2023-24 Boys Week 4: Carlsbad, Montgomery 1-2 in Votes
John Maffei’s weekly Union-Tribune poll.
#
TEAM
RECORD
POINTS
PREVIOUS
MAX-PREPS
CAL-HI SPORTS
1
Carlsbad
19-2 (11)
164
1
9/7
15/13
2
Montgomery
19-2 (6)
156
2
18/15
21/21
3
St. Augustine
19-3
139
3
16/14
22/22
4
Torrey Pines
16-5
119
4
41/44
29/30
5
Santa Fe Christian
15-6
92
5
77/75
NR/NR
6
La Jolla Country Day
16-5
81
6
57/64
NR/NR
7
Cathedral
15-6
52
7
104/115
NR/NR
8
La Costa Canyon
13-5
51
8
72/77
NR/NR
9
Mission Hills
16-6
36
10
128/136
NR/NR
10
Mission Bay
14-8
20
9
93/95
NR/NR
Others receiving votes Olympian (20-0, 19 points), San Marcos (16-5, 4), Rancho Buena Vista (16-6, 2), San Diego Southwest (20-2, 1).
First-place votes in parenthesis.
Points on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.
Bold entries in columns are up-to-date rankings followed by previous. Cal-Hi Sports’ and Max Preps’ represent state rankings. NR—Not ranked.
Records as of Monday, Jan. 22.
VOTING PANEL
John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune.
Aaron Burgin, Fulltime Hoops
Steve Brand, Eric Williams, Freelance writers.
John Kentera, Freelance Contributor.
Rick Smith, partletonsports.com.
Adam Paul, eastcountysports.com.
Braden Suprenant 97.3 FM The Fan.
Bodie DeSilva, scoreboardlive.com.
Steve (Biff) Dolan, Mountain Country 107.9 FM.
Joe Evangelist, San Diego Coaching Legends Committee.
Christian Pedersen, San Diego Sports Association.
Todd Cassen, Ron Marquez, CIF San Diego Section.
Rex Johnson, CIF Advisory Committee.
1973 Baseball: Huddleston’s Pointers Continue City Dominance
Baseball in the San Diego Section was an urban game.
Point Loma became the sixth different and overall 11th city squad in the Section’s 13 seasons to win the Class AA championship when it defeated Hoover, 12-2, in the playoff finals.
The Pointers, who fell to University in the 1972 championship, were coached by Dick Huddleston, who became a champion in two sports.
Huddleston was a starting tight end and linebacker at Escondido when the Cougars won the first San Diego Section football championship in 1960. He also would win a title as a coach in football, leading La Jolla to a 13-0 season and defeating St. Augustine, 14-6 in the 1993 title game.
4/30/73
Wayne Steele started for Hoover in a rivalry game with Crawford, got into trouble and was relieved, going to centerfield.
Steele returned to the mound in the second inning and was relieved again, going to centerfield, where Steele remained until taking the mound again in the fourth inning.
Steele and three other Cardinals pitchers allowed only seven hits but virtually “walked the ball yard” at Hoover.
Reese Mitchell improved to 9-2 and Crawford (10-4) took the Eastern League lead with a 14-3 victory. Hoover fell to 9-5.
5/2/73
Hilltop (12-1) clinched the Metropolitan League championship, 7-0 over Marian.
Coupled with Castle Park’s 3-1 victory against Chula Vista (8-5), the Lancers took a four-game lead over the Spartans with three to play.
Hilltop, 17-3, overall got four-hit pitching from Dan Flanagan. Castle Park’s Scotty Burney gave up five hits.
5/4/73
Helix and pitcher Bob Watkins threw shadow on the presumed Grossmont League title game of May 8 between Monte Vista and El Capitan.
Watkins beat El Capitan, 4-1, ending the Vaqueros’ 13-game winning streak and clinched the victory with a three-run home run in the sixth inning.
Monte Vista, 3-2 winner over Grossmont, took possession of first place with a 10-2 record.
