1988: Player is player in Century league

Lincoln coach Vic Player, on his 100th career victory:

“It’s wonderful to reach a milestone and be considered among the elite coaches in San Diego County.  It’s great to be up there with coaches I admired when I was young and first came to San Diego from Chicago, people like Duane Maley (San Diego), Bennie Edens (Point Loma), and Herb Meyer (El Camino).”

A 14-0 loss to Point Loma in Week 2 left Player with 99 wins. The loss was reversed early in Week 7 after a decision came down against the Pointers, who forfeited because they had used an ineligible player in the game against Lincoln.

Before he coached, Player (left) starred in 1960 St. Augustine backfield with Tom Procopio, Mike Moses, and quarterback Oliver Walker.

Although Player’s team had scored three victories in the next four games, Player considered the 28-6 triumph over Hoover in Week 7 to be as meaningful.

“We got the word that the loss became a victory but we still stuck to business, stayed focused,” said Player.

Lincoln finished with a 9-2 record, losing 40-29 to San Pasqual in the AA semifinals.

Player, who had stepped aside for three seasons in the mid-‘eighties, coached through 1993.  His 17-season record was 131-58-2, a .691 winning percentage.

 

 




1988: The Rise of Rancho Buena Vista

To Dick Haines, the arrival of Rancho Buena Vista felt like a kick in the pelvic region.RBV crest

Vista, where Haines had built a program of statewide respect after his appointment in 1970, was feeling the pain of no longer being the sheriff in town.

A new school on the south side of the growing North County community opened in 1987 and took many of the underclassmen from Haines’ powerful freshmen and junior varsity squads.

Haines was furious with the Vista school district, because the coach believed the district allowed the new school’s principal to draw the enrollment boundaries and that the school district was out to “get” Haines, who occasionally clashed with  honchos.

Alan Johnson was the RBV principal and was Haines’ former boss and friend at Vista. Haines declared the boundaries so favored the new school they even veered in a direction that would include the residence of Vista High’s Kira Jorgenson, according to Tom (Fifth Avenue) Saxe, veteran North County sportswriter and lifelong Vistan.

Jorgenson was one of the  top distance runners in the United States.

QUICK DECLINE

Vista’s enrollment dropped from 3,250 to 1,850 in three years. Rancho’s almost would double Vista’s in the same length of time. The enrollment numbers and the teams’ won-loss comparisons are startling:

Year Vista RBV
1986 12-1 NA
1987 6-4 4-5-1
1988 0-10 13-0
1989 4-7 12-2
1990 6-6 10-3
1991 13-1 5-6

Craig Bell, who had been a head coach at Burbank Burroughs and San Dieguito and an assistant for two years on Haines’ staff at Vista, was coach at the new school.

Bell inherited players who would fuel a championship run within a year, but facilities were nonexistent. Writer Steve Beatty of the Los Angeles Times San Diego edition visited the Longhorns as they prepared for their first season.

The Times correspondent wondered if he had taken a wrong turn.

Bell won more than 100 games in 14 seasons at Rancho Buena Vista

There was football equipment and drinking cups everywhere and a “welcome to our…cafeteria,” from Bell. The Longhorns’ dressing room was a place where students enjoyed lunch, at Lincoln Middle School, about 15 minutes away from the new campus.

Rancho’s practice at Lincoln followed the middle school’s practice and was before Vista Pop Warner players took the field, wearing the black and red of Haines’ Panthers. Bell appraised the barren, well-worn gridiron:

“The field is starting to look like Carlsbad State Beach,” he said.

From that beginning the Longhorns, playing home games at Vista High,  posted an above-the-curve, first-year record of 4-5-1 and resembled stampeding namesakes their second season.

FOOT IN MOUTH DISEASE

Although it was 5-0 and winning by an average of 42-13 each week, Rancho did not come of age until the Longhorns visited 5-0 Oceanside, a respected North County power for decades and the state’s top-ranked medium-sized (AAA) school, according to Cal-Hi Sports.

Oceanside coach Roy Scaffidi brayed that he had 10 or 11 Division I college prospects among his underclassmen and that two offensive linemen, Pulu Poumele and Saia Isaia, were the best in the country…yes, country (Poumele made an NFL practice squad and Isaia played four seasons).

A 165-pound defensive tackle named David Navadel spun around the two Oceanside forwards and scored 4.5 sacks of Oceanside’s heralded  quarterback, Jerry Garrett, and the RBV defense took Garrett down 10 times. Rancho won, 35-22.

