Coastal football history 101
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Roger Carlson
Someone once asked what was the most exciting moment for me when I
was a sportswriter for the Daily Pilot, covering high school football
from 1964 to 1988, before I left the press box for a soap box as the
newspaper’s sports editor.
The answer was, “Twenty-five years.”
Too many personalities, too many accomplishments and too many
nights to remember defy a top 10 list.
But there is a defining moment, each year, right about now as
Labor Day slips by and the openers await.
Everyone is unbeaten with high hopes. Friday Night lights are
about to be turned on. Footsteps are quicker and you feel a couple of
pounds lighter. It’s opening night and Showtime is here.
And there are a lot of questions, soon to be answered.
For instance:
Will this be a year Corona del Mar High’s Sea Kings rival the
exploits of the back-to-back CIF championship runs of Dave Holland’s
1988 and ’89 teams? The ’88 unit was unbeaten (12-0-2) and a year
later, the Sea Kings blanked three straight CIF foes before capturing
the title.
Holland was named Coach of the Year by the California Athletic
Director’s Association.
Always a defensive-minded coach, his Sea Kings’ 15-14 victory over
Newport Harbor in 1985 still resonates with the impact of a hammer.
There were his Sea Kings, who had rallied with two touchdowns and
a two-pointer to take the lead deep in the fourth quarter in
unbelievable fashion. Still time, however, for Mike Giddings’
explosive Sailors to retaliate, and respond they did behind the
quarterbacking of Shane Foley.
The Sailors quickly drove deep into CdM territory, but then
uncharacteristically shot themselves in the foot as time ran out and
Holland’s Sea Kings held on to post the dramatic upset at Orange
Coast College.
For CdM, an incredible and unforgettable finish to a 4-6 season.
Newport, which entered 8-1 and was the top-rated team in the
division, lost its No. 1 seed in the upcoming CIF Southern Section
playoffs, had to share the league title and never really recovered,
finishing 10-3.
Will Edison continue its amazing run of dominance since the
school’s inception in 1969?
It all started with a seniorless squad going 4-3-2, capped by a
staggering 21-20 upset of Fountain Valley to deny the Barons the
league championship and knock the Barons out of the CIF playoffs,
just a week after Fountain Valley had “upset” Herb Hill’s vaunted
Loara Saxons. The “upset,” as described by Fountain Valley Coach
Bruce Pickford, was a come-from-behind 21-21 tie, putting the Barons
into the driver’s seat for the league title and lone CIF playoff
berth with one game left. All that remained were these sophomores and
juniors at a first-year program called Edison.
The Chargers were emotionally charged after one of their players,
Mark Naylon, died from injuries sustained in a junior varsity game
against Estancia the previous week and played with spectacular
abandon. And it was an emotional mind-set that lasted for years.
A year later, Bill Vail’s Chargers would go 13-0, with a 27-14
victory over Lompoc at UC Santa Barbara giving them the CIF 3-A
championship.
The emotional strain proved too much for Vail, who retired from
the game a few weeks later and gave way to Bill Workman.
One winning season followed another and through 1987, 19 years,
there was never a losing season.
Another memorable moment came at Anaheim Stadium, where underdog
Edison had Long Beach Poly on the ropes in 1985, but was forced to
settle for a 14-14 tie when Poly’s heralded, and mouthy, Jackrabbits
scored with virtually no time left and then refused to go for a
two-pointer for the victory and kicked the PAT for the share of the
crown. It was an ultimate compliment to Edison, which had outplayed
Poly the entire game.
Will there ever be a display of power offense again to rival
Edison’s 1979-1980 juggernauts, who posted back-to-back CIF Big Five
Conference championships?
Individually, that night at Orange Coast College when Kerwin Bell
touched the ball four times in the first half and ran for four
touchdowns to pace a 43-14 victory over Canyon in 1979?
The four-year reign of terror (1978-81) posted an overall record
of 45-5 under Workman.
The ’79 team ran up a 55-0 victory over Redlands for the CIF
crown, winning its last eight games.
There was but one flaw in the run for the Sunset League
championship on a night when the Chargers visited Davidson Field on
the campus of Newport Harbor.
There the Newport Harbor Sailors of Bill Pizzica stunned Edison,
17-13, and all a frustrated Workman could do was throw his clipboard
high into the air as the Sailors celebrated their upset. Just three
weeks earlier, El Modena had shocked his projected unbeaten team,
28-27.
Newport’s shocker triggered a 32-game winning streak for Edison,
the Chargers averaging more than 30 points a game in that span.
Knocking off Edison wasn’t Newport’s only eye-opener.
Just a year earlier, the Sailors entered the Big Five playoffs as
“No. 16,” the wild-card pick, pitted against the No. 1 seed, host St.
Paul, coached by Marijon Ancich. Pizzica’s Tars shocked the
Swordsmen, 10-7, clearly the upset of the year in Southern
California.
The Big Five was just that in the era of 1977-1987. It was the top
three entries from the Angelus, Del Rey, Sunset, Citrus Belt and
Sierra leagues.
That meant dealing with the likes of St. Paul, Bishop Amat, Mater
Dei, Redlands, Fontana, Los Altos and Loyola, as well as the Sunset
League gauntlet. Later, the Moore League (Long Beach Poly) would
replace the Sierra League.
Pizzica’s first year (1974) included a 17-16 victory over Edison
and a memorable 21-14 victory over Loara en route to a 10-2 season. A
year earlier, Don Lent’s Sailors would run up a 9-2 record, all of
this in the toughest circles of the Southern Section.