El Capitan fell to 9-3 and Helix, the defending champion, was 7-4, tied for third with Granite Hills.
With two games to play, the win was significant for the Scots. The first three finishers make the playoffs.
—Idle Point Loma backed into a tie for the Western League championship, when Clairemont lost to University, 2-1.
Point Loma (11-6), which was 2-4 after six league games but had won nine of its last 10, led Clairemont by two games with two to play. The Chieftains, once 7-0, had faded to 9-7.
5/8/73
El Capitan (10-3) beat Monte Vista (10-3), 5-4, to throw the Grossmont League race into a tie with one game remaining.
With two runners on and none out in the fourth inning, junior Gary Armstrong, a .330-hitting shortstop, came on in relief and pitched four scoreless innings for the Vaqueros, who won on Gary Philips’ run-scoring single in the fourth.
—Point Loma won its third Western League championship in the last four years, 9-3 over Kearny. Steve Grimes (7-1) pitched a seven-hitter and homered for the Pointers (12-6).
5/9/73
Crawford, 8-1 down the stretch and 11-5 overall, earned a tie for the Eastern League title, 7-1, over St. Augustine as Gary Williams pitched a four-hitter and outfielder-turned catcher Dennis Snead was 2 for 3, scored two runs and drove in another.
5/11/73
Crawford, Hilltop, and Mission Bay clinched league titles and Monte Vista and El Capitan shared one, leaving it to the bosses to declare a champion and recipient of a better seed in the playoffs.
Crawford won its sixth Eastern League gonfalon since 1963, shutting out Lincoln, 5-0, for the Colts’ ninth win in the last 10 games, compliments of Reese Miller’s two-hit pitching.
—Hilltop closed a 19-4 regular season, best since 16-4 in 1964, with an 8-0 win over Metropolitan loop rival Sweetwater.
—Oceanside scored five times in the first inning and beat San Marcos, 7-4, for the Avocado League crown. First-year San Pasqual finished fifth in the 10-team circuit.
—El Capitan beat Grossmont, 6-3, and Monte Vista topped El Cajon Valley, 6-4, the teams sharing the Grossmont title. There was no question who would receive the top playoff seed. El Cap was 3-0 versus the Monarchs.
—Point Loma and Clairemont began playing at 3 p.m., and called it a day at 7:16 p.m., after the teams, scoreless after the fourth inning, struggled to a 3-3 tie in 12 innings.
The game would not be entered into league standings because no decision was reached, slipping Clairemont into third place behind University, which whipped Mission Bay, 6-1.
FINAL STANDINGS WESTERN LEAGUE
LEAGUE
OVERALL
TEAM
WON
LOST
Pct.
GBL
WON
LOST
TIE
Pct.
Point Loma
12
5
.706
—
14
7
1
.659
University
11
7
.611
1 1/2
15
10
0
.600
Clairemont
10
7
.588
2
12
9
1
.568
Kearny
9
9
.500
3 1/2
11
13
0
.458
La Jolla
7
11
.389
5 ½
8
14
0
.364
Mission Bay
7
11
.389
5 ½
7
15
0
.318
Madison
6
12
.333
6 ½
8
14
0
.364
EASTERN LEAGUE
LEAGUE
OVERALL
TEAM
WON
LOST
Pct.
GBL
WON
LOST
Pct.
Crawford
13
5
.722
—
15
7
.682
St. Augustine
11
7
.611
2
13
9
.591
Hoover
10
8
.556
3
13
10
.565
Patrick Henry
9
9
.500
4
13
11
.542
Morse
9
9
.500
4
10
12
.455
San Diego
6
12
.333
7
9
13
.409
Lincoln
5
13
.278
8
7
16
.304
METROPOLITAN LEAGUE
LEAGUE
OVERALL
TEAM
WON
LOST
Pct.
GBL
WON
LOST
Pct.
