Charlie Powell, the oldest and most renowned member of an iconic San Diego family, passed away Labor Day morning at age 82.
Powell, in 1950 photo, was arguably the greatest all-around athlete from this area.
A resident of Altadena, Powell was in San Diego for a family function when he became ill on Friday. He died at Scripps Mercy Hospital.
“He was my big brother and I respected him so much,” said younger brother Jerry. “He was always there for me with an encouraging word, always positive. That’s the kind of man he was.”
The brothers Charlie, Ellsworth, and Art were outstanding athletes at San Diego in the early ‘fifties, and Jerry was a star at Lincoln a decade later.
Charlie was the Southern California player of the year in football in 1950, starred in basketball, held the school track-and-field shot put record for 31 years, and signed as a professional baseball player upon high school graduation in 1951.
His greatest thrill, Powell once said, was when “Duane Maley told me that I would be the only man ever to earn twelve varsity letters at San Diego High.”
Powell did that, lettering all three years in four sports, football, basketball, track, and baseball. Maley was his football coach.
Powell went from one season in the St. Louis Browns’ farm system and signed an NFL contract with the San Francisco 49ers in 1952. He had 10 tackles for loss including quarterback sacks of Bobby Layne against the Detroit Lions in one game his rookie season.
Powell turned to boxing in the mid-fifties and rose to become No. 4 in heavyweight rankings. He returned to pro football with the Oakland Raiders in 1960.
2014 Week 1, Con’t: Helix Salvages Some Respect
Helix beat a good Ventura St. Bonaventure team, 24-20, Saturday night, but Mission Hills was beaten by Timpview of Provo, the No. 3 team in Utah, 42-28.
San Diego Section teams thus finished the first weekend far in arrears against intersectional teams.
In games involving teams from the city and county, the area was 2-8 in California and 5-11 including Utah, Hawaii, and Arizona.
Included was the carnage of dishearteningly blowout losses of 55-10 for Cathedral against Folsom of the Sac-Joaquin Section and 38-0 for La Costa Canyon by Newport Beach Corona del Mar of the Southern.
Cathedral gets another shot this week, taking on strong Westlake Village Oaks Christian, which lost to Bakersfield, the defending state Division I champion, 34-21.
Helix is back at it against Loomis Del Oro, another Sac-Joaquin Section entry with big biceps, while Oceanside takes on Mission Viejo.
Del Oro, 9-3 in 2013, was beaten by Helix, 35-24, in the state D-II championship in ’11. The Golden Eagles lost a home game to Honolulu Kamehameha, 25-17, in their 2014 opener.
Mission Viejo, 11-1 a year ago, was surprised by Bakersfield Liberty, 18-7.
The UT-San Deigo top 10 will be out in a couple days. My ballot, cast this morning, was:
Helix’s victory marked the first time the Highlanders have played a Ventura County team since 1957, when they bused North to Oxnard and went home with a 52-6 loss that became part of a footnote in area football history.
The 1957 season was marked by the Asian Flu epidemic which killed 70,000 Americans and about two million world wide.
Most area teams were forced to cancel games. Twenty-two of Helix’ 45 players were home with the flu, including seven starters, but coaches and school officials decided to go through with the game.
I feared for Cathedral and didn’t want to battle I-5 traffic on a Friday night to get to Oceanside, so the veteran blogger took in Rancho Buena Vista at Poway and was impressed.
With the winner and the loser.
Poway, 4-7 in 2013 and stung by the recent loss of two potential sophomore stars, quarterback Tate Martell and receiver Tyjon Lindsay, who moved together to Las Vegas and hooked up with nationally ranked Bishop Gorman, rolled to a 24-0 halftime lead over the Longhorns, then hung on with a late touchdown to win, 30-28.
(Martell and Lindsay meanwhile were 100 miles up the road, leading Gorman to a 48-27 win over Southern Section and Trinity League toughie Anaheim Servite at Cerritos College.
Martel threw for three touchdowns and ran for 130 yards. Lindsay returned a punt 92 yards for a touchdown and caught touchdown passes of 10 and 29 yards).
INELIGIBILITY BLUES
Rancho coach Paul Gomes, who has led a resurgence at the South Vista campus, was playing with less than a full complement.
“We’ve got fourteen players ineligible for six weeks because of grades, including twelve starters,” said a parent whose son starts for the Longhorns.
But quarterback Malik Taylor, a sturdy, 6-foot, 2-inch, 200-pounder with a live arm, passed for four touchdowns in the second half and had his team in front 28-24 with less than three minutes remaining.
