1939-40: Outdoor Inconvenience Becomes Indoor Comfort
There would be raised eyebrows and at least one exclamation of “Really?” and another of “No Way!” should a copy of Charles Byrne’s Jan. 4, 1940, article in The San Diego Union have been placed in a time capsule and opened 20 years later.
Basketball was evolving and moving indoors, although the game still was a primitive sport in most corners of San Diego’s tiny hoop universe.
“Metropolitan League basketball, which used to be played almost entirely on outdoor courts of asphalt, decomposed granite, or plain dirt surfacing, with only a few students on the sidelines, is growing up,” wrote Byrne.
Most of the league’s seven teams were getting out of the sun and rain, said Byrne.
Grossmont, Coronado, and Escondido had opened new facilities and Oceanside would play games at the Oceanside Community Center basketball pavilion, according to the writer.
Point Loma and Sweetwater still had only outdoor courts but would be able to schedule some home games at San Diego High and San Diego State, Byrne said.
It would be about 10 years before La Jolla and Point Loma had their own gymnasiums, but Sweetwater would play some home games on its outdoor layout into the 1950s.
CARDINALS IN FOREFRONT
The city’s Hoover High also had a new home, a 1,200-seat, balcony-included edifice, capacity of which promised to be taxed whenever the Cardinals played San Diego High.
Hoover’s game with Alhambra “won’t be the first game in the new gymnasium but it will be the first since installation of especially constructed folding bleachers capable of seating more than 1,200 along the sidelines (and upper level),” gushed Byrne.
“The new bleachers combined with a big court and spacious ceiling—for ventilation purposes—gives Hoover as good a layout as any….”
Hoover, with a 2-6 record, upset Alhambra, 27-24.
Byrne also praised the new Grossmont facility, with “modern, ‘telescoping’ bleachers that seat 500, with room for more on collapsible chairs.”
Telescoping? Meaning seats that are pushed or rolled back when not in use? Yes.
RAINED OUT
Basketball under the sun, not.
Persistent precipitation interrupted play at Point Loma, prompting delay of the Pointers’ Class B game against La Jolla.
The solution was simple: Move the action to Municipal Gym.
The B teams finished their game at the Balboa Park facility and then the varsities took the floor. Point Loma defeated La Jolla, 53-29.
COUNTY RECORDS?
Bob Ingle of Coronado scored 35 points in a 57-16 win over La Jolla, giving the Islanders’ the highest scoring output for the season and a reported County, single-game record for Ingle.
Ingle converted 15 of 29 shots from the floor, many on easy, “cherry-picked” baskets when Ingle and teammate Art Blaisdell retreated to the Coronado end of the court when La Jolla had the ball.
Teammates easily found Ingle and Blaisdell with uncontested passes even while patrolling the visiting Vikings with a three-man defense.
Bud Farmer, a 5-foot, 7-inch junior forward for Julian, led all scorers with 294 points in 20 games for a 14.5 average and had a 13.8 average for 12 Southern League games.
Farmer’s total for the season was believed to be an all-time County record.
WHO’S GOT IT?
No one.
During a scramble under the basket a loose ball bounced on the floor so forcefully that it took flight, soaring above the hoop, and then descended through the net.
Two points for Hoover.
Game officials did not know who last touched the ball and was responsible for the score. After some discussion the refs awarded the basket to Rupert Crosthwaite, captain and floor general of the Hoover squad.
The two points helped but were not enough. The Cardinals were on the short end of a 33-26 score to San Diego.
SPORTSMANSHIP?
Some in the Oceanside cheering section took boos and jeering to dangerous extremes.
Writer Charles Byrne said referees at a recent Pirates home game stopped play and cleared the floor of paper wads that were launched by rubber bands from the stands.
The wads were meant to pester opposing players.
Game officials had enough and warned Pirates coach Dick Rutherford that a technical foul would be assessed for every wad found on the court during remainder of the game.
According to Byrne, not naming his source, “The paper wads stopped, but the visiting players began to be stung by BB shot and after the game one player’s back and legs were covered with welts.”
The latter is hard to believe, but Oceanside’s free-wheeling program was a constant headache during this era for CIF honcho Seth Van Patten, with eligibility issues and other complaints often landing on his desk, according to historian John Dahlem.
CORONADO “BACKS IN” TO CHAMPIONSHIP
Coronado, with a 20-3 record and enjoying one of its finest seasons under Coach Hal Niedermeyer, was primed to play for the Southern Section’s Southern Group (small schools) championship after eliminating Ramona, 34-12, in a first-round game.
The Islanders were scheduled to play Imperial Valley League champion Calexico, but the schools couldn’t agree on where or when to meet.
As often out of necessity, commissioner Seth Van Patten allowed the schools to make arrangements.
Calexico wanted Coronado to come to the valley on March 8, but the Islanders said that was impossible because of the opening of Metro League track competition.
Almost all Coronado athletes and those at virtually all others played three sports, including track or baseball in the spring.
Coronado invited the Bulldogs to visit on March 9, but Calexico declined.