Hilltop
14
2
.875
—
19
4
.826
Castle Park
11
5
.688
3
15
8
.652
Chula Vista
10
6
.625
4
15
9
.625
Mar Vista
9
7
.563
5
11
11
.500
Bonita Vista
8
8
.500
6
12
10
.522
Sweetwater
7
9
.438
7
11
11
.500
Coronado
7
9
.438
7
11
12
.478
Marian
3
13
.188
11
5
13
278
Montgomery
3
13
.188
11
4
18
.182
AVOCADO LEAGUE
LEAGUE
OVERALL
TEAM
WON
LOST
Pct.
GBL
WON
LOST
Pct.
Oceanside
14
3
.824
—
17
5
.778
Escondido
13
5
.722
1 ½
15
9
.625
Orange Glen
11
6
.647
3
11
8
.579
Carlsbad
11
7
.611
3 ½
13
9
.591
Poway
8
10
.444
6 ½
11
12
.478
San Dieguito
8
10
.444
6 ½
10
13
.435
San Pasqual
8
10
.444
6 ½
8
14
.364
Vista
7
10
.412
7
12
10
.545
Fallbrook
5
13
.278
9 ½
7
13
.333
San Marcos
3
14
.176
11
5
17
.222
GROSSMONT LEAGUE
LEAGUE
OVERALL
TEAM
WON
LOST
Pct.
GBL
WON
LOST
Pct.
El Capitan
11
3
.768
—
19
6
.760
Monte Vista
11
3
.786
—
17
6
.739
Granite Hills
9
5
.643
2
13
10
.565
Helix
8
6
.571
3
12
11
.522
Mount Miguel
7
7
.500
4
14
11
.560
El Cajon Valley
6
8
.429
5
15
10
.600
Santana
2
12
.143
9
8
12
400
Grossmont
2
12
.143
9
6
16
.273
SOUTHERN LEAGUE COASTAL DIVISION/MOUNTAIN DIVISION
LEAGUE
OVERALL
TEAM
WON
LOST
Pct.
GBL
WON
LOST
Pct.
Army-Navy
8
0
—
Ramona
8
1
—
Christian
4
4
4
Borrego Springs
7
2
1
San Diego Military
4
4
4
Julian
2
7
6
Francis Parker
3
5
5
Mountain Empire
1
8
7
La Jolla Country Day
1
7
7
5/15/73
SAN DIEGO SECTION PLAYOFFS
CLASS AA
FIRST ROUND
UPPER BRACKET
Carlsbad (13-10) 3, @ El Capitan 4.
The Vaqueros powered up with two-run home runs by John Woodward and Joe Unden.
Castle Park (15-9) 1, vs. University 9, @Kearny Mesa Youth Field.
St. Augustine 3, @Escondido (15-10) 2, nine innings. The Saints’ Mike Gastelum singled, stole second and third base, and scored the winning run on a passed ball.
St. Augustine’s Mark Briskey homered and drove in another run; the Saints had just two hits off the Cougars’ Paul Ring
Chula Vista (15-10) 2, @Point Loma 5.
LOWER BRACKET
Hoover 2, @Oceanside (17-6) 1.
The Cardinals’ Wayne Steele stopped the Pirates with 13 strikeouts.
Granite Hills (12-11) 2, @Crawford 3. The Colts’ Andy Marino homered on a 1-2 count leading off the bottom of the 11th inning. Reese Mitchell of Crawford and Mike Ortega of Granite each pitched 10 innings, the maximum for one day, according to CIF rules.
Clairemont (12-10) 1, @Monte Vista 8.
Orange Glen (11-9) 4, @Hilltop 5.
CLASS A CHAMPIONSHIP
Ramona 5, @Army-Navy 5 (13 innings).
Ramona and host Army-Navy fought to a 5-5 tie in the Class A championship that was called after 13 innings because of darkness.
Dan Gordon went the distance for the Warriors, who scored four runs in the sixth inning to tie the score. Dan Stockhalper hit a two-run home run for the Bulldogs.