INTERSECTIONAL BLUES
Folsom 55, Cathedral 10.
Newport Beach Corona del Mar 38, La Costa Canyon 0.
Temecula Great Oak 38, Carlsbad 21.
Capistrano Valley Christian 52, Maranatha 0.
OUTSIDE CALIFORNIA
Avondale Westview, Arizona, 48, Westview 13.
Francis Parker 22, Honolulu Arthur Radford 20.
Mesa Desert Ridge, Arizona, 23, Eastlake 11.
Torrey Pines 34, Pleasant Grove, Utah, 21.
TRUE GRID
Best local matchup saw No. 2 Oceanside defeat No. 5 St. Augustine, 34-28…No. 1 Helix and 4 Mission Hills have intersectional battles tonight, Helix vs. Ventura St. Bonaventure, and Mission Hills vs. Timpview of Provo, Utah…Paul Gomes is in his third season at Rancho Buena Vista, improving from 6-6 in 2011 to 9-4 in 2013…the Broncos were 5-24-1 in their three previous seasons…
2014: Dunnam, Saska Among Those Passing
Farewell, old friend.
Those words were heard over the summer for at least four former San Diego-area football players.
Dunnam was first-string lineman on 8-2 Cardinals team in 1956.
Doug Dunnam, 75, was a starting guard on the 1956 City Prep League-champion Hoover team that upset San Diego High, 20-12, before a roaring, record, overflow crowd of 9,000 persons at Hoover.
Dunnam also was a member of the San Diego team that played the Los Angeles City Section all-star squad in the annual Breitbard College Prep game after his graduation in 1957.
Hal Krupens, 78, was a standout on Don Giddings’ 1953 Point Loma squad and scored 7 touchdowns and 42 points, plus touchdown runs of 72 and 2 yards as Point Loma routed Hoover in one quarter of play, 14-0, in the annual City Schools’ carnival before 24,000 fans in Balboa Stadium in 1952.
Krupens was head coach at Clairemont from 1986-90 and also coached track at Crawford.
Bill Harvey, 76, quarterbacked Bennie Edens’ first Loma squad in 1955 and was named to the Breitbard Athletic foundation all-City Prep League backfield.
Dave Saska, 68, whose family has owned a popular Mission Beach restaurant since the early 1950s, was a 210-pound all-San Diego Section lineman at El Capitan in 1963.
The Vaqueros upset Hoover, 27-12, in the playoffs and were beaten, 20-6, by Kearny in the finals.
Ron Loneski who coached Lincoln to six section basketball championships and state runners-up in 1988 and ’91, passed away at age 77 in Lawrence, Kansas.
1993: Vikings Coach Champion in Multiple Sports
Bill Seaward (58), Fred Aguon (90), and La Jolla Vikings celebrate championship.
Dick Huddleston won championships in multiple sports, as player and as coach
—He was a tight end and linebacker on the 1960 Escondido team that won the first large-school San Diego Section football championship.
–Huddleston coached Point Loma to the 1973 San Diego Section baseball title.
And led La Jolla to the 1993 San Diego Section Division III championship and the best record, 13-0, in school history.
The unbeaten season was the second for the Vikings and their first in 58 years.
Lawrence Carr guided the Vikings to a 9-0 season in 1935. Carr also happened to be the principal at San Diego High when the Cavemen were surprised but not upset, 19-13, by Huddleston, 180 pounds, and other similar-sized Cougars in 1960.
Huddleston had versatile background as football player and football and baseball coach.
70 WINS IN EIGHT YEARS
Huddleston’s coaching record ranked among the elite. Although serving as the Vikings mentor for a relatively short eight seasons, 1990-97, Huddleston’s teams compiled a 70-24-1 record for a .742 winning percentage.
DID HE OR DIDN’T HE?
Neighboring Mission Bay, the school that took much of La Jolla’s strong Pacific Beach and Mission Beach enrollment connection when that school opened in 1953, almost denied the Vikings’ chance for an undefeated season.
“I still haven’t heard from anyone close to the play who said the kid (Jaime Blake) ever got into the end zone.” said Mission Bay coach Jerry Surdy. “I would say, without a doubt, it’s the toughest loss I’ve had here at Mission Bay….”
Surdy was visiting with Union-Tribune writer Frank Brady after the Buccaneers’ 8-7 loss.