The Islanders felt they were the premier squad among the Southern Section’s less-enrollment members.
Coronado had defeated the Southern League champion, Ramona, in a playoff and held a victory over El Centro Central, which tied Calexico for the Imperial Valley League championship.
Most significant was a ballyhooed win over Hemet, the Riverside League titlist, which defeated Needles for the small school’s Eastern group championship.
All’s well that ends well. Van Patten must have agreed with the Islanders, for they were declared Southern Group champions, their victory over Ramona considered the deciding game.
BIG ONE ON PENINSULA
The Coronado gym was almost filled to its 500-person capacity when ex-San Diego High and San Diego State star Kendall (Bobo) Arnett brought the Hemet Bulldogs south for a late-season contest that was billed incorrectly as a playoff but had a postseason atmosphere.
How things happen: Niedermeyer was called to the telephone for a long distance call at halftime of a Coronado B game. The coach and Arnett, on the other end of the line, agreed to terms in a brief conversation and the game was on.
Hemet had won 16 in a row, including victories over big brothers Riverside Poly, San Bernardino, and Corona, and took an 8-7 lead at the end of the first quarter.
Coronado suddenly found the range, going on a 23-0 explosion that covered the second and third quarters and propelled the Islanders to a stunning, 39-21 triumph.
TRAGEDY
Bob Carrothers, who scored 13 points in the rout of Hemet, also was a national junior tennis champion in singles and doubles, Coronado’s student body president, and was headed to USC after graduation.
Months later in October, Carrothers was killed in an auto accident southbound on U.S. 101 in the Rose Canyon area of northern San Diego.
The car in which Carrothers was riding blew a tire, sending the vehicle across a center divider and down a steep embankment. The car struck a railroad signal post and then turned over several times before coming to rest upright.
Carrothers, sharing the rumble seat with a USC classmate while two other Trojan students were in the front seat, was thrown from the car and died without regaining consciousness, according to the Coronado Eagle and Journal.
Hours after hearing of Carrothers’ death, his aunt and uncle immediately began driving to San Diego from Pocatello, Idaho.
The car driven by Harry Collins went off the highway about 25 miles south of Pocatello. Mr. Collins was critically injured and his wife was killed.
Coronado High would name its basketball facility “Carrothers Gym”.
SCHUTTE EXITS
Bill Schutte replaced Ed Ruffa as coach at San Diego High and directed a 14-4 season, the Hilltoppers’ best since the 15-1, Southern California championship campaign of 1935-36.
The Hillers had won the 32-team, Southern Counties’ Invitational at Huntington Beach in December and came within a basket of taking the inaugural Chino Tournament after Christmas in a 26-24 loss to Long Beach Poly.
San Diego split two Coast League games with Poly but the Jackrabbits earned the postseason berth with a 27-12, elimination game win at Poly.
Location of the Poly-San Diego contest was determined by coin flip.
Schutte, an all-Southern California lineman for the Hillers in 1928, surprised many when Schutte announced he was leaving the Hilltoppers as soon as the basketball season ended.
Schutte accepted a position on the staff of Kansas State coach Hobbs Adams, who was the Hillers’ head coach from 1929-34 but did not coach Schutte, who had graduated from San Diego High.
The departing coach returned to San Diego after World War II and was head coach at San Diego State from 1948-55.
MID-YEAR GRADUATION
It never seemed to fail. San Diego lost a leading player to graduation in February, at a crucial point in the season.
Bob Carson, who led the Hillers with 178 points in 16 games, scored 17 as a turnaway, home crowd of 1,200 persons witnessed the Hilltoppers’ 42-27 win over Poly.
Carson was gone when the team met again later and the result was a 15-point loss for San Diego after the 15-point win.
SET SHOTS
Coronado was a 35-25 loser in the finals to Tustin in the Huntington Beach event for schools with less than 1,000 enrollment…its only other losses were 21-17 to the Coronado Merchants and a late-season, 29-27 upset by Escondido that snapped a 17-game league winning streak…San Diego coach Bill Schutte abandoned his man-to-man defense for a zone to counter Long Beach Poly’s “Figure 8” offense in the Cavers’ Coast League victory…as soon as Bob Carson graduated, the ex-Caver enrolled at Fullerton Junior College and joined the Hornets’ basketball team…Ramona won a third straight Southern League title with a 34-28 win over San Dieguito…George Marshall, a starting guard for Hemet, was unavailable for the game with Coronado because he was one of the stars in a school play…the preliminary game to Coronado-Hemet saw the Coronado Merchants defeat a Marine Aviation team, 34-32…Ollie Mathis of Point Loma led Metro League scorers with 121 points in 12 games…Coronado’s Bob Carrothers was the only repeater on the all-league squad that was determined in a vote by five Metro League coaches, officials who refereed league games, and sports writers…Grossmont won 5 of 6 games during an Imperial Valley-Yuma, Arizona, tour before Christmas…Escondido barnstormed to three victories at the same time in Riverside County…