kearny, however, advanced in playoffs by virtue of more yards in the overtime, California tie-breaker period.

CHAMPIONSHIP

Piece of cake.

Allen set a CIF record with 5 touchdowns and rushed for 197 yards in nine carries.  He scored from 30, 85, 20, and 10 yards and on a 60-yard interception return.

The Hornets defeated Kearny, 35-6, and as Allen said, “We had one thing to prove and that’s that we are No. 1.  We did it.”

“I’ll say it again, the 1976 team (which had a 7-2 record) had more talent, but this team put it together by staying together,” said Player.  “It’s a selfless team, a group of players who want to win for their teammates as much as for themselves.”

Allen spent the game’s last six minutes relaxing as he walked up and down the Hornets’ bench in San Diego Stadium, high-fiving and back-slapping his teammates.

In 13 games, Allen completed 54 per cent of his passes (78×145) for 1,434 yards and 9 touchdowns.  He rushed for 1,098 yards, averaging 8.3 yards for 132 attempts, and scored 12 touchdowns.

But Allen was named San Diego Section player of the year…as a defender.  He made 94 unassisted tackles and had a hand in 217 from his free safety position..

EMBREY HANGS UP WHISTLE

Bob (Chick) Embrey, an all-Southern California performer at halfback in 1944, and head coach since 1956, was ending a remarkable career  at Escondido.

“People are going to think I’m stepping down because we’re having a rough season (3-3, with the losses all by less than a touchdown),” Embrey told Steve Brand.

“I wasn’t motivated to do the job any longer,” said the always candid coach.  “I plan to stay on and teach and maybe help out with the Jayvees in a few years.”

Embrey’s last team was 4-5, only the fourth losing squad in his 22 seasons.  “A minor factor,” said the coach. “I felt I should stay through this year as a commitment to the seniors.”

Embrey (center) was flanked by assistants Herb Meyer of Oceanside and Bill Green of Escondido during County squad preparations for the 1964 Breitbard College Prep All-Star game.
Embrey (center) was flanked by assistants Herb Meyer of Oceanside and Bill Green of Escondido during County squad preparations for the 1964 Breitbard College Prep All-Star game.

Embrey retired with a career record of 144-66-4 (.682) and held the County record for most victories, which included San Diego Section titles in 1960 and ’63, and a tie for the title in ’69.

“At one time Escondido High was the only school in this area,” Embrey remembered.  “Then they split and split again, forming new schools (Orange Glen and San Pasqual) which cut down on our enrollment.

The legendary North County boss smiled.  “And each one of those schools wanted to make their reputation by beating Escondido,” he said.

Times had changed.

NO TIME FOR CHIT CHAT

Julian, 1-1-1 at the start of the season, outscored its last five opponents, 146-11, and shut out Army-Navy, 35-0, for the small schools’ title, but there would be no coffee klatches in the mountains with head coach Bill Nolan.

Not even a slice of apple at one of the local pie shops.

“We don’t have booster club meetings and we don’t take films,” said Nolan.   “I can’t see spending half my time in front of a projector.”

Nolan may have trod a different coaching path, but he read the community.  Julian, he said, was like any other small town.

We love you, coach, win or tie.

“The community doesn’t like to lose,” Nolan said.  “In fact, my second year here we didn’t make the playoffs and it almost cost me my job.”

Nolan had compiled a 30-22-3 record and had won two Class A championships since becoming head coach in 1970.

The Eagles’ 7-1-1 record this season was a historic best for the school, which opened in 1893 but didn’t play football until 1967.

FIT TO BE TIED

The Orange Glen-San Pasqual rivalry is called the Battle of Bear Valley Parkway, because the schools are located within 4 miles of each other on the thoroughfare in east Escondido.

Neither the varsity, junior varsity or freshmen teams of both schools could claim victory or had to live with a loss.  The big boys tied, 20-20, the JV’s deadlocked, 14-14, and the freshmen scratched to a 0-0 finish.

SNAP CALL BAD CALL?

Controversy, always hovering, reared up in the Castle Park-Vista quarterfinals game.

Vista, trailing, 14-12, had driven 67 yards to the Trojans’ 18-yard line with 2:56 remaining.

