Monday Night chatter
- Share via
The new face on Monday Night Football -- John Madden -- brought
rousing cheers from many old fans Aug. 5 at Canton, Ohio for the
annual Pro Hall of Fame game.
The list included one of his old college mates from Cal Poly, San
Luis Obispo, by the name of Ted Trompeter, who once served as a
sterling tackle at Newport Harbor High on the 8-1 ’49 grid team.
Trompeter, Class of ’50 at Newport, dislocated his shoulder in
football at Cal Poly and faded from the turf, but angled on with his
skills as a light heavyweight boxer and subsequently won the Pacific
College championship as a senior.
Reflecting on Madden’s Monday Night debut, Trompeter said, “I
thought he was great. He was just himself. And he really knows how to
explain the game.”
Madden had been an announcer on two other TV channels with Pat
Summeral for years, but the latter’s retirement plans last year left
Madden open for another opportunity. ABC-TV’s ratings had been
dropping for years and it felt an old pro like Madden could change
the picture.
Trompeter and his daughter, Jeannette, the anchor for TV-Channel 8
in Des Moines, Iowa, who is also a Cal Poly grad, worked one big fund
rally at San Luis Obispo with Madden to raise money for the Cal Poly
sports program.
Trompeter truly enjoyed himself with Madden several years ago at
the central coast campus. In fact, he laughed to joke that he finally
made the All-Madden Team. “Not as a player,” he explained, “but
serving as the hose man when we had to wash John’s big touring bus.”
Trompeter also drew another big surprise last week because
Jeannette and St. Louis Rams quarterback Kurt Warner had their
picture taken together “and she’ll send dad a copy to Paso Robles.”
She and Warner were working together on a big charity golf
tournament that will benefit crippled children. The pro-am tournament
was staged in Des Moines.
With amusement, he feels the photograph may well help he celebrate
his 70th birthday on Aug. 26.
On another note, one of his ’49 grid mates from Newport, Gino
Boero, a 240-pound tackle as a sophomore, and one who was seen once
as Harbor High’s “Refrigerator” on the line, has joined a new team of
late.
Boero is excited about the new venture, serving as a member of the
volunteer’s unit at Hoag Hospital every Tuesday. He rolls a cart
around, serving coffee to the patients and their guests.
He is also looking forward to volunteer plans for greeters and
said, “It sounds like more fun.”
He and his late father, “Papa Gino,” always favored making time
and space to help other people. Both once owned popular Italian
restaurants in the harbor area.
Boero, a Pilot Sports Hall of Famer, still has “wonderful recalls”
of the ’49 grid team, which racked up 323 points in those eight
victories during the regular season. He also played for teams under
Al Irwin in ’50 and ’51.
While researching for information on a versatile Harbor High
athlete, the late tom McCorkell, Class of ‘44, we came across another
versatile sort in Glynn Boies, Class of ’45.
Born in Mangham, La., Boies and his family, prompted by Costa Mesa
relatives, chose to leave the South and head for the harbor area in
the mid-’30s.
The noted relatives included a chap named Bud Attridge, who would,
in time, lead Newport to the league basketball championship and
become known as an All-CIF star.
And the three Nettles brothers, Bob, the late Jim, and Armand, who
would also become an All-Sunset League choice and a member of the
All-CIF basketball team.
Both Attridge and Armand would become Pilot Sports Hall of Famers.
Boies was not only a polished football player at end for Newport
in ’43 and ‘44, but also played on the championship ’44 basketball
team and served as a superb pitcher for the ’44 baseball team.
Coach Les Miller was so impressed with Boies that he named him the
team signal caller in ’44.
Boies was once hospitalized after a face injury in high school,
then injured again in the face during a college game and chose to
depart the sport.
He felt that “was the smart thing to do.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.