Bob Woodhouse, retired from years of success at San Marcos and San Pasqual and volunteering on Bell’s staff, told Tom Saxe:  “There was nowhere for (Garrett) to go but step up and get skewered by Navadel.  I’ve been coaching for 30 years and I don’t know if I’ve ever seen anything like that.”

Oceanside’s Gregory Frazier is swarmed by Rancho Buena Vista’s Kevin Lippert (13) and Bill Goodsill (12).

THUNDERING HERD

Operating behind a stout line anchored by tackle Jack Harrington, the San Diego Section offensive player of the year, Rancho’s Scott Garcia, who formed a 1-2-3 punch with O.J. Hall and sophomore Markeith Ross, ripped Oceanside for 280 yards.

General George Patton, the foot soldier, would have loved these guys. The Longhorns came to run.

Rancho averaged 413 yards on the ground and less than 30 yards passing in a 13-0 season.  They would be declared No. 1 in the state among California medium-sized teams as ranked by Cal-Hi Sports.

The Longhorns met Oceanside again in the playoff semifinal and sent the Pirates home with a 45-7 whipping.  They won the 2-A title in an all-Palomar League final with a 21-10 victory over San Pasqual.

Four University tacklers were required to take down Torrey Pines’ John Lynch, but the Dons beat Lynch’s Falcons, 27-20.

LYNCH INJURED

Torrey Pines quarterback John Lynch’s potentially brilliant season was short-circuited when Lynch sustained a broken ankle two minutes into the second quarter of the first game.

The Falcons were leading University 12-0 and Lynch had completed six of 10 passes for 146 yards and two touchdowns. Lynch made it back on the field in the 10th and final game against Poway, with a playoff berth going to the winner.

“John Lynch will do it all against Poway and if Lynch is healthy we can win it all,” Torrey Pines coach Rik Haines told the Evening Tribune’s Jeff Savage. Haines went further:  “If Lynch isn’t completely healthy we very well could win it all.”

Lynch was brilliant in the first half, completing 11 of 16 passes for 203 yards and two touchdowns as Torrey opened a 20-0 lead, but he was sacked four times and was 7 for 21 and 74 yards and with one interception in the last two quarters.

The teams tied, 20-20.  Torrey Pines, 4-5-1 was out of the playoffs and Poway, 5-4-1 and with a better Palomar League record, was in.

Lynch, eluding Chris Helbock of Poway, whose second-half comeback from a 20-7 deficit to a 20-20 tie got Titans into playoffs and Torrey Pines out.

HE MOVED TO DEFENSE

Fully recovered, Lynch was a baseball-football star at Stanford, drafted in the third round by the NFL’s Tampa Bay Buccaneers and in the second round by baseball’s Florida Marlins.

Lynch played 15 seasons at strong safety for Tampa Bay and Denver, earned nine Pro Bowl invitations and a Super Bowl ring when the Buccaneers defeated the Oakland Raiders in Super Bowl XXXVII.

After a stint working as a television commentator at NFL games, Lynch was hired as general manager of the San Francisco 49ers in 2017.

TORREY “LYNCHES” NEUMEIER

Jack Neumeier, who coached John Elway at Granada Hills High in suburban Los Angeles, was coaxed from his volunteer position with Fallbrook and joined the staff at Torrey Pines, ostensibly to design an offense for Lynch.

“John Lynch is as close to John Elway as any quarterback I’ve had,” Neumeier said.  “He has size (6-2, 200), speed (:04.6), a mental toughness like Elway and a great arm.  When he got hurt I saw hours and hours of hard work go out the window.”

HEAVYWEIGHT PLAYER

John Louis, a 6-1, 165-pound wide receiver-cornerback, was one of Point Loma’s key players.  He was adopted as a baby by former heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis. “He was my best friend,” the younger Louis remembered.  Joe passed away when John was 10 and John came to live with relatives in San Diego.

Louis made a touchdown-saving tackle against Morse and caught a 23-yard touchdown pass in same game in the Pointers’ 35-27 loss.

Joe Louis’ adopted son was standout for Pointers in battle with Morse.

METROPOLITAN SWITCH

The Metro Conference merged the 3-A Mesa League and the 2-A South Bay League, returning to an all 3-A Metropolitan League format.

Coronado opted out and went 2-A free-lance, hoping to earn an at-large playoff bid.  The Islanders finished 4-5 and not in the playoffs.

