2007: Oceanside’s 10th and First Titles

Oceanside became the second San Diego County team (and the first San Diego Section squad) to participate in the state playoffs, which resumed in 2006 after an 80-year hiatus.

The Pirates (11-1) of coach John Carroll, who won Carroll’s fourth Section championship and Oceanside’s 10th overall, were chosen to represent the South in the Division II championship against 13-0 Novato at the Home Depot Center in the Los Angeles suburb of Carson.

Carro;l, with quarterback Jordan Wynn, coached through and despite early-season leg injury.

Two opponents, two different worlds.

The Pirates represented the tough fiber of a Marine Corps town, hewn by the DNA from nearby Camp Pendleton. The Hornets were a North Coast Section team located in a leafy Marin County enclave about 30 miles beyond San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge.

The schools shared a curious geographical thread. Each was located within a stroll of the legendary, original U.S. Highway 101, although separated by more than 500 miles.

WHO ARE THESE GUYS?

Bigger, with more team speed, the Pirates struggled.  After taking a 7-0 lead they trailed 14-7 at the half before rolling to a 21-0 second half and 28-14 victory.

“I think it was too easy (Oceanside’s early lead),” Carroll said.  “Those guys came to play.  I think we lost our edge for awhile.”

“Maybe it was the underestimation of them,” receiver Frankie Zimmerman said.  “They came out so hard and you have to give them credit for that.”

Novato was no chump.  The Hornets were 12-1 in 2006 and 11-2 in 2005 and were riding a winning streak of 25 games.

Oceanside had trailed at halftime only once in 12 games.  “That was our worst first half of the year,” said Zimmerman, who caught a 22-yard pass from Jordan Wynn for the Pirates’ first score.

The triumphant Pirates posed for a team picture at Carson’s Home Depot Center.

FIRST GAME STUMBLE

Oceanside’s great season got off slowly as it was beaten, 28-20, by Helix in the season opener.

The Pirates had another tough game the next week but defeated La Costa Canyon, 27-20.

Oceanside didn’t know it then but it would meet the Mavericks again in the San Diego Section semifinals with its season on the brink.

BAD WEATHER AND PLAYOFFS

Driving rain throughout the County and sodden fields.  It must be late November and the games that count most.

The semifinals were about resilience for teams playing in the blustery, wet weather of early winter.

Oceanside passed the test.

The Pirates entered the third round of the postseason with a 9-1 record, with a goal of two more victories for a Section title, and maybe an invite to the second annual State Bowl series.

In a game that featured a combined 15 fumbles and “mud from goalline to goalline,” Oceanside knocked out the Mavericks, 14-10, with a late, fourth-quarter touchdown.

Pirates quarterback Jordan Wynn passed eight yards on fourth and seven to Zimmerman for a drive-saving first down.

Then Armani Taylor wedged into the end zone from a yard out four plays later, sending the Pirates into the Division II final against Mission Hills, which Carroll’s battlers dispatched, 26-7.

Oceanside defenders swarm Novato running back Ian Vontellrop.

85 YEARS AGO

After defeating Gardena, 31-14, for the Southern California championship in 1922, San Diego accepted an invitation to play in the state playoffs.

The Hilltoppers were defeated by Bakersfield, 17-6.  They had lost to the Drillers, 33-0 earlier in San Diego’s 10-4 season.

OCTOBER, THE CRUELEST MONTH

Beware the Santa Ana winds and heat.

Only four years had passed since the largest blaze in California history.  The Cedar fire, which began Oct. 26, 2003, charred almost 300,000 acres and took down more than 2,232 homes from Scripps Ranch to Julian, 60 miles away.

It happened again, almost to the day, Oct. 21, 2007, on another hot, Santa Ana day with high winds in the mountains.

Smoke was sighted near Santa Ysabel, between Ramona and Julian, in East San Diego County.

Flames again rose up and began a rampage that rolled West, through Poway, Rancho Bernardo, Westwood, Escondido, and parts of Rancho Santa Fe.

It was the second largest blaze in County history, burning 197,900 acres, and destroying 1,040 residences.

Concurrently, another devastating blaze, the Harris Fire, cut a swatch through San Diego’s South Bay areas.

Once again all high school sports activity was canceled for one week.