This one went down hard, not only because of La Jolla’s Blake had transferred from Mission Bay.
Blake’s involvement in the game’s winning play created additional acid reflux
DREADED PENALTY
The Buccaneers had committed a dead ball foul as La Jolla kicker Jason Green was lining up to kick a point after following a La Jolla touchdown with 6:33 left in the game that made the score 7-6.
Huddleston, whose team had trailed all afternoon, took a time out and assessed the benefits of the penalty.
The foul moved the ball half the distance to the goal line, to 1½ yards. Now Huddleston opted for a two-point try and Blake squirmed toward the goal.
Did he score? Yes, according to the official furthest from the play.
“Hey, we dodged a bullet,” said Huddleston.
Mission Bay’s Cory Young is swarmed by La Jolla’s Dan Newman (25), Jason Green (right), and Matt Currie (under Young).
BOUNCING BACK
With 13 offensive and defensive starters returning and Blake looming as a potentially outstanding successor to 1991’s sensational E.J. Watson, the Vikings were optimistic when they began the season.
But how far could they come back from 2-7-1 in 1992?
Their opening game said much. La Jolla defeated Santana, 20-17, on a 43-yard touchdown pass play with 3 seconds remaining in the game, after the Sultans had driven 88 yards to take the lead.
The Vikings offered a preview of what to expect in the playoffs when they beat St. Augustine, 35-12, in Week 3. They repeated with a 14-6 win over the Saints as Blake rushed for 206 yards and a touchdown in the San Diego Section championship.
Blake gave Vikings solid running game and scored 23 touchdowns and 146 points.
OTHER SIDE OF COIN
While Surdy ruminated about a victory lost, San Marcos’ Ken Broach, declared a 20-16 win over El Camino to be one of the biggest victories of his career in a season in which the Knights finished 10-3.
Quarterback Luke Underwood threw two touchdown passes in the final 3:31 as the Knights rallied from down 16-7.
El Camino’s first loss to San Marcos since 1987 slowed the Wildcats temporarily, but they went on to finish 10-4 with a 24-14 D-II championship victory over San Pasqual.
HORNETS FOUL OUT
This time the officials’ flags favored Mission Bay in a 21-17 win over Lincoln. The Buccaneers drove 99 yards in the fourth quarter, with the help of three, 15-yard penalties.
Sidney Phillips of University City shook loose from a La Jolla tackler and scored two touchdowns but Centurions came up short, 48-24.
BIG, BIG MEN
Seventeen Morse players were at least 205 pounds, including five who needed an industrial-sized Toledo scale when they weighed in at preseason training camp.
The Big 5 pushed the needle from 275 to 330.
Tigers coach John Shacklett weighed 205 and was the second heaviest man on the squad when he turned out for his senior season at Grossmont in 1956.
Reasoned 282-pound David Gates: “Athletes today spend a lot of time in the weight room. Everyone knows muscle is heavier than fat.” The Tigers’ offensive line averaged a close-to-NFL standard of 286 pounds.
Morse’s David Gates took advantage at all-you-can-eat restaurant.
BIG, BIG MEN, CON’T.
Not exactly, but when Morse was vacating the field at Brigham Young-Hawaii, the Torrey Pines squad was entering for its practice. ‘Pines coach Ed Burke had an idea.
Kiddingly (maybe) Burke attempted to persuade some Morse linemen to make a U Turn. “Okay, fellows, over here,” implored Burke. “I’ve got some Torrey Pines shirts for you.”
Pointing to David Gates and others, Burke said, “I’ll take this one, this one…this one”.
Union-Tribune writer Tom Shanahan was on the premises, covering the one-week trip by Morse, which dropped a 29-8 decision to Oahu Kahuku, and Torrey Pines, which defeated Honolulu Punahou, 32-21.
Meanwhile, Marian Catholic topped the Yakota Air Force Base squad, 26-8, in Tokyo. The base team, which plays other U.S. military schools, had won nine consecutive Far East championships.
Patrick Henry junior Rickey Williams, who went on to long career in NFL, was third-leading scorer in County with 150 points.
GO FIGURE
Early-season ratings can be disastrous.
No. 1 Mt. Carmel fell to No. 9 San Pasqual, 47-7, in Week 2 as the Golden Eagles, paced by Ethan Barkett’s three touchdowns and 117 yards, rushed for 494 yards.
Two weeks later Mt. Carmel defeated Rancho Bernardo, 17-9. Coach Bill Christopher’s surprising Broncos overcame the setback and finished with a 12-1 record, claiming the D-I championship with a 7-3 victory over Poway.
