La Jolla, winner of 30 in a row, including 28 consecutive this season, was on the cusp of getting to a place no other team had gone.
A 29-0 season was unprecedented.
The only San Diego County team to come that close was the 1959-60 Hoover squad that won its first 26 (most reports say the Cardinals won 27 in a row; search 1959-60 “Cardinals Come Up Short…”).
No major school varsity had traversed a full season without a loss, dating to the days of dirt courts and chain baskets.
And it wouldn’t happen this year.
The Vikings returned three starters from the 1962-63 club that won all 17 nonleague games but then ran aground on the rocky shoals of the Western League.
Not always composed, the seaside club staggered to a 5-5 loop record, finishing at 22-5 and out of the playoffs.
Rick Eveleth, Charlie Buchanan, and Bill Canning, three solid starters, plus John Walters and future pro tour golfer John Schroeder, were on hand for another run this season.
The Vikings won the Kiwanis Tournament Limited Division and Mustang Optimist event in December, and then swept the Western League with a 10-0 run and set a single-game scoring record in a 94-66 triumph over Mission Bay.
Averaging more than 65 points a game, La Jolla swarmed opponents and rebounded, although Eveleth, at 6 feet, 3 inches, was its tallest player.
CLASS AA PLAYOFFS
The Vikings proved the correct antidote to Monte Vista’s runners and gunners, winning the first-round game, 60-49, days after the Monarchs (20-7) had set a County record in a 120-77 victory over Granite Hills.
The Vikings had rallied from a 49-31 deficit in the third quarter to nose out the Spring Valley team, 62-58, in the fourth game of the season and repeated with a 68-50 victory (“I think their press hurt them; their tongues were hanging out in the second half,” noted La Jolla coach Bill Reeves) in the Kiwanis finale.
La Jolla’s first test since a mid-season, 44-41 escape from Kearny (15-13) came against dangerous Lincoln (17-8) in the semifinals. The Hornets strived mightily, but the Vikings stayed in front throughout and won, 78-70.
HIGHLANDERS IN WAY
With 6-foot, 7inch Al Skalecky, 6-3 Jim Sunderman, and 6-2 Ron Slocum patrolling inside, Helix (27-3) had lost to only one team in San Diego and removed that blotch in a succeeding meeting with Chula Vista.
Trailing 18-17, after the first quarter, Helix staggered La Jolla with a 15-2 run, led, 33-24 at the half, 50-39, after three and closed out a 76-56 victory that marked the first time a school outside the city limits had won the title.
Skalecky had 24 points and 13 rebounds, Sunderman 14 and 17. The 5-foot 10-inch Buchanan, who would be named CIF player of the year, led the Vikings with 8 rebounds.
Helix with a 46-22 edge on the backboards, had little trouble with the Vikings’ press, and shot 50.8 per cent from the field to 38.6 per cent.
The Highlanders had raced through the Grossmont League with a 12-0 record including a pair of wins against 10-2 Monte Vista, 77-72, and 65-59, the latter for the league clincher.
FUTURE AZTECS
Skalecky would team with La Jolla’s Rick Eveleth, Castle Park’s Ralph (Rip) Barrett, and Crawford’s Dave Miller on San Diego State’s 1966-67 team that played in the national collegiate College Division championship tournament in Evansville, Ind.
ALMOST STRANGER THAN FICTION
–Mar Vista scored the only points by either team in the fourth quarter to edge Sweetwater, 36-34. Mike Clark’s two free throws with 50 seconds remaining was the difference.
–Down 26 points with 14 minutes to play, Helix caught St. Augustine and then stole a pass and scored to defeat the Saints, 55-54, for the Kiwanis Tournament Unlimted Division title.
–Lincoln shot 57 per cent in a 77-66 win at Crawford and then shot 32 per cent in a 49-43 loss at home to the Colts, who claimed the Eastern League championship.
–Six Castle Park and Mar Vista players, three on each side, fouled out in the last five minutes.
–Rick Eveleth, 6-feet-3 inches, of La Jolla scored 26 points and held Mission Bay’s 6-8 Mike Kinkki to 4 points.
–Clairemont held on for a 74-70 victory over Granite Hills, despite giving up 35 points in the fourth quarter, after leading, 57-35.
–Hoover’s 2-4 start was its poorest since the 11-12, 1952-53 team.