The Bishop’s Jacon Kelly skidded on well-worn Qualcomm Stadium turf before Christian’s Sam Sniff could make tackle. Kelly and his teammates topped Patriots 17-7, for D-V title.

PERSONAL NOTE

The house my wife and I purchased in 1977 in Scripps Ranch burned in the Cedar fire.  We rebuilt on the same site.

I had come out of retirement, working with the St. Louis Rams and sitting in our charter on the runway at the airport in Seattle after a game against the Seahawks.

As the plane was about to take off for the return flight to St. Louis, I received a text from good friend Bob Cluck, in San Diego:

“The fire is in Santa Ysabel; at least 40 miles away…you should be okay.”

Meanwhile, my wife Susie, who had been at a casino in St. Charles, Missouri, with other Rams staffers watching our game, called our daughter in San Diego.

Susie told Courtney to go to our Scripps Ranch home, which was vacant, and gather the architectural drawings that were used for our new house.

We were going to rebuild again if we lost our second home.

When I returned to our apartment about 2 a.m. in Clayton, Missouri, I checked my email and there was a message from the Scripps Ranch community advisory board.

“The fire will be here at 7:30 a.m. tomorrow,” was the terse message the board sent to Scripps homeowners.

The winds blew in another direction.  Scripps Ranch was never threatened.  We were lucky, this time.

WEEK 4 TO QUARTERFINALS

What a difference six weeks can make.

Poway squeezed past El Camino, 15-14, in an early-season, nonleague game, then routed the Wildcats, 55-6, in the Division I quarterfinals.

Said unhappy El Camino coach Trace Deneke of the eventual champion Titans:  “They would have had a tougher time if they just scrimmaged themselves.”

Nick carried Poway offense.
Nick carried Poway offense.

The blowout “felt nice,” understated Poway coach Damon Gonzalez, whose team, riding Nick Ricciardulli’s 22 touchdowns, would complete a 12-0 season by defeating Rancho Buena Vista, 21-7, in the finals.

WHERE’S THE BEEF?

How big the difference between City and North County football?  San Pasqual (7-2) met Hoover (6-3) in the playoffs. Final score, Eagles 62, Hoover 21.  How big the difference between small city and small Imperial Valley football?  Horizon (2-7) defeated Imperial (7-3) in the playoffs, 35-21.  The Bishop’s then kayoed Horizon, 63-45.

‘HE PROBABLY COACHED MOSES’

That’s what  third-year Eastlake quarterback Derek Witte said of his new position coach, respectfully of course.

Witte and dad played for Chapman.

Witte was talking about Jan Chapman, a 46-year coaching veteran who had completed 25 years on the staff at Southwestern College but started his career at the new Marian High in 1960, after quarterbacking the fledgling University of San Diego program.

Chapman accepted Eastlake coach John McFadden’s invitation to continue.  There was no generation gap, although there was a passage of generations.

Eastlake linebackers coach Steve Witte, the quarterback’s father, played for Chapman in one of Jan’s earlier incarnations as Hilltop’s coach.

“With him it’s someone to read the field with,” Derek Witte said of Chapman.  “He’s another quarterback and someone for me to talk to.”

HORNETS FIND STING

Ron Hamamoto couldn’t have been blamed if he had second thoughts about his new job.

When Hamamoto called his first practice at the re-born Lincoln High, the Hornets did not have uniforms or a place to practice.

The school had been shut for four years and the beautiful, new campus was missing a few items.

Necessities such as helmets and pads were on the way.

Some doubters wondered whether the Hornets would win a game.  None of the players from the 5-5 season of 2002 were around and Hamamoto would have to assess the talent and make quick judgments on the run, before the season began.

Helix’ Trevor Van skirted Oceanside defense in Highlanders’ 28-20, opening-game victory.

L.B. POLY IN MIX

The Long Beach Poly graduate, who had been offered the coaching position by Executive Principal Mel Collins, himself a former Poly administrator, was the right man for the job.

Lincoln posted a 6-5 record in its return and reached the D-III playoff quarterfinals.  It was the  18th time in 21 seasons that one of Hamamoto’s clubs made the postseason, 11 at University, now Cathedral, and seven at Rancho Bernardo.

Highlight of the season was 25-20 surprise of Point Loma, which had outscored opponents 168-19 in its previous four games and would advance to the D-III title game.