The game would continue three days later.
5/16/73
QUARTERFINALS
UPPER BRACKET
El Capitan (20-7), 4, University 5, @Grossmont College.
The defending champion Dons pieced together five hits and three runs in the sixth inning.
Charlie Tuttle singled in Mike Dunning, who gave up one hit after coming on relief in the first inning, with the winning run.
St. Augustine (14-10) 1, Point Loma 6, @Mesa College.
The Saints committed six errors and Pointers hurler Terry Greaves’ “sweeping curve ball” kept the North Park team off-balance all afternoon.
LOWER BRACKET
Hoover 8, Crawford (16-8) 3, @San Diego State.
Reggie Waller hit an inside-the-park home run and Matt Powell pitched a steady six-hitter for the Cardinals.
Monte Vista (18-7) 1, Hilltop 5, @Southwestern College.
Hilltop profited from five Monarchs errors to score four unearned runs.
5/18/73
SEMIFINALS
University (17-11) 5, Point Loma 7, @San Diego State.
Pitcher Steve Grimes opened the last of the seventh inning with a single, advanced on Steve Vargas’ intentional base on balls, and went to third when Paul Contreras walked. Tom Pike’s two-run double ended University’s quest for a second straight championship.
Grimes and Pike each had two hits. The rest of the team, zero.
Hoover 3, Hilltop (21-5) 1, @Mesa College.
Lefthander Wayne Steele allowed four hits in a powerful pitching performance and the Cardinals were in the championship game for the sixth time in 13 San Diego section seasons.
“I went to my fast ball a lot today,” said Steele, “because (lately) I’ve been throwing my curve ball into the dirt….”
Steele also walloped a 402-foot triple that hit the centerfield fence on one bounce, scoring Reggie Waller and Wayne’s brother, Dwayne Steele. Wayne then scored on David Todd’s single.
CLASS A CHAMPIONSHIP
Ramona (9-1) 6, @Army Navy (8-1) 5, 17 innings.
The Bulldogs’ Mark Miller walked to open the top of the 17th inning, which followed the game that was suspended after the earlier, 13-inning tie.
Miller was sacrificed to second by John Skahan and scored the winning run on Brian Blomberg’s single.
Nick Crouch struck out two batters in the bottom of the 17th to secure the victory.
5/19/73
CLASS AA CHAMPIONSHIP, @SAN DIEGO STATE
Point Loma (18-7-1) 12, Hoover (16-11) 2.
Eight different Pointers combined for 13 hits, including home runs by winning pitcher Steve Grimes (7-1) and Tom Pyke.
Pyke’s three-run clout capped a playoff season of 10 runs batted in after Pyke had hit .206 in the regular season.
“That’s the Tom Pyke we’ve been looking for all season,” said Pointers coach Dick Huddleston. “He hit .600 and stole 25 bases last year on the JV team, so we knew the ability was there.”
2023-24 Boys Week 3: Status Quo Prevails 1 Through 9
The top nine positions lingered, with only Mission Hills, on a 10-game win streak, displacing San Marcos at No. 10. Olympian, the only undefeated team at 20-0, and Mission Bay with three more wins, stayed where they were.
John Maffei’s The San Diego Union-Tribune poll.
#
TEAM
RECORD
POINTS
PREVIOUS
MAX-PREPS
CAL-HI SPORTS
1
Carlsbad
17-2 (11)
164
1
7/8
13/13
2
Montgomery
18-2 (6)
154
2
15/16
21/21
3
St. Augustine
17-3
139
3
14/17
22/22
4
Torrey Pines
14-5
119
4
44/43
30/31
5
Santa Fe Christian
14-6
104
5
75/75
NR/NR
6
La Jolla Country Day
14-5
82
6
64/63
NR/NR
7
Cathedral
14-6
42
7
115/101
NR/NR
8
La Costa Canyon
12-4
39
8
77/82
NR/NR
9
Mission Bay
13-7
26
9
136/157
NR/NR
10
Mission Hills
14-6
22
NR
95/211
NR/NR
Others receiving votes
San Marcos (15-4, 20 points), Olympian (20-0, 19). San Diego Southwest (18-2, 2), Hoover (13-7, 1), Rancho Buena Vista (14-6, 1).