Marian nixed the 3-A designation and joined the 1-A Mountain-Desert circuit, improving from 2-7 to 6-4-1 and winning the 1-A title, 13-6 over Holtville.

BASEBALL IN HIS FUTURE

Brian Giles of Granite Hills was the second-leading scorer in the San Diego Section with 23 touchdowns in 11 games, but Giles is better known for his 15 major league baseball seasons, lifetime .291 average, 287 home runs, and a pair of All-Star game invitations.

Giles played right field for the San Diego Padres from 2006-09 and his brother, infielder Marcus played seven seasons, including 2007 with the Padres.

Granite Hills’ Brian Giles, rushing for some of his 178 yards in 35-17 win over Valhalla, had distinguished major league baseball career.

WHO DO YOU WANT, GUYS?

New Sweetwater coach Andy Sanchez, who replaced the retiring Gene Alim, acceded to his players’ wishes that they “play the best” and scheduled nationally No. 2 Carson of the Los Angeles City Section in the Red Devils’ first game.  After a scoreless first half Carson pulled away to win 34-0.

Sweetwater also was beaten by Playa del Rey St. Bernard, 26-19, and Santa Barbara 14-12 but won five of its last seven to go 5-5.

STEADY, COACH

Coming off a 46-24 loss to Rancho Buena Vista, Crawford coach Dan Armstrong reflected.  “We’re not in awe of anybody,” Armstrong said.  “We’d play them next week if we could.  We made them look better than they are.”

Crawford did not quickly recover.  Point Loma defeated the Colts 43-3 (and later forfeited the victory) in Crawford’s next game.  The Colts finally recovered, made the playoffs, and finished 7-4.

THE CAVERS’ LADY

Mia could boom them…

Mia Labovitz completed her third season as San Diego High’s placekicker. Her 40-yard field goal gave the Cavers a 3-0 victory over St. Augustine.

“It would have been good from forty-five,” said San Diego coach Allan (Scotty) Harris.  “We have trouble scoring points, so anytime we’re down around the twenty or thirty-yard line we’re not afraid to send her in.”

Aside from carrying a 3.3 grade-point average scholastically, Mia also was a standout on the Caver’s soccer and track-and-field squads.

TOO MUCH OR TOO LITTLE

Chula Vista coach Jim Wilson said he regretted calling on running back John Funke for 25 rushing attempts in the opener against Mount Miguel, which edged the Barons, 15-12.

Perhaps Wilson rued not calling Funke’s number more often.  Funke rushed 46 times for 301 yards the following week in a 34-18 victory over Clairemont.

CANDID COE

In appraising the Metropolitan League preseason favorite, Mar Vista coach Sam Coe said, “Chula Vista has got stud after stud” on its roster.

Coe was equally direct when his Imperial Beach squad upset University, 25-23:  “I don’t want to say we’ll beat Notre Dame tomorrow, but these kids are starting to believe in themselves.”

The Mariners flattened out and lost their next six.

Armando Biondo maneuvered in the mud for 88 yards in 15 carries as Ramona edged San Marcos, 19-14, and finished regular season with 6-4 record, their first winning campaign above the 1-A level.

ARE WE AT THE RIGHT VENUE?

“This is unbelievable!” a stunned Carl Iavelli exclaimed to Karen Frawley of The San Diego Union.

Iavelli had just stepped off the bus at Monte Vista High an hour before his Valhalla team was to meet Oceanside in a quarterfinals playoff. The Norsemen coach was greeted by a darkened stadium and an unmarked field left muddy from recent rain.

To paraphrase the nasty prison guard in Cool Hand Luke, “What we have here is a failure to communicate.” Valhalla, the sanctioning San Diego Section, and host Monte Vista apparently had crossed signals.

For once, the “dreaded administrative glitch” did not involve an ineligible player.

“We expected everything to be ready to go and, boy, were we surprised,” Iavelli told the reporter following Oceanside’s 17-0 victory.

The game was delayed only 15 minutes after a combined effort by coaches, parents, and officials prepared the field and got the lights turned on.

TOO CLOSE

Oceanside and Rancho Buena Vista survived a couple scary comebacks. The Pirates defeated Santa Ana Mater Dei, 36-34, although the home team scored 21 fourth-quarter points and almost converted a two-point conversion that would have tied the game with 13 seconds left.