SHORT, BUT NOT SMALL

Cathedral bludgeoned Point Loma, 41-3, for the D-III title behind 5-foot, 10-inch (or less) quarterback Nick Russell.

“Let’s face it, I’m vertically challenged,” said Russell. “I’ve got a big heart and coach (Sean Doyle) says it’s heart that wins games.”

Russell threw for four touchdowns, giving him 21 for the season.  “He may not have a quarterback’s body, but that kid’s a winner,” said Doyle.

Big running back Tyler Gaffney scored two touchdowns for the Dons and finished the season with 28.

No gaffes by Gaffney.
Gaffney seldom slipped.

Gaffney would almost double that total in 2008.

POTASSIUM, ANYONE?

Each Friday afternoon during football season Tyler Gaffney’s’ mother provides him with two bananas, catering to Gaffney’s favorite fruit.

Gaffney’s teammates in turn tagged him with a somewhat unusual nickname:  “Peel”.

FAREWELL, MARIAN!

The Marian Crusaders, languishing for years in uninspiring surroundings in the Nestor community, were moving to a new, 52-acre campus and would now be known as Mater Dei Catholic.

Located near the new California 125 highway and within the Southern edge of the San Diego city limits, the team was immediately taken by the elements.

“Hell week! It was hotter than hell for three days,” said lineman Brian Lacey.

“We’re not on the beach anymore,” declared coach Matt White.

The 20-minute move inland resulted in a rise in temperature from the cool sea breezes of Imperial Beach.

Not to fret.  The Crusaders were more than happy to compete in front of the fresh, concrete seating area, on an all-weather gridiron, and other attractive amenities.

WHO’S TO ARGUE?

Tim Costello wasn’t talking about the 12 points he scored in The Bishop’s 17-7, Division V championship over Christian.

Costello was Mr. December for Knights.
Costello was Mr. December for Knights.

“I definitely think we’re a Top 10 team,” said Costello of the 11-1 Knights, who slowed Christian’s 5,000-yard career rusher Lawrence Walker with a smothering defense.

The Bishop’s was known for offense, averaging 50.2 points a game. But D-V teams seldom cracked The San Diego Union rankings.

Costello did his part with perhaps the San Diego Section championship day’s most complete performance.

Costello intercepted a pass, rushed for a touchdown, kicked a 31-yard field goal and two points after, and averaged 44.8 yards punting.

Kevin Bobrow did the congratulating and Matt Moynihan did the celebrating after latter caught one of Nick Russell’s four touchdown passes in Cathedral’s 41-3 victory over Point Loma in D-II championship.

DROUGHT

Mount Miguel was eliminated by Cathedral, 35-0, in the D-III semifinals, keeping alive a 27-season (since 1981) streak of not having reached the San Diego Section finals.

Mount Miguel had made the playoff semifinals the week before for the first time in 21 years, defeating Ramona, 29-27, on a six-yard touchdown pass, Aaron Bryant to Ahmad Nunley.

It was 11 years and counting since a D-I team from the city had made the finals.  Mira Mesa was eliminated by Poway, 16-0, in the semifinals.

HARD KNOCKS FOR RED BIRDS

The Hoover Cardinals won their first five games and outscored opponents, 172-47.

It was a mirage.

None of the five losers had winning records.  Hoover was beaten, 46-7, in its sixth game by Point Loma.

Hoover had not beaten the Pointers since 1957, losing 15 in a row to the peninsula squad.

The Cardinals flatted out to a final record of 6-4, their last game a 62-21 loss to San Pasqual in the first round of the playoffs.

QUICK KICKS

Patrick Henry’s 35-0 win over Crawford gave the Patriots a 4-1 record, their best start since a 7-0 run in 1999…the Patriots lost their last four to finish 4-5…West Hills made its 15th consecutive playoff appearance and 16th in the school’s first 19 years…the Wolfpack was yet to advance beyond the quarterfinals…Oceanside’s 31-7 victory over Carlsbad ended the Lancers’ 25-game, non-losing streak…Montgomery still was looking for its first playoff win since 1986, losing a first-round game to Brawley, 31-28…a 46-6 victory over Warner Springs Warner in the 8-Man finals wasn’t San Pasqual Academy’s only reward…the Dragons were going to move up to 11-man in 2008… Christian announced a move to Valhalla High for home games after more than 30 years of using Valley Stadium on the Granite Hills campus…the Patriots eventually would move back….




