1982-83: Falcons’ Dudley Played 25, Count ‘Em, Years
Torrey Pines’ 6-foot, 11-inch Chris Dudley was among the San Diego Section’s leading scorers with 438 points and a 16.8 average.
A fine season and a productive four years at Torrey but not a blueprint for the future.
The future stretched…and stretched.
Dudley went on to play four years at Yale University and then embarked on a National Basketball Association career that stretched 19 seasons, from 1983-84 to 2002-03, with five different teams.
Dudley ranks in an NBA Top 25 for longevity.
Through 2022-23 only 23 players had played more seasons.
Dudley epitomized the professional journeyman, valuable and available in any situation.
A future candidate for Oregon’s highest office, Chris played in 886 NBA games, averaged 3.9 points, 6.2 rebounds, and 1.2 blocked shots, and not long after retirement lost a close race in the gubernatorial election.
Dudley was a fourth-round choice and 75th player in the 1983 NBA draft by the Cleveland Cavaliers. He also played for the New Jersey Nets, New York Knicks, Phoenix Suns, and finished his career in a second stint with the Portland Trail Blazers.
1982-83: It Happened in Hoops This Season
The game still was played from December until early March, but San Diego Section basketballers seemingly were playing more and scoring more.
Ninety points, once considered elite, had become almost routine. 100 points no longer was surprising.
–Santa Fe Christian stepped up in class and the experience was not uplifting. Carlsbad defeated the Navigators, 112-18. The Lancers outscored their outmanned opponents, 29-1, in the fourth quarter.
Santa Fe Christian eventually changed its mascot to Eagles.
12/4/82
–Randy Pass had 6 of his game 14 points as Grossmont outscored San Dieguito, 10-5, in the fourth overtime of a 59-54 victory.
–The teams were deadlocked at 41 at the end of regulation play.
12/9/82
Russ Swier scored 30 of Ramona’s total in a 64-46 loss to Madison.
12/10/82
–Vista’s Jimmy Douglas scored 45 points, retrieved 20 missed shots, and third-ranked Vista topped visiting and fourth-ranked Sweetwater, 77-72.
–El Capitan dropped a 58-46 decision to Monte Vista and the Vaqueros could point the finger at the free throw line, where they missed 16 of 18 attempts.
12/13/82
Steve Brand of The San Diego Union noted the wide gulf between attendance in the championship games at the Hilltop and Mt. Helix tournaments.
“Helix attracted an almost full house (for Morse and Helix). The Hilltop final, featuring two unbeaten teams (Mira Mesa and Point Loma), drew only a handful of fans.”
Brand pointed out that Mt. Helix had the host school, plus Morse and Lincoln and that the Hilltop championship was played during and after an epic Chargers-49ers football game; during a Virginia-Georgetown contest featuring all-Americas Ralph Sampson and Patrick Ewing, and just before tip of a San Diego-State Oregon game.
The 10-team tournament also started Nov. 30 but finished with a scheduled Dec. 11 ending, a full week after semifinal play and almost two weeks after the opening tip.
12/17/82
Morse ganged up on Sweetwater, 60-32, in the second half and cruised to a 92-51 victory. Lawrence West, nicknamed “Camel” by his teammates because “he’s a hard worker”, scored 22 points.
CENTURY CLUB
TEAM
OPPONENT
SCORE
Carlsbad
Santa Fe Christian
112-18
Sweetwater
Coquitlam Centennial, B.C., Canada
109-91
Morse
St. Augustine
107-61
Lincoln
Granite Hills
107-40
Sweetwater
Richmond, B.C., Canada
105-74
El Camino
Coronado
105-36
El Camino
Escondido
102-57
Point Loma
Mission Bay
101-71
Borrego Springs
The Bishop’s
100-36
TOURNAMENTS
HILLTOP INVITATIONAL
Point Loma 76, Mira Mesa 73.
Kevin Celestine of the Pointers and Tag Glithero of the Marauders offset each other with 25 points apiece.
–Point Loma ran away from Mar Vista, 89-70 after a 28-5 first quarter to set up for Mira Mesa, 63-60 winner over Torrey Pines
MT.HELIX INVITATIONAL
Morse, 63, Helix 56.
The Tigers, leading, 46-33, after three quarters, rode out a mild Helix charge.