Mt. Carmel up and downed its way to a 7-6 record, but not before shocking No. 1–ranked Rancho Buena Vista, 45-7, four weeks after its loss to San Pasqual.
San Pasqual, supposedly rebuilding, went 10-3 and all the way to the D-II finals before losing to El Camino, 24-14.
THE HIP COACH
Tom Shanahan had an interesting read on Rancho Bernardo’s Christopher:
“Bill Christopher, the football coach with the pierced ear and who coached NFL star Ronnie Lott (at Rialto Eisenhower), now has a new identity, coach of Rancho Bernardo, CIF San Diego Division I champion.”
Christopher, who played for Bennie Edens at Point Loma in the late 1960s, promised his team he’d wear an earring if the Broncos won the Palomar League.
Christopher affected the jewelry during the playoffs and, after the title game win over Poway, agreed to continue with the adornment through the team banquet. He was not excited about the prospect.
The issue arose during preseason practice when several players turned out with earrings, to Christopher’s disdain.
LIKE FATHER, LIKE…
Ethan Barkett was an all-San Diego Section running back for coach Mike Dolan’s San Pasqual Golden Eagles.
Thirty years before, Ethan’s father was a starting forward on the San Diego City College basketball team that was runner-up to Fresno City in the State Junior College tournament.
Nick Barkett also was the first San Diego Section basketball player of the year. He led 24-3 Hoover to the 1960-61 championship.
THEY STAND ABOVE
Three South Bay coaches each won his 100th game, bringing to 16 the number of 100-game winners in County history.
Joining the prestigious group were George Ohnessorgen of Chula Vista, Gil Warren of Castle Park, and Gene Alim of Sweetwater.
Warren (second from left) was outstanding player at Sweewater in 1958 and wasn’t stopping at 100 wins.
Steve Brand of the Union-Tribune visited with some of the group’s active members:
“The one-hundredth is a milestone,” said Point Loma’s Bennie Edens (229). “After that you kind of go from victory to victory.”
“I was at about one-twenty when someone brought it to my attention,” said Dick Haines of Vista (127 at Dover, Ohio, and 180 at Vista). “The two-hundredth was no big deal. The three-hundredth, I thought it would never come.”
“To win one-hundred games you need an understanding wife,” said Helix’ Jim Arnaiz (156). “You need good assistant coaches. You need to have good parents and good players, and you need lots of luck.”
“All one-hundred means is you’re getting old,” said Ohnessorgen. “These players weren’t here when I started (in 1982), so our first goal is winning the Metro League and, in the long term, the CIF playoffs.”
Rancho Bernardo’s Luke Olander is mano-a-mano with Poway’s Greg Rudy. Olander scored touchdown and RB scored its first win over city neighbor after four tries, 14-0.
ZEIG AND ZAG
Mark Zeigler of the Union-Tribune covered Chula Vista-Sweetwater, the premier, continuous rivalry in the County.
Chula Vista won, 14-12, when Sweetwater missed a two-point conversion attempt with 15 seconds remaining.
“It was,” Zeigler wrote, “the kind of game that embodies high school football, where you can’t find a parking place, where even those who can find a seat stand, where players hold hands in the huddle…”
…and only where the coach promises his players they could shave his head if they won. Ohnessorgen’s hair, soaked from the contents of a water cooler dumped on his head, would be gone by Monday.
ONE FOR THE BOOK
Shields scored all eight points, for both teams..
Bonita Vista’s 6-2 victory over Sweetwater, giving the Barons a best-in-school-history 7-0 start, was manufactured by one man.
Bonita’s Scott Shields kicked field goals of 37 and 47 yards before a full house at Sweetwater’s Gail Devers Stadium, then retreated out of the back end of the end zone from punt formation with five seconds remaining, giving the host Red Devils a safety and making for a final score of 6-2.
How often have games ended 6-2?
In the almost 100 years of football in San Diego County there had been 11 other games by that score.
The first teams listed in the table below were the 6-2 winners, except for Monte Vista, which was the 6-2 loser.
Year
Team
Opponent
1927
San Diego
=Santa Ana
1928
San Diego
St. Augustine
1934
Escondido
=Grossmont
1946
Fallbrook
=Ramona
1949
Grossmont
Sweetwater
1952
San Dieguito
Hemet
1959
Coronado
=Oceanside
1967
Grossmont
=Mount Miguel
1979
Clairemont
Mira Mesa
1985
San Marcos
=@Oceanside
1992
Monte Vista
@Oahu Kaneohe James Castle
=League game.