SURPRISING COLTS
With a starting lineup comprised mostly of graduates of a junior varsity team that was 8-8 in ’62-63, Crawford coach Jim Sams found out quickly what potential opponents had on their minds.
“You get an idea of what the other clubs think of you when they try to schedule a game,” said Sams after the Colts won their first six. “They’ll call and ask how many letterman you have and you say, ‘None’, and they want you on their schedule.”
Crawford’s 25-5 record was better than the 24-6-1 of the championship 1962-63 squad. 6-4 sophomore Von Jacobsen joined 6-7 senior Dennis Grey, 6-3 junior Bob Boone 5-11 senior Ronnie Layton, and 6-3 senior Dave Miller, who saw action the previous year, in the starting lineup.
CANTANKEROUS
Taciturn Paul Pruett, who didn’t like the setup while at San Dieguito, sounded off about Kiwanis Tournament venues.
“The people running this thing know how big a home court advantage is but nothing is ever done about it,” said the Hilltop mentor.
“They shove the County teams into any old gym and let the city teams play their first two or three games at home.”
Pruett said he would continue to enter the Kiwanis because there aren’t any other pre-Christmas events of significance, “but if they start another one somewhere, we’ll be in it.”
Hilltop didn’t have to go to Hoover or San Diego for its second-round game with Grossmont, but the Lancers were bounced, 58-44, at Sweetwater.
INTRANSIGENT
Castle Park was awarded a forfeit victory over Morse in the San Dieguito Mustang Optimist, post-Christmas tournament.
Tigers coach Tom Williams refused to leave the court after referee Jimmy Spurling assessed a second technical foul against Williams, who was unhappy with the way the game was being called.
Morse outnumbered Castle Park in personal fouls, 15-7, when the game ended with the Trojans ahead, 40-23, in the third quarter.
IRATE
“This was the worst performance by a team of mine in fourteen years of coaching; the kids have got no pride in defense and don’t care if the other guy scores,” said Bill Standly of San Diego (13-15) following a 69-46 loss to La Jolla.
BALANCE
La Jolla oozed it. Charlie Buchanan, the CIF player of the year, scored 436 points, Bill Canning 390, Rick Eveleth 374, and John Walters 318. Skalecky led Helix with 440, followed by Jim Sunderman, 421, and Ron Slocum, 319.
Guards Lynn Lowder (217) and Bob Grundstrom didn’t score as much (“I’ll bet some of the opposing coaches don’t know their names,” said Helix coach Bob Speidel), but they were essential in breaking down La Jolla’s defense.
Grundstrom’s looper with one second left pushed the Highlanders past 15-13 Kearny, 57-55, in the opening round of the playoffs.
POLITICS ELIMINATED
The CIF board of managers announced that leagues could break ties for playoff spots with an elimination game. Previously administrators in respective leagues voted for postseason representatives.
SCORING LEADERS
Name | Team | Games | Points | Average |
Barrett | Castle Park | 30 | 537 | 17.9 |
Landis | Monte Vista | 26 | 529 | 20.3 |
Leininger | Morse | 25 | 518 | 20.7 |
Fitzmorris | Madison | 28 | 480 | 17.1 |
Rippe | Lincoln | 24 | 442 | 18.4 |
Skalecky | Helix | 30 | 440 | 14.7 |
Gray | Monte Vista | 27 | 439 | 16.3 |
Buchanan | La Jolla | 29 | 435 | 15.0 |
Syverson | Mar Vista | 30 | 430 | 14.5 |
Henderson | Clairemont | 23 | 421 | 18.3 |
Sunderman | Helix | 30 | 421 | 14.0 |
Grey | Crawford | 30 | 394 | 13.1 |
Canning | La Jolla | 29 | 390 | 13.4 |
Vera | Mission Bay | 24 | 384 | 16.0 |
Renwick | Grossmont | 22 | 374 | 17.0 |
Queen | El Cajon Valley | 23 | 370 | 16.1 |
Wilkins | Granite Hills | 30 | 362 | 12.1 |
Eveleth | La Jolla | 29 | 374 | 12.9 |
Paddock | St. Augustine | 28 | 359 | 12.8 |
Jacobsen | Crawford | 30 | 359 | 12.0 |
White | Chula Vista | 26 | 353 | 13.6 |
Spence | St. Augustine | 16 | 350 | 21.9 |
Howe | Grossmont | 25 | 345 | 13.8 |
Kinkki | Mission Bay | 24 | 328 | 13.7 |
Chandler | Mar Vista | 30 | 328 | 10.9 |
Hallien | Kearny | 26 | 327 | 12.6 |
Hanchett | Monte Vista | 27 | 322 | 11.9 |
Dunne | St. Augustine | 28 | 321 | 11.5 |
Reina | Kearny | 24 | 320 | 13.3 |
Slocum | Helix | 30 | 319 | 10.6 |
Calvin | San Diego | 28 | 318 | 11.4 |
Walters | La Jolla | 29 | 318 | 11.0 |
Shaulls | Madison | 29 | 317 | 10.9 |
Lott | Point Loma | 26 | 314 | 12.1 |
Boone | Crawford | 30 | 312 | 10.4 |
BIG LEAGUERS
Clairemont’s Kenny Henderson (18.3) and Madison’s Al Fitzmorris (17.1) were elite scorers in the Western League but made their marks in major league baseball.