–Six players scored in double figures as Morse beat Kearny, 85-51. Madison transfer Ray Epton was one of the five with 14. Lawrence West had 17 and Shawn Bell 15, plus 15 rebounds.
–Lincoln’s Anthony Todd scored 35 points in an 81-58 win over Mission Bay.
–Morse stopped Lincoln, 67-60, as Lawrence West, after a first half collar, scored 12 points and had 10 rebounds in last 16 minutes.
Eight teams participated.
PARKER
Francis Parker 38, Army-Navy 30.
–The host Lancers won their eight-team event.
RAMONA
San Marcos 60, Canyon Country Canyon, 55, OT.
The Knights emerged in the eight-team event by converting 24×42 free throws, the losers 7×21.
–Russ Swier scored 26 points, almost all in the first half, as Ramona took a 49-17 lead in an 83-43 win over Army-Navy.
LT.JIM MITCHELL MEMORIAL
Las Vegas Western 94, Glendale Hoover 92, 2 OT.
–The Kiwanis Tournament no longer invited out-of-area teams but the San Dieguito-based event, honoring a former Mustangs athlete who was killed in Viet Nam, tabbed the two finalists, Glendale Hoover as No. 1 seed and Las Vegas Western No. 2, among the 16 teams.
–Chris Dudley’s 25 points set the pace as Torrey Pines whipped San Pasqual, 69-65, for third place.
–Western eliminated San Pasqual, 98-63, and Hoover topped Torrey Pines, 75-64, in the semifinals.
–Western also out ran Mira Mesa, 103-96, as three players scored at least 24 points. Tag Glithero led the Marauders with 30.
–Torrey Pines, pushed by Chris Dudley’s 22 points, upset 10th-ranked El Camino, 72-65, dealing the Oceanside club its first loss, but the Wildcats, in their fourth season under coach Ray Johnson, rebounded to go to 5-1 with a 102-57 win over Escondido.
KIWANIS
The 36th annual’s entry list of 27 teams, including fifteen Unlimited and 12 Limited division squads, was the lowest since the 1953-54 season, when there were 24 squads.
–A move to 32 teams in 1955-56 was followed by the creation of the Classified Division for a peak of 44 squads in 1967-68.
Helix 57, Lincoln 50, Unlimited Division.
Lincoln’s Anthony Todd collected his fourth foul with 1:05 remaining in the third quarter and didn’t score again, finishing with 12 points. Helix clinched with a 22-12 last quarter.
–Yoyo Mitchell’s basket with 4 seconds to go finally got San Diego past Chula Vista, 77-75, in four overtimes.
La Jolla 63, Crawford 54, Limited Division.
La Jolla pulled away with a 19-8 third quarter. Crawford was assessed 28 fouls and 5 players fouled out.
–Sophomores Demetre Lafitte and Dave Burgess combined for 48 points and 17 rebounds as University upset Sweetwater, 75-60.
POINT LOMA
–Starting center Mark Fisher was stranded by weather in Denver and leading scorer Kevin Celestine had a hip pointer.
–The Pointers managed with John Giles, picking up for Fisher and scoring 24 points, and Celestine rallying with 16 in a first-round, 79-56 win over San Marcos.
–The champion Pointers moved to 7-1 the same day in the round-robin event by playing another game, and defeating Mar Vista, 63-49. Celestine added 14 points.
BARON-OPTIMIST
Vista 48, Orange Glen 41.
El Camino 73, Marian 62 (small schools)
The Patriots’ slow-down game pestered Vista until Jimmy Douglas broke through in the third quarter and finished with 22 points and 14 rebounds.
–A 30-10 third quarter, after it trailed, 29-20, at halftime propelled El Camino past Crawford, 74-50. The Wildcats’ Freddy Spears scored 30 points.
–The ensuing win over Marian gave the Wildcats a 4-0 record in the tournament and they ended December with a San Diego Section-leading average of 85.1 points.
SANTANA
University 55, Patrick Henry 49.
Jim Binford and player-of-tournament David Reyes each scored 15 points for the Dons.
RICHMOND CHALLENGE @VANCOUVER, CANADA
Sweetwater won the round-robin tournament with a 2-1 record on the basis of the most points scored (295).
–Sweetwater 105, British Columbia Richmond 74.