Today’s edition of Sailors, under Coach Jeff Brinkley, operate in
a different arena. And they don’t often enter as the underdog. So the
question begs: How often will the Sailors be the underdog this year?
Estancia’s Eagles have been on the downside for a couple of years.
Can the Eagles turn the corner, as did the 1970 edition after four
straight losing seasons?
The 1970 team of Phil Brown went 9-2 with the losses coming to CIF
champion Edison, 14-12, and powerful Bonita, featuring Allen Carter,
in the second round of the CIF 3-A playoffs, 15-14, on a mud-soaked
OCC field. They were four points away from an unbeaten season and a
berth in the CIF semifinals.
Decades would separate Estancia’s next waves with the 9-3 and 7-5
teams of Ed Blanton in ’79 and ‘80, and the 7-3-1 and 10-1 teams of
John Liebengood in ’88 and ’89.
Can the Oilers of Huntington Beach return to the glory years of
the early 1980s?
Who could forget the slashing runs of Danny Thompson, who carried
Huntington Beach to back-to-back seasons of 8-4 and 7-3-1 under
coaches Greg Henry and George Pascoe, respectively?
They were seasons a long time coming after just three title years
in the school’s history (1926, 1946 and 1966).
Luke Davis of youth baseball fame in Costa Mesa was Huntington
Beach’s big weapon for the Harry “Cap” Sheue-coached Oilers in 1926,
and the 1966 team was produced by Coach Ken Moats.
Pascoe, incidentally, was the son of Edison’s first principal,
Ernie Pascoe.
There aren’t too many questions at Costa Mesa, where life has been
good for the Mustangs for 10 years. But it wasn’t always like that.
Costa Mesa, from 1960 to 1988, 29 campaigns, had just three
winning seasons, all under Coach Tom French (8-2-1 in 1976, 7-4 in
‘75 and 7-5 in ‘76). After that, things went south again, for a long
time.
For the Mustangs, the great moment came in 1967 when Ramon Ricardo
delivered a field goal and Newport Harbor fell, 3-0. Inquiries by
telephone had one consistent reaction when the score was revealed:
“Are you sure about that?” Yes, it was for sure.
While there was plenty of individual talent to consider, the final
scores often fell short. But then, one day in 1993, Myron Miller
showed up.
Will Marina High’s Vikings come up with someone like Steve
Monahan, the receiver-turned quarterback under a legendary coach
named Leon Wheeler?
Wheeler, a coach from the very old school, put the Vikings on the
map in spectacular style, soon after another coaching legend, El
Rancho High’s Ernie Johnson, spent one year at Newport Harbor.
Johnson and his Sailors swept to the Sunset League championship
with an overall record of 8-2 in 1970.
I still remember Johnson stalking the field before Harbor’s opener
against Corona del Mar.
He was furious his team was on the field for warm-ups and there
was no ball.
On the other side of the 50, meanwhile, was Holland and his Sea
Kings, with six balls, and six sets of set-ups all going through
their motions.
The Sailors won, 7-0. In the first 18 years of their series,
through 1980, Newport was 15-3 against CdM.
Holland, Corona del Mar’s coach for 20 years over two tours, is
presently turning the wheels at Laguna Beach (his eighth year) where
the Breakers continue a history of underdog roles.
Laguna Beach wasn’t the underdog in 1968 under Coach Hal Akins,
with solid victories over such foes as Foothill, El Modena, Villa
Park and Tustin highlighting the road to the Crestview League
championship. The Artists bowed out in the second round of the CIF
Division 3-A playoffs with a 10-1 record.
The sight of Akins, and his Artists, assistant coach Norm Borucki
and Skipper ringing the victory bell on the sideline, was a scene
right out of 1940. High school football in its purest form.
Will it be a memorable season for Ocean View? Who would ever
forget the smashmouth coach named Karl Gaytan? The Seahawks had a
great player in Notre Dame-bound offensive lineman Todd Norman, but,
unfortunately, were never able to find a way to clone him.
It all begins this week at Davidson Field, Sheue Field, LeBard
Stadium, Guyer Field, Boswell Stadium, and the Santa Ana Bowl, among
others.
The same sites where the likes of Frank Seurer and Dave White of
Edison, Jerrott Willard and John Katovsich of CdM, Alvin White, Wade
Tift, Vinnie Mulroy and David Cadigan of Newport Harbor, Andy
Sinclair and Rick DiBernardo of Edison, Benny Ricardo, Dave Gleason,
Bill Lux and the Ferrymans (Dick and Jim) of Costa Mesa, Matt Johner,
Vince Klees, Steve Kraiss, Jeff Graham and Larry Hall of Estancia,
Steve Brazas, Steve Bukich, Jim Swick and Fritz Howser of Newport
Harbor, Jeff Thomason and J.R. Walz of CdM, Bob Tripp and Brian
Theriot of Newport Harbor, Dan Bauer and Steve Cook of Costa Mesa,
Estancia’s Mike and Tony Camp, and so many more, dazzled under Friday
Night lights.
And taking it back a little further, there were the exploits of
Jim Stangeland, and Clare Van Hoorebeke at Huntington Beach, and at
Newport Harbor, Al Irwin, Hal Sheflin, Bob Berry, Johnny Ikeda, Gino
Boero, Rolly Pulaski, Manuel Muniz and a quarterback named Don
Cantrell, among many others. All of them traveled these trails.
Hey! Kickoff is at 7 p.m. Don’t be late!
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