2013, Week 10: Mission Hills On Top…For Now

The suddenly topsy turvy UT-San Diego football poll saw another change at the top this week after last week’s No. 1, San Pasqual, took a surprising haymaker from Rancho Buena Vista and fell , 38-36.

Mission Hills, upset two weeks ago by San Pasqual, quickly filled the void.  The Grizzlies smashed Fallbrook, 61-21.

Meanwhile, Oceanside is lurking.  The Pirates had 11 first place votes to Mission Hills’ 12 but added a more impressive victory to their resume, rudely ushering  Ramona out of the undefeated ranks, 42-0.

While Oceanside lurks, Eastlake lies in the weeds.Eastlake logo

Coach John Mc Fadden’s Titans of east Chula Vista won their seventh straight game and scored eight-first place votes after a workmanlike, 27-0 win over Bonita Vista.

What does it all prove?

There are no great teams in the San Diego Section this season, just some very good ones.

                      Team                              W-L               Pts.      Last Week

1 Mission Hills (12) 7-1 275 2
2 Oceanside (11) 6-2 271 4
3 Eastlake (8) 7-1 270 3
4 San Pasqual 7-1 200 1
5 Helix 6-2 171 8    
6 Madison 7-1 165 7
7 St. Augustine 6-2 113 10
8 Cathedral 6-2 71 5
9 Ramona 7-1 63 6
10 Mount Miguel 7-2 50 9

*Points awarded on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.                                                               Others receiving votes with points in parenthesis: Torrey Pines, 21; Grossmont, 17; La Costa Canyon, 12; Rancho Buena Vista, 10; Imperial, 4; El Capitan, 3.

Thirty-one sportswriters, sportscasters and administrators vote each week, including:  John Maffei, Craig Malveaux, Dennis Lin, Don Norcross, Lisa Lane, and Andrew Burer, U-T-San Diego; Steve Brand, Terry Monahan, Bill Dickens, Tom Saxe, Rick Hoff, U-T-San Diego correspondents; Nick Pellegrino, East County Sports.com; Steve (Biff) Dolan, Rick (Red) Hill (107.9 FM The Mountain); Jeff Kurtz, playonsports.com; Ernie Martinez, XTRA Sports 1360; John Kentera, Jack Cronin, Ted Mendenhall, Bob Petinak, Jordan Carruth, Bobby Wooldridge, Mark Chiebowski (The Mighty 1090;  Rick Willis, Brandon tone, Jake Fadden, KUSI-TV; Craig Elsten, 619sports.net; Rick Smith, Partletonsports.com; Jerry Schniepp, John Labeta, CIF San Diego Section, and Bruce Ward, San Diego Unified School District.




2013, Week 9: Colts Like Wild Horses, Untamed

Crawford rose to 8-0 and played a home game under lights.

Imperial’s Royce Freeman set a San Diego Section career rushing record as the Tigers went to 8-0.

San Pasqual and Ramona dropped from the ranks of the undefeated.

NEW CORRAL

Crawford coach Mike Wright convinced his administration and the ruling City Conference that the Colts were more suited to an overall less demanding level of competition, thus a move from the Division IV Central League to the D-V  Manzanita.

The first night game at home was facilitated through rented lights and Crawford responded with a 35-0 victory over Calexico Vincent Memorial.

Among those in attendance was Bill Rainey, who led the Colts to an 8-0-2 record and the San Diego Section championship in 1961. Rainey was CIF player of the year. He also was the first champion in the Section track finals the previous spring with a winning time of 1:58 in the 880-yard run.

NEW CORRAL, CONT.

Crawford’s football field and track and field facilities will be moved across Trojan Avenue to the site of the original baseball field, which will move to the existing football and track location.

Crawford will play a road schedule in football in 2014, while construction is completed.

EYE OF THE TIGER

Imperial’s Royce Freeman played the first half in a 49-14 rout of Calexico and rushed for 135 yards in 11 carries, giving Freeman a 37-game, four-season career total of 6,778.

Freeman moved past Rickey Seale, the son of ex-Charger and Oakland Raider Sammy Seale.  Rickey rushed for 6,778 yards at Escondido from 2006-09.

THE LONGEST RIDE

Oceanside’s could have missed its kickoff with Ramona because of a traffic accident on State  78.