–British Columbia Abbotsford, 81, Sweetwater 73.
–Sweetwater 109, British Columbia, Coquitlam Centennial 91.
CHINO
LaVerne Damien, 69, Escondido 47.
The Cougars were eliminated in consolation play.
1/4/83
Monte Vista overcame a 15-point Helix lead to defeat the Helix, 51-50, on Brad Morgan’s 15-foot basket at the buzzer.
–Reggie Wallace scored 40 points as Sweetwater beat Southwest, 80-51.
1/5/83
Mike Haupt scored 26 points as Mira Mesa set a school record in a 99-73 win over Christian.
1/12/83
Anthony Todd scored 27 points and Arthur Hamilton 17 as Lincoln outlasted Morse, 76-73, in two overtimes.
1/18/83
Out of the past came Poway and Orange Glen, which played to an old-fashioned 20-19 score, edge to Poway.
1/28/83
Reggie Owens scored 22 points and Oceanside gained a first-place Avocado League tie with El Camino, 58-53 in overtime, extending the Pirates’ home-court winning streak to 33 games, dating to the 1980-81 campaign.
–The Pirates trailed by eight points with six minutes remaining and by five with 1:02 left in regulation.
ALMOST TALLEST
Six-foot, 4-inch Russ Swier believed he was the third tallest person in Ramona, population 12,500.
Swier stood behind his 6-5 coach Larry Bringham, who played at U.S. International University “and a dentist here in town named Jim Hill,” according to Bud Maloney of the Evening Tribune.
The 6-8 Hill played at Fordham University in New York.
Swier led the San Diego Section with a 27.0 average this season.
ALL-TIME SINGLE-SEASON LEADERS IN SCORING AVERAGE
NAME
TEAM
SEASON
POINTS/AVERAGE
Mitchell Lilly
Madison
1976-77
893/31.9
Bill Walton
Helix
1969-70
960/29.1
Paul Halupa
Bonita Vista
1968-69
718/28.7
Tom Shaules
St. Augustine
1957-58
736/28.3
Michael Pitts
Sweetwater
1978-79
872/28.1
Halupa
1969-70
689/27.5
Ralph Drollinger
Grossmont
1971-72
868//27.1
Russ Swier
Ramona
1982-83
595/27.0
Hans Wichary
University
1979-80
447/26.3
2/4/83
Lincoln dropped a double-overtime, 76-68 decision to Hoover, despite Anthony Todd’s 35 points.
–Todd had to pick up the slack after the Hornets forfeited 12 victories because of ineligibilities.
–Hoover’s Ricky Pernell scored 36 points, following games of 38, 31, and 29.
2/8/83
Anthony Todd joined an elite group when he scored 50 points, with 24 field goals and two free throws in a 96-78 win over St. Augustine. The 6-foot, 8-inch Todd was aided by Alton Beavers’ 16 points and 13 rebounds.
–Todd became the 11th player in County history reach 50.
–Search 1979-80: “Three Division Alignment…” for a listing of the 10 others.
2/10/83
Anthony Todd, just two days later, socked Crawford with 46 points in an 89-48 win. The Colts led, 15-12, after one quarter.
2/16/83
—Sweetwater sweated before clinching a fifth straight league title, the first four in the Metropolitan before realigning in the new South Bay loop, 66-62, over Hilltop.
The Lancers converted 12 of 14 free throw attempts in the fourth quarter and slowly chopped a 54-46 Red Devils lead to 4 points, but their last score came with one second left.
2/20/83
—La Jolla won a playoff against University, 58-37, to clear the final hurdle to the 2-A playoffs. The Vikings and Uni had tied as Western League champions, each with 10-2 records.
—Point Loma closed with a 91-59 win over San Diego and also finished 10-2. A postgame vote by league officials accorded the Pointers the No. 1 playoff position. They also would be the top seed in 2-A.
PLAYOFFS
3-A
First Round
Morse 76, Madison 64 (17-7).
Granted a reprieve from a City Schools boss, No. 1 seed Morse took a nine-point lead in the first quarter and never looked back. The Tigers originally were scheduled to play Hilltop, the only team in the playoffs with a losing record.
3-A Quarterfinals
Sweetwater 56, Monte Vista 52 (19-5).
