1967 Baseball: Go East, Young Man; Power Continues to Shift From Cavers
San Diego High, one year removed from a San Diego Section championship, posted a 10-12 record. The sub-.500 finish represented the Cavemen’s poorest record since the 1907 squad of coach Lawrence Carr, Sr., was 0-7.
Yes, 1907, according to Don King’s Caver Conquest.
Power had moved East after being seated for most of the last 60 years at the school near downtown. Crawford had won three championships, Hoover two, and Helix one since 1961, the first season of the San Diego Section.
San Diego, since Clarence (Nibs) Price became coach in 1915, succeeded mostly by John Perry, Dewey (Mike) Morrow, and Les Cassie, had enjoyed unparalleled success through the 1950s.
The competition was ramping up, but first-year coach Jerry Dahms guided the Cavers to the Southern California finals in 1960 and Bernie Flaherty won a championship in 1966.
Flaherty left for San Diego City College and was replaced by Charlie Davidson. The Cavers were 8-7, fourth in the Eastern League and out of the playoffs, but they were 3-0 against eventual section champion Hoover.
EXPANSION
The CIF board of managers agreed to extend the playoffs this year by increasing the 2-A field from eight to 12 teams.
5/2/67
Chula Vista clinched its first Metropolitan League championship since 1962, 1-0 over Hilltop. The Spartans, 10-1 in league, would take a 17-7 record into the playoffs.
–The 11-run mercy rule ended San Miguel’s 12-1 win over Julian in the fifth inning of the first game of their Southern Prep League doubleheader. The second game went six innings before the Knights made it a mercy sweep of the Eagles, 20-9.
–Dale Davis (8-3) won his third game against Hoover, scattering four singles in San Diego’s 3-2 victory that left the Cavers with an 8-5 Eastern League record, one game behind Crawford and Hoover, and clinching the championship for St. Augustine (11-3), which shut out Morse, 4-0.
–Saints coach Bill Whittaker had a four-man pitching rotation of Mike Valeri, Jim Adesso, Skip Redondo, and Steve Chipp, which had a combined earned-run average of 1.59 in league play and 1.28 for the season.
–The Saints (19-3 overall) also could run out a hard-hitting lineup that included future major leaguer John Wathan (.391), Charles Benitez (.380), Wayne Bradley (.348), Skip Redondo (.340), Steve Ferrari (.333), and Dave Gonzalez (.318).
–Point Loma (11-3), fifth in 1966, clinched the Western League championship with an 8-1 win over La Jolla, while Clairemont was routing Mission Bay (9-5), 11-2.
–El Capitan (11-2) wrapped the Grossmont League gonfalon, 6-4, over Helix, as coach Art Preston’s team opened a 2 ½-game lead on the Highlanders and Santana, each 8-4.
5/5/67
Brien Bickerton pitched a no-hitter and lost.
The Santana lefthander’s career ended with a 1-0 defeat to Helix, which clinched second place in the Grossmont League and a berth in the San Diego Section playoffs.
“He took the challenge,” said Helix coach Bill White of his ace, Larry Sweat. “I told him he was going against the best lefthander in the County and he would have to match him. And by golly, he did.”
Helix scored in the first-inning on a pair of errors, one for three bases, and a swinging bunt, and Sweat kept the Sultans at a distance, scattering three hits, striking out 10. He improved to 10-3 and lowered his earned-run average to 0.52.
Bickerton finished the season with a 9-2 record. He gave up 46 hits in 92 innings, struck out 150 and posted a 1.67 E.R.A. Bickerton also hit six home runs, drove in 33, and batted .384.
–Mission Bay took some pleasure although out of the Western League title race when the Buccaneers scored on a bases-loaded walk in the last half of the ninth inning to defeat champion Point Loma, 3-2.
–Al Forman’s three-run home run and solo shot by Vic Foster wasn’t enough as Morse dropped a regular-season finale, 5-4, at Hoover.
–Brad Cutler lost a no-hitter on a leadoff single by Clairemont’s Dwayne Lawson, but Kearny defeated Clairemont, 5-0.
–Marian was going nowhere in the Palomar League but it traveled in style on the final day, hammering undefeated San Marcos, 14-0.