Henderson played 16 seasons for seven teams and peaked with the San Francisco Giants in 1970, batting .294 with 104 runs, 17 home runs, and 87 runs batted in.
Fitzmorris pitched 10 seasons, mostly with Kansas City, and posted a 77-59 record. He was 44-29 from 1974-76 with the Royals.
Helix’ Ron Slocum played parts of three seasons with the expansion San Diego Padres, 1969-71, and Bob Spence of St. Augustine in the same time frame was with the Chicago White Sox.
INJURY SLOWS SAINTSMAN
St. Augustine was 9-0 and had just defeated Hoover, 78-63, as Bob Spence scored 22 points, Mike Paddock 20, Jimmy Antl 10, and Dennis Dunne 13, including 11 consecutive free throws.
It was a pyrrhic victory. Spence’s eye became inflamed from a foreign substance on a towel that Spence used to wipe sweat during a time out.
Spence missed 5 games because of that injury plus seven others. The Saints flattened out to 2-8 in the Eastern League and 16-12 overall.
Spence still led the County with a 21.9 scoring average with 350 points in 16 games.
LIVING LARGE
George (Bud) Milke had seen or played on all manner of basketball courts from his days at San Diego State to when he first took over the Mar Vista program in 1953-54.
“We used to play home games at Muni Gym, State College, and Point Loma, and practiced on asphalt,” said Milke, marveling at the beautiful facility he inherited when Milke began the Castle Park program this season.
With Rip Barrett, the only player with varsity experience, leading the County with 537 points, the Trojans surprised by tying Chula Vista for the Metropolitan League championship and posted a 23-7 record, stunning for a first-year school.
Castle Park made a quick exit from the playoffs, beaten by Lincoln, 78-55, which featured 6-5 Steve (Cord) Rippe, whose 23 points helped offset the 30 by Barrett.
BASKETS GALORE
San Diego teams were busy after Christmas, playing in the San Dieguito Mustang, Chino, Banning, Fillmore, Covina, San Bernardo Kiwanis, and Newport Optimist events.
Crawford was whacked by Downey Pius X, 76-54, in the third place game at Covina. Pius X got to the finals of the Southern Section playoffs but bowed to Long Beach Poly, 60-58.
Yucaipa defeated St. Augustine, minus Bob Spence, 56-50, for the consolation championship at Banning after the Saints lost to Palmdale, 74-65, in the quarterfinals (the Saints were called for 30 personal fouls to their opponents’ 16). La Jolla beat Castle Park, 61-53, for the Mustang championship.
San Diego outscored Antelope Valley, 44-39, in the second half but could not overcome a 21-point halftime deficit and was beaten, 76-60, in the San Bernardino consolation finals. Helix, after a 71-53 loss to Ventura and 64-47 win over Buena Park, bowed in the consolation finals to Burbank Burroughs, 71-69, at Fillmore.
CLASS A
Carlsbad (16-6) stretched its Palomar League streak to 30 wins in a row and beat Marian, 50-32 in the playoffs before losing to University (13-8) in the championship game at La Jolla, 48-44.