Vista coach Dick Haines is direct in his instructions to quarterback Jon Korcheran.
Vista coach Dick Haines is direct in his instructions to quarterback Jon Korcheran.

Panthers quarterback Jon Korcheran rolled left, and then threw back across the middle.

Richard Bisset, circling out of the backfield, jumped to catch the pass and was immediately hit by Castle Park defenders, who separated Bisset from the ball.

Touchdown, ruled official Bill Tellous, who was straddling the goal line.

“I’ll admit, it was close…could have gone either way,” Bisset told Hank Wesch of The San Diego Union.  “I really thought I had the ball long enough but didn’t think the official thought so.”

Bisset’s body language suggested fumble: “I got mad and started jumping up and down but when I turned around, I saw the ref signal touchdown.”

Trojans coach Gil Warren railed against the possession call.  “I’ve never seen anything like it,” stormed the veteran coach.

Vista’s 18-14 victory was followed by a 21-7 loss to Kearny in the semifinals.

KEARNY MIRACLE

Tom Barnett would never forget his third game as a head coach.

The Kearny mentor watched his team resourcefully score 22 points in the last 6:55 to defeat Patrick Henry, coached by first-year mentor Dale Twombley, 28-26, in what would be the Eastern League title decider.

Patrick Henry lost four fumbles, including two in the fourth quarter, the first at the Komets’ 34, followed shortly by Marty Hunter’s 37-yard touchdown pass to Tony Ford.

The Patriots lost the ball again 50 seconds later and the Komets drove 23 yards to Stanley Holmes’s touchdown with 4:33 left.  A two-point conversion narrowed the Patriots’ lead to 26-20.

No. 1 for Barnett was one for the books.
No. 1 for Barnett was one for the books.

Four plays later Kearny again had the ball, but Hunter was intercepted by Eddie Wilson deep in Henry territory.

With fourth down on their eight-yard line and 33 seconds remaining, Henry’s Matt Kofler accepted a safety.

The score now was 26-22 but Kofler seemed to move Henry out of danger with a robust, 70-yard punt.

From the Komets’ 26-yard line, Hunter found Ford down the middle for a 43-yard gain to Henry’s 31.

Five seconds remained and Hunter, appearing trapped on the sideline, lofted a cross-field, 31-yard pass to D.J. Jones, who caught the ball for the winning touchdown as time ran out.

“I didn’t know where the line of scrimmage was,” said Hunter.  “I saw him open and threw it.”

LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON

Earnel Durden was an all-America football player at Oregon State and he earned rare praise from head coach Tommy Prothro, a coach not given to hyperbole.

“Durden was a real gung-ho player,” said Prothro, who admired the former Los Angeles city player of the year from Manual Arts  for his toughness and passion, whether running the ball or blocking in the Beavers’ single wing attack.

The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.

Durden,  a coach on Prothro’s San Diego Chargers staff, had a son leading the football team at Helix.

Quarterback Mike Durden, a star in his own right,  spoke of the group concept.

“I consider that the line has to block, I have to throw, and someone has to receive,” said Durden, who also was a starting guard in basketball and a sub 49-second quarter miler on the track team.

QUICK KICKS

Lincoln had no home games and competed at nine different sites in 13 weeks:  Point Loma, Mesa College, Southwestern College, Patrick Henry, La Jolla, Madison, Serra, Hoover, and San Diego Stadium…Stanley Murphy, who played at San Diego High, was named the Cavers’ head coach…Murphy’s older brother, H.D., was the star of the 1959 Southern Section Southern Division championship team…geography meant nothing, but the West defeated the East, 22-14, in the Grossmont League  carnival…the West’s Granite Hills, 11 miles East of Helix, outscored the Highlanders, 9-0, in the fifth and final, 12-minute quarter… announced attendance was 12,205 at San Diego Stadium for Kearny and Lincoln…the winning Hornets arrived to a welcoming crowd of more than 700 on campus…Gov. Brown would not sign a bill that shifted the burden of malpractice suits from team doctors, who volunteered their time and service, to school districts and, ultimately, to taxpayers…lawyers got involved and the issue wasn’t settled before the season, but doctors were given some leeway and continued to staff games…the Grossmont District superintendent came under fire when he suggested banning all interscholastic sports because of budget woes….