QUOTABLE
“I just made the cuts, put my shoulders down, and executed.” Vista’s 6-foot, 240-pound sophomore Eddie Lologo, to Ed Graney of the Union-Tribune.
Lologo rushed for 165 yards in 28 carries as Vista defeated Rancho Buena Vista, 14-7, in the teams’ annual battle for city bragging rights. Lologo added, “We played our hearts out.”
It gets no better than that.
Travis White (left) and teammate are in celebratory mood after White intercepted Orange Glen pass and ran 40 yards for touchdown. Pointers won, 17-16.
MARKS
Morse’s 1990 state record of 649 points in 14 games was topped by Concord De La Salle, which had 665 in 13 this season.
Chad Davis’ career national passing record of 9,337 yards, achieved at Palm Springs, Torrey Pines, and Mira Mesa, was broken by Newbury Park’s Keith Smith (9,967).
Crawford’s Altie Parker caught 95 passes in 12 games, but was the state runner-up to Newbury Park’s Leodes Van Buren, who caught 101 in 14 games.
MON”DAY” AND NIGHT
Football coach and athletic director Chris Miller stood before the expanse that was the new Scripps Ranch High football stadium.
For awhile it appeared the preps would be out of luck.
Saturday night, Dec. 11, at Jack Murphy Stadium, was out because the Chargers would have a game on Sunday, Dec. 12.
The stadium manager had been fired in 1983 after Long Beach State and San Diego State had chewed up a rainy field the night before the Chargers were to play the Dallas Cowboys on national television.
Stadium manager Big Bill Wilson worked with CIF honchos to arrive at a Monday, Dec. 13 date.
Combined attendance of 14,395 watched a triple header that began at 1 p.m. and ended about nine hours later.
Teneil Ethridge gained 143 yards in 15 carries with the kind of running that had Santana struggling to bring him down. Highlanders won, 28-7.
QUICK KICKS
Castle Park freshman linebacker Zeke Moreno did not pass age-eligibility to play football until near the end of the season…Moreno finally got his chance and had 13 tackles in a playoff loss to El Capitan…Dick Huddleston also was captain of the 1961 Escondido team and played collegiately at Cal Western University…Mission Bay’s 21-17 victory was its first over Lincoln since 1973 and ended a string of six losses in a row to the Hornets…his life would end prematurely in an auto accident after playing for the Los Angeles Raiders, but, for now, there was unlimited promise for St. Augustine’s Darrell Russell, a 6-foot, 5-inch, 280-pound defensive tackle who also was a standout on the Saints’ basketball squad…Rancho Bernardo’s 21-6 win over Monte Vista marked dedication of the Broncos’ stadium…CIF officials ratified in February a long-discussed and ping ponged decision by the Coordinating Committee and Board of Managers to drop the 3-A, 2-A, 1-A designation for football playoffs in favor of I, II, III, and IV….
1930: Cougars Don’t Like Vintage Mascot
Jack Mashin’s Grossmont Foothillers (top) and Harry Wexler’s Escondido Cougars tied for league championship with Coronado.
Now wait just a grape-pickin’ minute!
Students at Escondido High were up in arms.
They did not cotton to the term Grape Pickers or its use to describe the school’s athletic teams, although the wine-making fruit held agricultural sway in the area and the city had hosted a Grape Day Festival since 1908.
The students wanted a tough, masculine mascot.
They voted to adopt the cougar, which had been known to prowl the mountain ranges near the valley community for centuries.
The school also made a request of sports writers to refrain forthwith from referring to Grape Pickers in print.
Perhaps coincidentally, football at the second oldest football-playing school in the County finally was earning some respect.
The Cougars, paced by future major league baseballer Pete Coscarart; Tom Luscardi, and future NFL player Ed Goddard, posted a 9-2 record although defeated by El Centro Central in the CIF minor division championship game.
THREE-WAY TIE
Along the way, coach Harry Wexler’s North County squad tied with Coronado and Grossmont for the Southern Prep League championship.
Escondido defeated Grossmont, 31-0, and Grossmont topped Coronado, 12-7, but Coronado upset the Cougars, 20-6.
The teams were 3-1 in final standings and followed an interesting path from there.
A three-hour meeting of representatives from the three schools was held Monday, Nov. 12, at the Stanley Andrews store in downtown San Diego.