Rancho led University 40-7 at the end of three quarters in the playoffs and hung on, 40-36.

Wingback Darryl Lewis was one of Morse’s many outstanding players.

QUICK KICKS

Helix made the playoffs for the 11th time in coach Jim Arnaiz’s 16 seasons…Roy Scaffidi was out as Oceanside coach after a 9-4 season, replaced by John Carroll…Scafiddi had released Carroll as the Pirates’ defensive coordinator early in the season…Carroll coached outstanding defenses at Anaheim Servite before coming to Oceanside…Ramona had to fill a gap in its schedule and managed to sign Dana Point Dana Hills for its opener…the Bulldogs won 21-7 and went on to finish with a 6-4 record, their first winning season since 1975 and first as a 2-A team…Bonita Vista was forced to move its opener with Mount Miguel from Southwestern College to Chula Vista…the college gridiron was damaged from a series of summer concerts…San Pasqual jolted Lincoln with long drives and 406 yards offense, 248 of which came on 25 carries and 4 touchdowns by Tony Medina, which prompted Lincoln coach Vic Player to declare, “I’ve been  coaching twelve years and never has one of my teams been physically handled like that.”…San Pasqual defeated the Hornets 40-29 to gain the 2-A finals against Rancho Buena Vista…after losing five fumbles in a 30-20 loss to San Pasqual, El Camino coach Herb Meyer more or less described the Eagles as “mediocre.”…that was what San Pasqual defensive players were chanting following the 14-0 playoff win over Meyer’s Wildcats…add dreaded administrative glitch: Vahalla forfeited five games for using an ineligible player, then Grossmont forfeited a 48-14 victory over Valhalla, the game going into the books as a loss for both teams….




2013: Jack Menotti, Head coach at Madison, Ramona

Jack Menotti, who coached Madison to an undefeated season on the field in 1972, passed away Dec. 28, 2012.

Coach John P. "Jack" Menotti, 1933 - 2012
Jack Menotti on the sideline at Ramona High, 1982.

Menotti, 78, also coached at Mesa College and was head coach at Ramona.  He was introduced to coaching in the 1960s by Birt Slater, the legendary Kearny High mentor.

“He didn’t have a  football background but he wanted to get into football,” Slater recalled.  “I told him, ‘You go home this summer and learn as much as you can.  We’ll see where you are when we come back to school.'”

Menotti  apparently was a quick study.  “He became a very good coach,” said Slater, who appointed Menotti to his  staff and eventually named the Los Angeles-area native defensive coordinator of  teams that were annual playoff contenders in the late ‘sixties.

Madison’s  8-0-1 season of 1972 was almost wrecked by an administrative error which resulted in  two forfeits that followed back-to-back victories over Clairemont, 41-6, and Point Loma, 14-3, early in the season.

Despite the two forfeits, Madison still was battling for the Western League championship when the Warhawks met Kearny late in  the 1972 season.

The teams fought to a 15-15 tie. Kearny won the championship with a 4-1-1 record and went into the playoffs. Madison was 4th at 3-2-1 but would been 4-2 and the champion had it beaten Kearny, which also would have finished 4-2.




2012: Freeman in State Top 10 in Scoring

Imperial’s Royce Freeman tied for 10th in scoring among California football players in 2012 with 220 points in 12 games.  Freeman tied for 75th nationally, according to MaxPreps.

Madison’s Pierre Cormier scored 176 points for a tie for 34th in California and La Jolla Country Day’s Sage Burmeister was 45th with 168.

Freeman and Norwalk’s Rashaad Penny are the only juniors in the top 10.  Isaiah Sharp of Wasco is the only sophomore.  Leaders:

Name, School                                                   G  TD PAT 2PT. Points

Jake Taylor, Lake Arrowhead Rim of World  14  57        0        0   342

Sty Hairston, Banning                                        13  56        0        1   338

Terrell Newby, West Hills Chaminade            14  45        0        0  270

Tony Cota, Manteca Sierra                               12  41         0       1   248

Ryan Severson, San Jose Valley Christian     13  39         0       3   240

Jimmy Toland, Indio Shadow Hills                  11  39         0       0  234

Rashaad Penny. Norwalk                                  11  37         0       4  230

Nathan Chunn, Escalon                                     14  38         0       0  228

Joe Protheroe, Concord Clayton Valley          14  36         0       3  222

Royce Freeman, Imperial                                 12  36         0       2  220

Isaiah Sharp, Wasco                                          12  36          0      2  220

Scoring statistics were supplied to MaxPreps by team representatives and correspondents. PAT and 2-point conversions can be incomplete or inaccurate.