Sweetwater won its 16th in a row, improving to 20-5, which marked their sixth straight 20-win season, but not before experiencing sauna-like perspiration, especially with the memory of their No. 1 seedand first-round, 86-83 loss to Fallbrook the previous season.
“I must have lost ten pounds,” declared Red Devils coach Gary Zarecky.
Vista 77, Mira Mesa 73 (16-8).
The favored Panthers got more than they expected from the rising Marauders, sparked by junior Mike Haupt, who scored 32 points, a total matched by Vista’s Jimmy Douglas.
Vista did not know which team it would play until Mira Mesa suddenly was given playoff entree when Morse was ruled out because of forfeitures.
Morse 75, Hilltop 38 (11-14).
All 12 Tigers got into the scoring column.
Helix 72, Torrey Pines 56 (20-6).
2-A
La Jolla 67, Hoover 54 (15-9).
Central League champion Hoover ran afoul of Rick Eveleth’s tough and resourceful Vikings.
La Jolla held Hoover’s high-scoring Ricky Pernell to 19 points while three Norsemen made double figures.
Point Loma 56, Southwest 47 (15-8).
El Camino 91, Chula Vista 63 (14-10).
Lincoln 60, Oceanside 52 (14-8).
3-A Semifinals
Helix 66, Vista 54 (20-5).
Six-foot, 4-inch Tyrone Muldrow didn’t let Jimmy Douglas’ at least 4-inch height edge get in the way as Muldrow scored 20 points and pulled down 17 rebounds.
With an assist from Scott Webb, Muldrow’s basket stopped a Vista rally, which had narrowed the score to 55-51 and sparked a Highlanders run of 13 points in a row.
Douglas had 27 points and 14 rebounds for the Panthers.
Morse 64, Sweetwater 56 (21-5).
Parade Magazine third-team all-America Lawrence West led the Tigers with 22 points. All of his 10 baskets came from point-blank range. “What we tried to do was get the ball inside and get them in foul trouble early,” said West.
Sweetwater star Reggie Wallace picked up his third foul halfway through the first quarter and sat for the remainder of the half, at which Morse led, 35-26.
2-A Semifinals
La Jolla 76, Lincoln 54 (8-16).
El Camino 76, Point Loma 72, OT (20-5).
The Pointers scored the last six points to etch a tie at 68 and send the game into overtime.
“When we walked off the court at the end of regulation time we were really hanging our heads, but we gathered our composure and came back,” said Wildcats coach Ray Johnson.
A basket by 22-point contributor Freddy Spears with 12 seconds remaining in the extra session clinched the El Camino victory.
1-A Semifinals
Army-Navy 57, Julian 49.
Francis Parker 83, Victory Christian 43.
SCORING LEADERS
Anthony Todd
Lincoln
24
646
26.9 (2)
Russ Swier
Ramona
22
595
27.0 (1)
Jimmy Douglas
Vista
25
539
21.6 (4)
Kevin Celestine
Point Loma
25
525
21.0 (6)
Reggie Wallace
Sweetwater
26
521
20.0 (7)
Ricky Pernell
Hoover
23
484
21.04 (5)
Albert Gonzalez
Army-Navy
19
463
24.4 (3)
Freddy Spears
El Camino
26
445
17.3
Tyrone Muldrow
Helix
27
445
16.5
David Reyes
University
23
442
19.2 (8)
Chris Dudley
Torrey Pines
26
438
16.8
Fred Farnsworth
Marian
22
430
19.5 (9)
Ed Raymond
Santana
25
417
16.7
Kevin Willard
Chula Vista
22
402
18.3 (10)
Tag Glithero
Mira Mesa
24
397
16.5
Jim Binford
University
23
386
16.8
Mike Haupt
Mira Mesa
23
386
16.8
John Peisner
El Capitan
23
384
16.7
Lawrence Tolbert
Crawford
23
381
16.6
Dwane Hurd
Carlsbad
19
360
18.9
3-A Championship.
Morse 51 (4-20), Helix 50 (24-3).
Helix led, 49-47, before 4,677 persons at the Sports Arena, until the Tigers’ Carl Fisher scored two baskets in the final 1:09 to pull out the victory,
2-A
La Jolla 79 (21-4), El Camino 67 (23-3).