First-place votes in parenthesis.
Points on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.
Bold entries in columns are up-to-date rankings followed by previous. Cal-Hi Sports’ and Max Preps’ represent state rankings. NR—Not ranked.
Records as of Monday, Jan. 15.
VOTING PANEL
John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune.
Aaron Burgin, Fulltime Hoops
Steve Brand, Eric Williams, Freelance writers.
John Kentera, Freelance Contributor.
Rick Smith, partletonsports.com.
Adam Paul, eastcountysports.com.
Braden Suprenant 97.3 FM The Fan.
Bodie DeSilva, scoreboardlive.com.
Steve (Biff) Dolan, Mountain Country 107.9 FM.
Joe Evangelist, San Diego Coaching Legends Committee.
Christian Pedersen, San Diego Sports Association.
Todd Cassen, Ron Marquez, CIF San Diego Section.
Rex Johnson, CIF Advisory Committee.
2023-24 Boys Week 2: Four Teams at Top Separating From Field
John Maffei’s The San Diego Union-Tribune poll.
#
TEAM
RECORD
POINTS
PREVIOUS
MAX-PREPS
CAL-HI SPORTS
1
Carlsbad
14-2 (11)
164
1
8/8
13/19
2
Montgomery
16-2 (6)
158
2
16/12
21/24
3
St. Augustine
15-3
137
3
17/17
22/NR
4
Torrey Pines
13-4
119
4
43/42
31
5
Santa Fe Christian
12-5
96
6
75-98
NR/NR
6
La Jolla Country Day
13-5
65
5
63/82
NR/NR
7
Cathedral
13-5
52
8
101/118
NR/NR
8
La Costa Canyon
11-3
44
9
77/82
NR/NR
9
Mission Bay
10-7
29
7
157/149
NR/NR
10
San Marcos
13-4
18
10
211/219
NR/NR
Others receiving votes
Mission Hills (12-6, 15 points), Olympian (17-0, 12). San Diego Southwest (16-2, 5), Hoover (12-6, 1).
First-place votes in parenthesis.
Points on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.
Bold entries in columns are up-to-date rankings followed by previous. Cal-Hi Sports’ and Max Preps’ represent state rankings. NR—Not ranked.
Records as of Monday, Jan. 8.
VOTING PANEL
John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune.
Aaron Burgin, Fulltime Hoops
Steve Brand, Eric Williams, Freelance writers.
John Kentera, Freelance Contributor.
Rick Smith, partletonsports.com.
Adam Paul, eastcountysports.com.
Braden Suprenant 97.3 FM The Fan.
Bodie DeSilva, scoreboardlive.com.
Steve (Biff) Dolan, Mountain Country 107.9 FM.
Joe Evangelist, San Diego Coaching Legends Committee.
Christian Pedersen, San Diego Sports Association.
Todd Cassen, Ron Marquez, CIF San Diego Section.
Rex Johnson, CIF Advisory Committee.
2023-24 Boys Week 1: Carlsbad No. 1, Montgomery No. 2 in Poll
A mid-November-through-December grind in which many teams completed at least half of their season schedules turns to January league play, accompanied by the popular, so-named “classics” that bring together top teams for weekend doubleheaders until the playoffs.
Five teams at the top of the Union-Tribune poll appeared to have separated themselves from the pack, with Carlsbad and Montgomery running almost neck and neck for positions 1 and 2.
Carlsbad (14-2) defeated Faith Family of Dallas, 78-69, in the National Division championship of the 33rd annual Torrey Pines Holiday Classic. St. Augustine (13-3) defeated San Jose Arch Bishop Mitty, 57-55, for third place and Montgomery (13-2) dropped a 67-53 decision to San Juan JSerra in the fifth-place contest.