FINAL LEAGUE STANDINGS
PALOMAR
TEAM | W-L | Pct. | G.B. | ALL GAMES |
San Marcos | 9-3 | .800 | — | 13-9, .591 |
Army-Navy | 7-4 | .667 | 1/12 | 9-8, .529 |
Marian | 7-5 | .583 | 2 | 11-10, .524 |
Ramona | 0-11 | .000 | 8 1/2 | 2-17, .105 |
EASTERN
St. Augustine | 12-3 | .800 | — | 21-3, .875 |
Crawford | 10-5 | .667 | 2 | 19-5, .792 |
Hoover | 10-5 | .667 | 2 | 14-9, .609 |
San Diego | 8-7 | .533 | 4 | 10-12, .455 |
Morse | 4-11 | .267 | 8 | 7-15, .318 |
Lincoln | 1-14 | .067 | 11 | 3-20, .130 |
WESTERN
Point Loma | 11-4 | .733 | — | 16-6-1, .717 |
Mission Bay | 10-5 | .667 | 1 | 15-9, .625 |
Kearny | 8-7 | .533 | 3 | 13-11, .542 |
Madison | 8-7 | .533 | 3 | 13-11, .542 |
Clairemont | 6-9 | .400 | 5 | 11-11, .500 |
La Jolla | 2-12 | .143 | 9 | 2-18, .105 |
SOUTHERN
S.D. Military | 8-0-1 | .944 | — | 12-2-1, .833 |
L.J. Country Day | 6-3 | .667 | 2 ½. | 9-4, .692 |
San Miguel | 2-5-1 | .313 | 5 1/2 | 6-6-1, .500 |
Julian | 0-8 | .000 | 8 | 0-8, .000 |
METROPOLITAN
Chula Vista | 10-2 | .833 | — | 17-7, .708 |
Sweetwater | 8-3-1 | .708 | 1 ½ | 10-9-2, .524 |
Hilltop | 8-4 | .667 | 2 | 16-6, .727 |
Escondido | 6-5-1 | .542 | 3 ½ | 10-10-1, .500 |
Mar Vista | 4-7-1 | .375 | 5 /1/2 | 6-16-1, .283 |
Castle Park | 3-8-1 | .292 | 6 1/2 | 4-17-1, .205 |
Coronado | 1-11 | 0.83 | 9 | 3-16, .158 |
AVOCADO
Poway | 12-2 | .857 | — | 18-5, .783 |
Orange Glen | 10-4 | .714 | 2 | 14-4, .778 |
University | 9-5 | .643 | 3 | 16-7, .696 |
Oceanside | 7-7 | .500 | 5 | 11-12, .478 |
Carlsbad | 6-8 | .429 | 6 | 10-10-1, .500 |
San Dieguito | 6-8 | .429 | 6 | 11-11, .500 |
Fallbrook | 5-9 | .357 | 7 | 9-12, .429 |
Vista | 1-13 | .071 | 11 | 4-18, .182 |
GROSSMONT
El Capitan | 11-3 | .786 | — | 13-8, .619 |
Helix | 10-4 | .714 | 1 | 14-7, .667 |
Santana | 8-6 | .571 | 3 | 14-8, .636 |
Granite Hills | 8-6 | .571 | 3 | 12-6, .667 |
Mount Miguel | 7-7 | .500 | 4 | 12-11, .522 |
Monte Vista | 5-9 | .357 | 6 | 8-14, .364 |
Grossmont | 4-10 | .286 | 6 | 9-13, .409 |
El Cajon Valley | 3-11 | .214 | 8 | 6-16, .273 |
5/9/67
2-A PLAYOFFS
FIRST ROUND
Mission Bay 1, Sweetwater (10-10-2) 0, @Southwestern College.
The Buccaneers’ Gary Myron gave up two hits and stretched his scoreless innings streak to 27.
“We won’t hurt many people with the bat,” said Bucs coach Ken Bailey, after his team scratched four hits against the Red Devils’ Bill O’Quinn and didn’t get a runner past first base until the seventh inning.
Mike Shepherd doubled and eventually came home on Mike Fox’ single.
Hoover 2, Helix (14-8) 1, @Mesa College.
George Cappelletti singled in Pat Roark with the winning run in the ninth inning and offered that luck was involved.
“I think it was a curve,” Cappelletti said of pitcher John Sturgeon’s offering. “I know he had me faked out.”
Crawford 2, Orange Glen (14-5) 1, @MiraCosta College.
Tim McClure hit a 350-foot home run over the left field fence in the eighth inning, giving Leo Edge the pitching victory over Ernie Oliva.