“Our basic game plan was to work for the best shot and bang the offensive boards and it worked almost perfectly in the first half,” said Vikings coach Rick Eveleth.
La Jolla led, 39-24, at intermission.
“They took it to us underneath,” said El Camino coach Ray Johnson.
1-A
Francis Parker 40 (19-3), Army-Navy 39 (17-5).
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL PLAYOFFS
First Round
Division I
Los Angeles Crenshaw 86, Morse 45 (4-21), @Long Beach Arena.
Many in the crowd of 1,751 stood and gave the Tigers a standing ovation when the Tigers’ Ray Epton scored a field goal with 3:34 left in the half.
The Tigers had launched 14 unsuccessful attempts from the field before Epton’s basket.
Morse also did not score in the first quarter, drawing an 0-17 collar as the Cougars, behind 6-foot, 7-inch John Williams, who scored 22 points.
The Cougars took a breath in a 19-17 Morse second quarter before racing to a 52-26 advantage in the second half.
“I told our players before the game the key would be for us to cut down on our turnovers,” said Morse coach Ron Davis. “When we had 12 turnovers in the first quarter that was the end of the game.”
Technically, Morse finished with a 4-21 record, with a total of 20 forfeitures. They were 21-4 on the court.
Crenshaw topped Oakland Bishop O’Dowd, 62-55, in overtime for the state championship.
Division II
Oxnard Santa Clara 57, La Jolla 56 (21-5).
A 17-3 La Jolla lead evaporated into a 54-49 deficit and then the Vikings battled back but couldn’t finish, turning the ball over three times in the final 1:36.
Atherton Menlo defeated Santa Clara, 53-51, for the state title.
Division III
Santa Monica Crossroads 81, Francis Parker 64 (19-4).
Parker, considered the longest of longshots, outplayed the Roadrunners for almost three quarters. Mark Seiber scored 22 for Parker and Jay Filderman added 20 points, 14 on free throws.
Crossroads reached the state finals before losing to Cloverdale, 71-64.
1982-83: Morse is Out of Playoffs And Then Back In
There would be state basketball playoffs this season and Morse liked its chances to represent the San Diego Section.
Ray Epton, whose 25.0 average at Madison in 1981-82 was highest in the San Diego Section, had transferred to the school on Skyline Drive, where Epton joined 6-foot, 7-inch preseason all-America Lawrence West, 6-6 Shawn Bell, and 5-11 Carl Fisher, plus a tall, deep supporting cast.
But an anonymous tip doomed the Tigers, costing them 20 forfeits and knocking Morse out of the San Diego Section playoffs.
Epton’s family, in changing residences, moved to a home that, as it turned out, was beyond Morse’s enrollment boundary.
Tigers athletic director John Shacklett said an investigation established that Epton lived on the Mount Miguel side of a street that separates the Morse and Mount Miguel districts.
Morse officials either did not check the address or were unaware of the boundary.
Eastern League representatives, acting on the late-coming information, voted 3-2 to oust the Tigers.
Someone had ratted out the Tigers to the CIF San Diego Section not long after playoff seedings were published, creating a storm of emotion.
But…
After some shouting, pointed fingers, and foot stomping, the Tigers were let back in the door.
The issue went all the way to the office of City Schools big shots.
EX-BASKETBALL COACH
Dick Jackson, a former basketball player at San Diego High and coach when Crawford began its program in 1957-58, made the decision.
“Taking in all the facts and looking at our options we came to the conclusion that was the fairest way to handle this,” Jackson told Steve Brand of The San Diego Union.
“I’m not entirely comfortable about this because I’m not entirely comfortable about the whole thing,” said Jackson. “However, I think it is the best decision considering all aspects.”
Jackson pointed out that the playoff time line was critical. Four games already had been played, four more were scheduled that night, and the Epton family had sought a court injunction.
Madison, the team Epton had left, became the Tigers’ first-round opponent. “It’s not fair,” said Warhawks coach John Hannon. “We forfeited an entire football season a few years ago and no one came to our defense.”
ANOTHER DREADED ADMINISTRATIVE GLITCH
Lincoln was 12-2 and gearing for the stretch run when it was discovered that Hornets Arthur Hamilton and Charisse Jones had unexpectedly exhausted their eligibility.
Lincoln then forfeited 12 victories, including a 76-73, double-overtime victory over Morse….