The usual 48-minute ride for the 39-mile trek became a two-hour marathon.

It’s all good.  Oceanside won, 42-0.

Sweetwater rushed (a  record?) 66 times for 405 yards, averaging 6.1 yards a thrust, and defeated Marian Catholic 41-14.

The Red Devils are running the ancient double wing favored by head coach Brian Hay and they’re getting used to the first-year coach’s offensive philosophy. They’ve won three in a row.

QUICK KICKS

Rancho Buena Vista’s 38-36 win over San Pasqual improved the Longhorns’  record to 6-2, their best since a 6-1-1 start in 2003… the West Hills Wolfpack dropped its 16th in a row to Helix, 44-7…score was 44-0 at halftime…St. Augustine surprised Cathedral, 19-7 but the Dons still lead the series, 32-20…backup quarterback James Harwell of San Marcos passed for four touchdowns and ran for another in a 47-27 win over Del Norte…starter Will Freed has been out with a broken jaw….

 




2013, Week 9: San Pasqual Ousts Mission Hills

San Pasqual this week became the third North County team to occupy the number one position in the weekly UT-San Diego football poll.

The Eagles surprised Mission Hills, 13-10, in overtime, knocking out the Grizzlies, who had climbed to No. 1 in Week 7 after kayoing Oceanside, which had resided in first since the preseason poll.

I voted for the Cathedral, as did two others.  Eastlake also received some support, meaning three teams received first-place votes for the first time this year.

San Pasqual takes on  Rancho Buena Vista this week. The Longhorns are 5-2 but so far haven’t impressed the voting panel, earning only two points among the “others” this week.

Hoover, 5-1, before a 13-9 loss to Serra, might have had a shot at a low Top 10 position but the Cardinals lost a touchdown because of  an “inadvertant whistle”.

                          Team                         W-L              Pts.             Last                                                                                                                                                       Week                                 

1 San Pasqual (26) 7-0 301 2
2 Mission Hills 6-1 251 1
3 Eastlake (2) 6-1 237 3
4 Oceanside 5-2 212 4
5 Cathedral (3) 6-1 190 5    
6 Ramona 7-0 188 6
7 Madison 6-1 118 7
8 Helix 5-2 105 8
9 Mount Miguel 6-2 30 10
10 St.  Augustine 5-2 29

*Points awarded on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.                                                               Others receiving votes with points in parenthesis: Grossmont, 14; La Costa Canyon, 9; Torrey Pines, 8;  El Capitan, 6; Torrey Pines, 4, Imperial, 3; Carlsbad, Rancho Buena Vista, 2 each.

Thirty-one sportswriters, sportscasters and administrators vote each week, including:  John Maffei, Craig Malveaux, Dennis Lin, Don Norcross, Lisa Lane, and Andrew Burer, U-T-San Diego; Steve Brand, Terry Monahan, Bill Dickens, Tom Saxe, Rick Hoff, U-T-San Diego correspondents; Nick Pellegrino, East County Sports.com; Steve (Biff) Dolan, Rick (Red) Hill (107.9 FM The Mountain); Jeff Kurtz, playonsports.com; Ernie Martinez, XTRA Sports 1360; John Kentera, Jack Cronin, Ted Mendenhall, Bob Petinak, Jordan Carruth, Bobby Wooldridge, Mark Chiebowski (The Mighty 1090;  Rick Willis, Brandon tone, Jake Fadden, KUSI-TV; Craig Elsten, 619sports.net; Rick Smith, Partletonsports.com; Jerry Schniepp, John Labeta, CIF San Diego Section, and Bruce Ward, San Diego Unified School District.



2013: Legend of McKeevers and San Pasqual’s No. 86

Terry Monahan’s story in today’s UT-San Diego about the history of San Pasqual’s football jersey No. 86 jogged my memory.

Eighty-six has been worn  by Eagles linebackers almost every year since 1977, but since 1983 in honor of a former player who passed away.

Barry McKeever, the son of a USC all-America, wore No. 86 in 1982 and ’83 for San Pasqual and when he  played collegiately at Stanford.

But before there was 86 there was….

First, let me say that I followed the exploits of Barry father, Mike McKeever, and uncle Marlin in high school, me a student at Lincoln in San Diego and the McKeever twins all-stars in football and track and field at Mt. Carmel in Los Angeles.