A league rule stipulated that a playoff would have to be played Tuesday, Nov. 13, or Friday, Nov. 15.
In the scrambling, seemingly haphazard manner in which the CIF Southern Section selected playoff teams, it appeared that two clubs from the Southern League were eligible for the postseason.
According to The San Diego Union, Coronado coach Amos Schaefer said he’d play only if Grossmont agreed to enter the playoffs.
Grossmont coach Jack Mashin bailed, citing a number of injuries that depleted his squad would preclude a game the next day.
Mashin and Schaefer, after a three-hour back and forth, finally conceded the championship to Escondido and its representative Martin Perry, and cited curious logic:
Ed Goddard attempts tackle on Coronado’s Jimmy Blaisdell, who helped Islanders upset Escondido, 20-6.
Grossmont had beaten Coronado the previous Friday and even if Coronado would defeat Escondido again, the Islanders’ loss to Grossmont would overshadow a win over Escondido.
That’s the way it was reported in The San Diego Sun.
ORANGE PEELED
The Cougars routed Orange County champion Orange, 52-0, that Friday in their final, regular-season game. But a pregame story in The Sun declared that the matchup “may be considered as one of the Southern California interscholastic Federation, Unit B playoff contests.”
The disclaimer notwithstanding, the playoffs were scheduled to begin the following week, when Escondido was to play the inaugural City League champion, Point Loma.
It gets more confusing.
The story in The Sun added, “If pairings should so fall that Orange and Escondido would logically be paired up in second round playoffs the score of tomorrow’s game in all probability would be considered instead of (Escondido and Orange) playing another game.”
NEW DEAL
Always looking for possible revenue streams, the struggling federation this season had divided its members by leagues into Major Division and geographic Northern Minor and Southern Minor.
Teams from the Coast, Cirtrus Belt, Foothill, Orange, Ventura, Bay, and San Luis Obispo leagues were placed in the Major Division.
Teams from the San Diego City League, Southern Prep, and Imperial Valley circuits would align in the Southern group. Teams from the Riverside, San Gabriel Valley, Ventura Minor, and Tri-County loops would comprise the Northern group.
The increased playoffs and more numerous pairings didn’t “fall” to a Cougars-Orange showdown.
Escondido met Point Loma and moved on with a 13-6 victory. Next up was Banning, the Riverside County champion, and the Cougars sent the Broncos home, 46-0.
The win over Banning set up a second match with El Centro Central, beaten, 6-0, by the Cougars early in the season.
Maybe it was the long postseason, but even a partisan home crowd couldn’t help the Cougars, who dropped a 20-6, championship game decision to the team from Imperial Valley.
Point Loma’s City League champion, coached by Lawrence Purdy (top). Hoover, with former San Diego coach John Perry, fielded its first team.
THE WEXLER WAY
Coach Harry Wexler brought the Escondido program out of the depths in which it resided for most of the previous 30 years. His teams posted a 57-32-11 record over 10 seasons from 1928-37.
Escondido’s record under five coaches from 1920 until Wexler was hired was 10-41-5.
Wexler’s .624 winning percentage is bettered at Escondido only by the standard of the legendary Bob (Chick) Embrey, who was 144-66-4 (.682) from 1956-77. Paul Gomes was 59-37-7 (.607) from 2001-09.
Local merchants, so taken with the Cougars’ success, closed their stores in order to see the game with rival Oceanside.
NO, NOT ME
Did Wexler, a Washington State Cougar in his undergraduate days, have something to say about the change in nicknames?
School officials said Wexler did not suggest or have anything to do with the switch.
Wexler undoubtedly had something to say about Goddard’s future.
The sophomore fullback went on to an all-America career at Washington State and was the second player selected in the 1937 NFL draft.
A Los Angeles Times reporter was so taken with Goddard’s running in a victory over USC that he coined Goddard the “Escondido Express.”
GODDARD GOES FIRST
There had been a handful of San Diego-area preps who had played professionally, notably Russ Saunders of San Diego High with the 1931 Green Bay Packers, but Goddard was the first to be drafted in the NFL.
Goddard played two seasons, 1937 and, ’38, with the Brooklyn Dodgers and Cleveland Rams and then went into teaching and coaching. He was an assistant coach on the 1950 Fullerton High staff. The Indians upset San Diego, 20-19, in the playoffs.