2012: Oceanside Among Best in Final Rankings

OceansideCal-Hi Sports has spoken.

Oceanside, 12-1, and San Diego Section II champion, is 15th in the newletter’s final 2012 state rankings.  The Pirates are fourth in Southern California D-II, following Gardena Serra, West Hills Chaminade, and Huntington Beach Edison.

Other San Diego Section entries were far down the list.

In D-II Poway (10-3) is 41st overall and ninth in the South; Helix (10-1), is 44th and 10th, and Valhalla (9-4), is 45th and 11th.

Madison (14-1)  was first among the South’s D-III squads, but 46th overall.

But for a 30-20 loss to Temecula Chaparral which took on added importance each week as Chaparral lost its last four games after a 7-0 start, Oceanside would have been matched against Gardena Serra in the Southern California regional playoff.

If you believe the final CalPreps power ratings, coach John Carroll’s Pirates would rank 11th in California, but that hypothesis is flawed because the teams that finished with lower power ratings advanced further than Oceanside in the postseason and lost points when defeated in the regional playoffs, in which Oceanside didn’t participate.

Cal-Hi’s top 15 with CalPrep power ratings:

1–Concord De La Salle, 76.2.
2–Corona Centennial, 69.4.
3–Harbor City Narbonne, 68.3.
4–Vista Murietta, 66.3.
5–Gardena Serra, 66.2.
6–Folsom, 59.0.
7–Granite Bay, 64.5.
8–Long Beach Poly, 67.2.
9–Bellflower St. John Bosco, 67.0.
10–Santa Ana Mater Dei, 65.4.
11–Ventura St. Bonaventure, 60.5.
12–West Hills Chaminade, 57.8.
13–Mission Viejo, 64.1.
14–Huntington Beach Edison, 57.8.
15–Oceanside, 60.6.




2012: Freeman Imperialist Among Scorers

Royce Freeman’s touchdowns are as common as July’s 110-degree days in  the Great Imperial Valley.

The 6-foot, 1-inch, 215-pound junior continued to make history this season at Imperial High, whose football lineage dates to 1942 and whose  list of graduates goes all the way back to 1908.

Tigers’ bite comes from Freeman.

Freeman led the Tigers to a 9-3 record and won the San Diego Section scoring championship for the second consecutive season, with 36 touchdowns and a total of 220 points in 12 games.

Freeman scored 39 touchdowns and had a total of 240 points in a 9-3  campaign in 2011.

His career total of 76 touchdowns and 462 career points ranks Freeman seventh in San Diego Section history.  He passed Helix’ Reggie Bush (450) this season and needs 236 points in 2013 to better the career record of 697 set by Mission Bay’s Dillon Baxter in 2009.

IN COMPANY WITH THOMAS, ARNAIZ

Upon graduation in June, 2014, Royce will join the two other most prominent athletic alumni of Imperial High.

Linebacker Robert Thomas, who played collegiately at UCLA, was a No. 1 selection of the St. Louis Rams and the 31th player in the 2002 NFL draft.

Robert  Thomas played seven seasons for four teams and is the younger brother of Stan Thomas, who attended El Centro Central and played  tackle at Texas before  the Chicago Bears’ drafted him with the 22nd selection in the 1991 draft.

Jim Arnaiz was a four-sport standout (football, basketball,  track–shot put and sprints–and baseball) before attending California Poly-Pomona and embarking on a legendary coaching career.

Arnaiz is one of the most honored coaches in San Diego Section history, having guided Helix to four San Diego Section championships and posting a career record of 212 victories, 77 losses, and 6 ties.

MONSIEUR MADISON

Madison’s Pierre Cormier was runner-up to Freeman in Divisions I to IV with 29 touchdowns and 176 points in 14 games.  Oceanside’s William Gulley was third with 158 points, followed by Eastlake’s Aaron Baltazar, the leading D-1 scorer with 128 points.

USUAL D-5 SCORING

The smaller schools produced their annual complement of blockbuster scorers.  Justin Harrison of Calvin Christian had 192 points, followed by Ben Giese of Tri-City Christian (178), Serge Burmeister, La Jolla Country Day, 168; Willie Wilson, Mountain Empire, 140, and Bulla Graft, The Bishop’s 138.