They were all-Southern Section football picks, top college recruits, and among the best shot putters in the country.

Enrolling at USC the twins were part of a Trojans’ renaissance that saw USC bounce back from a 1-9 record in 1957 to 4-5-1 in ’58, and 8-2 in ’59.

Originally Mike McKeever was issued jersey No. 64 and Marlin was given No. 85.

Sometime later the USC publicist had an idea.  He put one of the twins in No. 86 and stationed him in front of a mirror.

Mike (left) and Marlin, after the change in numbers.
Mike (left) and Marlin, after the change in numbers.

The reflection from the mirror was No. 68.

Who is whom?  And which is which?

Nos. 68 (Mike) and No. 86 (Marlin) were the numbers the youngsters carried forward in their all-America and NFL careers (Barry told Monahan that he wanted to wear his father’s 68 but that number had been taken by Barry’s brother Mac, so Barry was given 86).

Mike’s NFL time was cut short by a tragic automobile accident.  Marlin went on to play 14 seasons.

 




2013, Week 8: No Love for Cathedral

Mount Miguel crashed the Top 10 with a 42-21 victory over previous No. 1o El Capitan, but UT-San Diego‘s weekly rankings otherwise remained the same in the lead-up to Week 8.

Except.

Cathedral, which I ranked second, stayed fifth and, contrary to some other winners, did not receive more  points after a 42-3 blowout of 4-1 Scripps Ranch.

I don’t get it.  The Dons have played a tougher schedule than all of the teams above them other than Oceanside, but they’re not getting any respect, in my opinion.

Justifiably perceived North County bias in  media power outlets doesn’t appear to be in play.

Cathedral is considered “North County” (although its Del Mar address  is within San Diego’s city limits, as is Torrey Pines’, and Cathedral is part of the city’s Eastern League).

San Pasqual, 6-0 and second in the poll, obviously is outstanding.

But the Eagles haven’t had a Vista Murietta, Arizona’s Chandler Hamilton, or Gardena Serra on their schedule, as have Cathedral, Eastlake, and Oceanside. San Pasqual has had a full plate of essentially rank-and-file North County neighbors.

The first five teams’ strength of schedules (opponents’ won-loss records combined):

Team Won Lost Pct.
Mission Hills 15 21 .417
San Pasqual 16 19 .457
Eastlake 20 18 .526
Oceanside 29 9 .763
Cathedral 22 15 .595

I couldn’t elevate Oceanside despite its strength of schedule.  That 30-6 loss to Mission Hills was uncharacteristic but it couldn’t be ignored.

Place Team W-L Pts Last Week
1 Mission Hills (31) 6-0 310 1
2 San Pasqual 6-0 246 2
3 Eastlake 5-1 223 3
4 Oceanside 4-2 218 4
5 Cathedral 5-1 182 5
6 Ramona 6-0 178 6
7 Madison 6-1 122 7
8 Helix 4-2 110 8
9 Carlsbad 5-1   43 9
10 Mount Miguel 5-2   18

*Points awarded on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.                                                               Others receiving votes with points: St. Augustine, 14; Grossmont, El Capitan, 13 each; Torrey Pines, 4, Imperial, Mission Bay, Hoover, 2 each; Rancho Buena Vista, 1.

Thirty-one sportswriters, sportscasters and administrators vote each week, including:  John Maffei, Craig Malveaux, Dennis Lin, Don Norcross, Lisa Lane, and Andrew Burer, U-T-San Diego; Steve Brand, Terry Monahan, Bill Dickens, Tom Saxe, Rick Hoff, U-T-San Diego correspondents; Nick Pellegrino, East County Sports.com; Steve (Biff) Dolan, Rick (Red) Hill (107.9 FM The Mountain); Jeff Kurtz, playonsports.com; Ernie Martinez, XTRA Sports 1360; John Kentera, Jack Cronin, Ted Mendenhall, Bob Petinak, Jordan Carruth, Bobby Wooldridge, Mark Chiebowski (The Mighty 1090;  Rick Willis, Brandon tone, Jake Fadden, KUSI-TV; Craig Elsten, 619sports.net; Rick Smith, Partletonsports.com; Jerry Schniepp, John Labeta, CIF San Diego Section, and Bruce Ward, San Diego Unified School District.