Hilltoppers coach Hobbs Adams relied on Ted Wilson (left and upper left)) and Wilson teammates teammates (from upper left) Irvine (Cotton) Warburton, Don Giddings, Gerard Burchard, and Orin Whitley.
THEY ALL REMEMBERED
Before they passed, many retired San Diego High coaches and staff shook their heads when they spoke, often, of the game coach Hobbs Adams’ Hilltoppers lost at Long Beach Poly in 1930.
Estimated attendance at Burcham Field was 15,000 persons for the game that decided the Coast League championship and the league’s playoff representative.
Another 4,000 was said to have been turned away.
Hundreds of Hilltoppers boosters were there. Radio station KSUN in San Diego offered a play-by-play of the contest. San Diegans also were able to pick up a Long Beach radio station broadcast on San Diego station KGER 1350.
The Fox Theater commissioned a special cameraman to take film of the game and begin a one-week showing the day after the Thanksgiving tussle.
LUCK O’ THE JACKRABBITS!
The Jackrabbits won, 14-8, and breezed to the Southern California upper division championship.
–San Diego had 15 first downs, Poly 1.
–Long Beach’s longest gain on a running play was 4 yards.
WRITER’S LAMENT
The game story lede, in part, as sent by The San Diego Union reporter Charles Byrne:
“Although outclassed—and outclassed badly—Long Beach Poly capitalized on the ‘breaks’ of the game to capture the Coast League championship in one of the weirdest prep school battles ever witnessed in Southern California.”
Poly’s one first down was on a pass play that turned into a 50-yard touchdown.
A Cotton Warburton punt from the end zone was blocked and Warburton recovered for a Poly safety. Long Beach led, 8-0.
The Jackrabbits went up 14-0 after a lateral from Warburton to Ted Wilson was knocked in the air and strayed into the hands of another Poly defender, who ran 85 yards.
San Diego got on the board in the fourth quarter. Cecil McElvain intercepted a Poly fumble and raced 20 yards to make the score 14-6.
King Hall blocked a Poly punt out of the end zone for another safety.
Poly went on to defeat Redondo Beach Redondo Union, 20-3, for the championship.
ROAD WARRIORS
Ted Wilson’s two touchdowns were not enough in loss at Phoenix.
Thirty-three of the 40-man San Diego squad boarded a 5:15 p.m. train on Thursday for an all night ride to Phoenix.
After “resting up” the Cavers dropped a 22-20 decision to Phoenix Union and hustled to the depot to catch the last train at 10:30 Friday night.
The team arrived back in San Diego Saturday morning.
The sluggish Hilltoppers trailed, 15-0, at halftime but rallied as Ted Wilson scored two touchdowns and Cotton Warburton added another.
SOUTHERN GOES ALL COUNTY
The fledgling City League, numbering Point Loma, La Jolla, San Diego High’s Reserves, and the new Hoover High, meant that the Southern Prep, originally known as the County League, would become just that, a league of County squads.
The Southern Prep now listed Coronado, Sweetwater, Oceanside, Escondido, Mountain Empire, and Julian. The last two did not field football teams but competed in other sports.
HILLTOPPERS’ BIG THREE
At one point in the preseason, San Diego coach Hobbs Adams had five, 11-man squads practicing daily.
Adams decided that assistant coach Mike Morrow would handle a group called the “Reserves”, sometimes referred to as the “Seconds”, and Glenn Broderick would continue as coach of the B’s.
Broderick’s B team was the defending Southern California champion, but the Coast League dropped its B playoffs this season
The Little Hilltoppers forged a free-lance schedule and again prevailed in Southern California.
The B team defeated Santa Monica, 25-6, in the preliminary game to Long Beach Poly’s 20-3 victory over Redondo at the Los Angeles Coliseum.
As was the practice in track and field and other sports, with A, B, and C squads based on “exponents,” B footballers’ eligibility was determined by their height, weight, grade, and age.
The Reserves served as sort of a varsity minor league. Players shuttled back and forth between the teams.
LIGHTS…ACTION….
The date was Sept. 27, 1930, when St. Augustine and Grossmont took the field in the first high school night football game under lights in San Diego County.
One day after San Diego State had played the Marine Corps Recruit Depot on the tanbark Navy Field, St. Augustine defeated the Foothillers, 25-0.
San Diego coach Hobbs Adams took his team to Navy Field for a workout later in the season before the Hilltoppers boarded a train for a game in the north.