Hilltop 3, Poway (18-6) 1, @Palomar College.
The Lancers’ Ed Saffer had two hits and Hilltop made the most of three Poway errors, all runs unearned.
5/12/67
QUARTERFINALS
Hoover 4, Point Loma (16-7-1) 2, @Mesa College.
“I didn’t expect to hit it that well, but I’m not complaining,” said Hoover’s Dana Baltzer of his ringing, two-run triple in the fifth inning that overcame a 1-0 Pointers lead.
“I just wanted to hit the ball someplace,” Baltzer told Bill Finley of the Evening Tribune.
Paul Brunner hurled the first five innings for the Cardinals and then was backed up by Ben Epstein and Mike Harrison.
Mission Bay 5, St. Augustine (21-4) 1, @Westgate Park.
Mission Bay’s Rick Phillips socked a three-run home that broke a scoreless tie in the fifth inning and stunned the favored Saints.
Phillips’ drive, on an incoming fastball, cleared the centerfield fence, 405 feet away. “That’s the longest ball I’ve ever hit…by far,” said the Buccaneers’ third baseman.
“He seems to be thriving on throwing,” ‘Bay coach Ken Bailey said of the sturdy Myron, of whose 9 strikeout victims included 8 in the last four innings, and scattered six hits.
Crawford 7, El Capitan (13-9) 1, @Grossmont College.
Leo Edge (14-4) gave up a run on two hits in the first inning and then battled through seven bases on balls to shutout the Vaqueros for the remainder of the game.
The Colts broke open the game with five runs in the third inning on four singles, El Capitan errors, and force plays.. Earl Altshuler drove in the first run with a single.
5/15/67
1-A CHAMPIONSHIP
San Diego Military (13-2-1) 3, San Marcos (12-8), 2, @MiraCosta College.
5/16/67
SEMIFINALS
Hoover 3, Chula Vista (18-8) 1, @Southwestern College.
Jerry Bartow’s comments seemed patronizing. “Chula Vista’s got a good little team,” said the Hoover coach to Bill Weurding of the Evening Tribune.
“They handled several balls that we hit real well,” Bartow added.
The coach declared that his sore-armed pitcher, Paul Brunner, benefitted from the hot, Santa Ana weather: “The heat was just what he needed. Just as good as having his arm in a whirlpool.”
Pat Roark was 4 for 4 for Hoover and Brunner cuffed the favored Saints on three hits. Of Roark, Bartow said, “He’ll run the count on you, because he knows he’s not going to strike out. He’s got that much confidence.”
Crawford 3, Mission Bay (17-10) 2, @Mesa College.
The Colts made it five trips to the finals in Bill Sandback’s six years as coach.
“We’ve been lucky, but we’ve had some fine talent here, too,” said Sandback. “In a single-elimination playoff anything can happen. Any team in it can win.”
Crawford had a 3-0 lead after three innings, two resulting from Mission Bay errors. The Buccaneers reached Colts ace Leo Edge for two runs in the sixth inning.
CHAMPIONSHIP
5/19/67
Hoover (18-9) 6, Crawford (22-6) 4, 13 innings, @Beeson Field, Marine Corps Recruit Depot.
The game went on and on, the lights of Beeson Field illuminating, some of the 1,200 persons on hand eventually heading home for dinner, before the Hoover Cardinals, after three hours and 45 minutes, finally edged the Crawford Colts.
Dana Baltzer’s two-run home run in the top of the 13th inning, was the difference. Hoover, which won the first San Diego section championship in 1961, went home with a second championship trophy.
Baltzer’s drive over the left field fence saddled Crawford’s ace pitcher, Leo Edge, with his fifth loss against 15 victories. “It was a low curve, down and away,” said Edge. “He must have been looking for it.”
Baltzer, rushed after the game by many in a mob of about 500 Hoover students, also had cleared the fence in the ninth inning but his drive drifted foul.
Ross Barnhart, who was on base when Baltzer homered, pitched the last eight innings in relief. “My arm felt good,” said Barnhart, adding, “That’s the longest I’ve pitched in a while.”
Edge, who had pitched 35 innings in the last two weeks and four games, received a standing ovation from the crowd when he came to bat in the 11th. “I was physically exhausted, but my arm felt all right,” said Edge.
Jerry Bartow, the emotional and somewhat eccentric Hoover coach, was asked what he was going to do with the trophy. “I’m going to take it home and just look at it, I guess…for a long time.”