JUMP SHOTS
Morse’s Kenny Leininger set the single-game scoring pace with 49 points in a 73-71, overtime victory against El Capitan…Leininger, who scored 24 of the Tigers’ 25 fourth-quarter points, tied St. Augustine’s Tom Shaules (1956-57) for the third-highest-ever total, behind the 60 and 53 Shaules scored in 1957-58…Steve (Cord) Rippe scored 23 as Lincoln tied a school record in an 81-57 win over Granite Hills…the Hornets had 81 against La Jolla in 1958-59…a week after playing four games at Bing Crosby Hall in Del Mar in the Mustang event, Kearny went back to that venue and beat San Dieguito, 57-42, as erstwhile football stars Steve Reina (25) and Jim (Yazoo) Smith (11) paced the Komets…Reina was MVP of the Mustang but Madison’s Al Fitzmorris set the scoring record with 118 points…Al Skalecky’s 24 points led Helix to a 60-46 win over Granite Hills and his 23 rebounds were double that of any other player on the floor…after tying the school record with 32 points in a 84-66 win over Grossmont, Monte Vista’s Paul Landis broke the record with 40 in an 84-58 win over Granite Hills…led by Landis’s 27 points, 11 Monte Vista players scored in their record, 120-77 win over, you guessed it, Granite Hills…the Monarchs led at the quarters, 35-15, 61-38, and 89-57…Dennis Dunne’s basket with 5 seconds to play elevated St. Augustine past Morse, 68-66…a 74-50 victory was La Jolla’s first in 11 tries versus Clairemont…Lincoln’s 58-47 win against San Diego in the Eastern League opener was the Hornets’ sixth against 18 losses to the Cavers dating to 1953-54…Fallbrook had the highest point total of any Avocado League squad when it beat Ramona, 91-37….
I seem to be missing from the 63-64 scorers list. I scored more than 300 points averaging about 11.8 per game as I recall for Hilltop in the Metro League. I was considered the league’s best defensive player as I held Barrett well below his average twice and held Syverson to just two points when we beat them early in the season. I was offered a basketball scholarship to Cal Western but turned it down to accept an academic scholarship to University of the Pacific where I played baseball. I remember these players very well. Tom White broke my nose in a game against Chula Vista but I came back two days later to play one of my best games of the season against Castle Park. I wore a mask and a knee brace from a football injury so I might have intimidated my opponents.
Where is Bob Gray, Hilltop’s 6’4″ center from the 62-63 season when the Lancers narrowly lost to St. Augustine in the semi-finals of the San Diego CIF. I was the only junior letterman on a senior dominated team that won the Metro league handily. If I’m not mistaken, Bob made the all-CIF team. He was a great rebounder and scorer who played only one varsity season because he lost a kidney playing football. When Gray fouled out of the Saints game, I replaced him and scored the last two points of the game, a 49-47 thriller as I recall.
thanks for writing, Terry. I’m good friends with Larry Blum, Crawford ’63 who set scoring records here and went to the Univwersity of San Francisco. Larry still plays fullcourt basketball at USF and more than once has told me that Bob Gray, who lives in the Bay Area, also plays. I’ll let you know if I get more information.
Early in the season we beat Crawford and I had the opportunity to guard Blum. He was a great player with a cross-over dribble that was ahead of its time. I was known for my defense. I stopped Rip Barrett cold twice in games against Castle Park in 1964. He never forgot it. I saw him at a reunion recently and he called me his old nemesis. I will attend a fifty year baseball reunion at University of the Pacific in October and Rip and I will dine together. He lives in Sacramento. A veterinarian, he ended up at UC Davis where I received my Ph.D. in psychology in 1974. We’re both Aggies. Small world. BTW I communicate often with Joe Stetser who was a little All-American quarterback at Chico State and a team-mate of Bob Gray and me. Through Joe’s e-mails I was re-connected with Bob Gray who told me about his pickup games with Blum. Of course, I saw Larry play when I was a student at UOP and we played USF. I played on the freshman basketball team but concentrated on varsity baseball. Our senior season, 1968, we finished 32-15, the best record in the history of the school.
UC Davis had a legendary coach, Jim Sochor, who sent a lot of coaches into major colleges and the have all been big winners at TCU, UW (Boise State), and Oregon. They beat a lot of schools with scholarship athletes but they never gave them. My senior year at Pacific we beat Davis in ten innings when I hit a lead-off triple and my buddy Bernal Phipps squeezed me home for the winning run. Our coach, Tom Stubbs, is still living. He loved to play small ball. We will honor him in October after fifty years as the GOATs.
Rolf Bwenirschke kicked for Sochor, used to speak of him often when I was PR man for the Chargers.
As always great stuff. Keep it up Rick. Us old fans love it.
Thanks, Dean. We’ll keep it going, Basketball is a little more tedious. So many games. You don’t want to miss anything.