1942-43: It’s All About Victory

Galvanized Americans had Victory on their minds as the war moved into its second year.

San Diego school officials, living in the hub of the defense industry, pitched in.  They created the Victory League and put the Metropolitan League in a basketball drydock.

Call theirs a New Year’s Resolution.

Coronado coach Hal Niedermeyer had announced a Metro schedule of one round of nine games on December 10.

But on Jan. 12, when play got under way, the circuit had a new name, a positive acknowledgement of Uncle Sam’s rallying cry for Victory in Europe and Japan.

The Metro, born in 1933 and inclusive of the city’s and suburbs’ smaller schools, would not return until after the 1945-46 academic year.

Wayne Wagner (left), Rich McKee, and coach Ricky Wilson were part of Hoover’s challenge to San Diego.

OFF ROAD?

Low fuel tanks and balding tires were by-products of the need for precious wartime materials.

Necessary gas rationing and travel restrictions were such that the league did not include all members who competed in the similar Metropolitan loop during football season.

Victory travel would be by streetcar or bus.

Suburban Sweetwater and rural Escondido and Oceanside were forced to bail.

Night games were at the option of host schools.

As they did in football for the 1942 season, local titans San Diego High and Hoover split their squads.  Four teams included the San Diego Blues and Whites and the Hoover Reds and Whites.

WE GOT GAME

Military personnel and defense workers needed outlets, free of the stressful demands of their jobs.

Dozens of basketball teams were formed.

Some were unique, such as the Spot Welders of the Solar Day Shift League.

There also were teams named the Balloon Battalion, B-24 Fuselage, Machine Shop, Tool Controls, Bombing 12, Naval Air Personnel, 10th Replacement Center, Armed Guard, and Submarine Repair.

Not to mention Naval Training Station Dental Clinic, Provisional Battalion, the Elliott Leathernecks, Point Loma Radio School, and the Solar Aircraft Dawn Patrol.

And more.

Jim Glasson was one of key players for San Diego coach Merrill Douglas’ squad.

MY ALMA MATER

Several months after graduation at San Diego and before he entered the military, Ermer Robinson still had his game.

Robinson scored 17 points, including the winning free throw with 20 seconds remaining as the Alumni defeated the San Diego varsity, 30-29, in one of the few December games throughout the County.

Frank Pietila played for the Hilltoppers varsity while his brother Paul was on the Alumni B team that lost to the school B’s, 38-32.

SHRILL WHISTLES

Earl Keller of The Tribune-Sun pulled no punches.

“In a game that was all but ruined by over officiating on the part of Pete Burk and Don Clarkson, Herbert Hoover’s cagers scored a last-minute, 34-33 win in their city championship series opener over San Diego High before an overflow crowd in the Hiller gym,” wrote Keller.

Burk and Clarkson called 29 fouls “and had the players afraid to breathe,” noted the scribe, incidentally a San Diego High graduate.

Leo Tuck, who would be a midterm graduate the following week and later played at San Diego State, emerged from a crowd under the basket to score and give the Hoover varsity a 34-33 victory.

The combined teams would meet twice during the season and the rival split squads would meet four times.

San Diego won the second game between the combined teams, 35-25, and the varsity, Blues, and Whites were 5-1 against Hoover, counting all games.

A’s AND B’s

San Diego’s split squads won the Class A title with a  13-1 record, the Whites going 7-0 and the Blues 6-1, the only blemish a 33-32 loss to Point Loma.

Against all competition, San Diego was 17-6, including Blues and Whites combined teams.

One of the combined team losses was 42-32 to Camp Callan, a rugged Army anti-aircraft squad that scored more than 100 points against multiple service teams.

The Hoover Class B team, a power and school favorite for a decade, won that classification with a 12-2 record.  The Cardinals’ combined Reds and Whites were 10-4, and 11-4 against all competition.

KEEPING IT IN FAMILY

Correia could put ball in basket.

Johnny Correia of Point Loma scored a running set shot from near the half-court line in the final seconds of a 38-25 loss to Hoover to finish with 16 points and earn his second straight Victory scoring title.

Correia, who had 102 points in league play, was joined on the all-Victory League team by Hoover’s Don Nuttall, who had 101 points.

Other first-team choices were the Cardinals’ Don Smith and San Diego’s Sal Gumina and Jim Glasson, who also was all-Southern Section third team.

Correia’s  brother Frank made the Victory second team and cousin Ed was on the B first team.

KEEPING IT IN FAMILY II

San Diego High midterm graduate Frank Pietila was on the second all-Victory League team and played municipal and AAU basketball for years in San Diego.

Pietila’s son, Ron, played professional baseball after graduating from Sweetwater and became an honored coach in San Diego and throughout California, known as the “Godfather of Girls Soccer.”

Frank, who coached youth baseball and  scouted talent for major league baseball teams, also is the great grandfather of  Micah Pietila-Wiggs, who starred on Chula Vista’s 2013 Eastlake team that won the Little League World Championship.

WHAT’S YOUR TRADE?

San Diego Vocational, which opened in September, 1941, fielded a team and joined the Victory League when Sweetwater, Oceanside, and Escondido backed out.

Vocational competed in most sports except football  before being merged after the 1954-55 school year into technical and shop departments at San Diego High.

The school was aligned with San Diego JC before moving to a more permanent location at State and Market streets in downtown San Diego in 1948.

The Pietila name has resonated for decades.

SET SHOTS

So he didn’t mistake one for the other, San Diego coach Merrill Douglas asked brothers Mitch and Ben Rosenthal to get different style haircuts…Vocational’s first victory was 58-45 over a team known as the “Mission Beach Champs” as Larry Hansen scored 22 points…Sweetwater developed an intra-school team competition in which every boy enrolled was invited…success of the Victory League in football and basketball encouraged participation in spring sports; principals met at Hoover on Feb. 16 and decided to go ahead with baseball and track, with a precautionary “Only necessary travel to games would be permitted,” said La Jolla principal Dr. Earl Andreen…after winning eight consecutive practice games, La Jolla flattened out to 9-7…former Escondido football coach Harry Wexler, who coached a military team in 1941-42, was Vocational’s coach…teams that did not have campus gymnasiums and played on outdoor courts, were able to access the San Diego gym when the Blues and Whites were playing elsewhere…Point Loma defeated Grossmont, 26-17, for its first victory over the Foothillers since 1938…the San Diego County Officials’ Association announced that any surplus money from the season would be turned over to war bonds….