The Navy Field site at the foot of Broadway and adjacent to Pacific Highway and Harbor Drive would be renamed Lane Field as home of the Pacific Coast League San Diego Padres later in the decade. The Padres’ franchise was moved from Hollywood in 1936. The owner of the team was Bill Lane.
San Diego High’s Class B team represented the school in its first night-time venture when the Little Hilltoppers traveled to Brawley.
Coach Vance Clymer (third row, right) guided his second Sweetwater team to 2-5 record after 0-6 in 1929.
HOOVER, THE SCHOOL, ASCENDS
September was a historic month.
On Sept. 3, Herbert Hoover High, 4474 El Cajon Blvd., in East San Diego, opened its doors to almost 1,000 sophomore and junior students. There was no senior class.
Known as the Engineers or Presidents, students opted for school colors of Red and White.
Their teams eventually became the Cardinals.
Coach John Perry, who had posted a 52-14-5 record at San Diego from 1920-26 but had left coaching to pursue additional educational credentials, came out of retirement to lead the Eastsiders.
Perry’s first call resulted in 88 candidates, a remarkable turnout, said The San Diego Union, in that there were less than 500 boys in the school.
A total of 130 were out at San Diego High, 50 at Grossmont, 75 at Army-Navy, and 35 at St. Augustine.
ALSO DEBUTING
San Diego had a new practice field north of the City Stadium but the rough, dirt layout prohibited intrasquad scrimmages until the team moved into the stadium and its turf playing surface.
The football team and student gym classes soon would access the stadium on a daily basis throughout the school year after an agreement was reached during a meeting of the Balboa Park Board and City Schools big shots.
For the next 30-odd years, it was easy to identify the practice field site. Whenever news media photos were taken of the San Diego High players, the Balboa Naval Hospital would loom in the background.
The new, Crosstown Freeway of Interstate 5 opened in 1963 and changed the practice landscape, as the baseball field was reconfigured. Cavers teams continued to practice football there.
SIGNS OF THE TIME
Spreckels Theater Cinema signs of the time, star Eddie Dowling is acquitted of murder of wife Betty Compson’s lover.
La Mesa was approved for daily mail delivery after the community’s Chamber of Commerce voted to increase the number of sidewalks and paving as required by the U.S. Postal Service.
The government agency also had required La Mesa to improve street lighting and provide a modern numbering system for residential and business addresses.
AGGRAVATED BATTERY
Interscholastic athletics at Fresno Edison Technical were suspended until the end of the school year June 1, 1931.
Two Technical students were charged with assaulting game referee H.L. Rowe, a resident of Madera who ruled a touchdown in favor of Kingsburg with two minutes left in the game that gave Kingsburg a 6-0 victory and setting off a riot.
About 30 Technical students were involved in the beef at the game and for creating another disturbance that night.
FOOTBALL HUB
Thirty-one former San Diego-area gridders were listed on the rosters of 12 universities.
Twelve players each were from San Diego High and St. Augustine. Coronado had four.
The schools included USC, Stanford, California, and Oregon of the Pacific Coast Conference, plus Idaho, Tulane, Kansas, Tulsa, St. Mary’s, Santa Clara, Regis of Denver, and Columbia of Seattle.
TRUE GRID
Hobbs Adams closed practices and locked gates at City Stadium as his team prepared for visiting Long Beach Wilson and Santa Ana…the Bruins were coached by former San Diego High star Rockwell (Rocky) Kemp, Santa Ana by former Memorial Junior High and San Diego High coach Gerald (Tex) Oliver…heavy rain forced the Hilltoppers indoors to their new gymnasium the Thursday before the Alhambra game…Grossmont had turf for the first time…”We’ve been working for a turf field for about six years, and now that we have one, it’s probably the best in the County,” said Foothillers coach Jack Mashin…Ramona, which opened in 1893, continued the idea fielding a football team… coach Harold Roberts was in place, but the Bulldogs wouldn’t be on the field until 1938…Gene Miller got San Diego on the scoreboard against San Bernardino by drop-kicking a 38-yard field goal…Oceanside was constructing an athletic facility that could hold three full-size football fields, four tennis courts, and a quarter-mile oval for track and field meets…one local writer described Grossmont as “the back country school.”…flags flew in St. Augustine’s 64-0 win over Brawley…the Saints were penalized 165 yards and the Wildcats 105…the same Brawley squad dropped a 26-0 decision to the San Diego B team the next week…Cotton Warburton was the only athlete from the area to earn all-Southern California honors…Warburton was on the first team for the second year in a row.