Faith Family (10-9) is ranked 56th in Texas by Max-Preps, throwing some shade on the Lancers’ championship, but the Eagles, two-time defending state 4-A champions from the Dallas suburb of Oak Cliff, knocked off St. Augustine, 75-55, in the semifinals and defeated 15-1 JSerra, Max Preps‘ California state No. 1, 60-42, in the opening round.
Torrey Pines (12-4) lost in the National consolation finals, 56-50, to Rancho Santa Margarita. La Jolla Country Day won the Governor’s Division third-place game, 61-58, over Barack Obama’s alma-mater, the Honolulu Punahou Buff ‘n Blue, 61-58.
John Maffei’s ongoing The San Diego Union-Tribune poll is being picked up as our Week 1.
First-place votes in parenthesis.
Points on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis. Cal-Hi Sports’ and Max Preps’ represent state rankings. NR—Not ranked.
Records as of Monday, Jan. 1.
VOTING PANEL
John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune.
Aaron Burgin, Fulltime Hoops
Steve Brand, Eric Williams, Freelance writers.
John Kentera, Freelance Contributor.
Rick Smith, partletonsports.com.
Adam Paul, eastcountysports.com.
Braden Suprenant 97.3 FM The Fan.
Bodie DeSilva, scoreboardlive.com.
Steve (Biff) Dolan, Mountain Country 107.9 FM.
Joe Evangelist, San Diego Coaching Legends Committee.
Christian Pedersen, San Diego Sports Association.
Todd Cassen, Ron Marquez, CIF San Diego Section.
Rex Johnson, CIF Advisory Committee.
Tom Helmantoler, Southern Conference Advisor.
1972 Track: Outstanding Marks, but Few Medals at State
San Diego Section track and field athletes kept getting better, but so was everyone else.
Excellent marks were posted, some that would have shattered records a few years before, but didn’t earn a mention in this narrative because of ever-increasing volume, i.e., more and more good performances.
With two qualifiers in each event, the section advanced 44 entries to the 54th state meet at Las Plumas High in Oroville.
Eleven of the 44 survived the trials. Only three scored points or finished in the top five of their events in the finals.
Whether it was the two-day grind under a hot sky and the pressure of the great event, or that many marks in San Diego Section meets were made on the blazing fast Balboa Stadium all-weather oval, or that human timers either were too slow starting their watches or too fast shutting them down.
COTTON COMES UP SHORT
Most disappointed was El Cajon Valley’s Terry Cotton, the favorite in the mile who ran a career best 4:05.5 but was upset by Garden Grove’s Mark Schilling in 4:05.4.
Cotton had won his trial in 4:11.4, more than four seconds faster than the next qualifier, and Schilling was ninth, running 4:19.8.
“I just ran out of energy in the last stretch,” said Cotton to Will Watson of The San Diego Union. “I really didn’t tie up in my legs, but I just didn’t have it for that final surge.”
Schilling, whose best had been 4:09.9, took a narrow lead about 60 yards from the finish line, holding on and breaking the meet record of 4:07, by Chula Vista’s Tim Danielson in 1966.
De WHO?
Escondido’s Tom De Julien, who did not win in the Avocado League finals or the San Diego Section meet, was fourth in the pole vault with a career high of 14-6.
De Julien had cleared a lifetime best of 13-9, three inches better than before, in Friday’s trials.
Along the way De Julien caught a break.
“I broke my pole on Wednesday,” said the Cougars’ senior, who earned the fourth place medal with fewer misses than two other vaulters.
De Julien reported that he had to drive to Lo Angeles the next day to get another pole. The new implement was stiff.
“I had trouble getting to the pits on my first couple of run-throughs,” said De Julien. “but I just put my mind to it that I was going to vault with it.”
5/5/72
WESTERN LEAGUE TRIALS, @MESA COLLEGE
Point Loma’s John Willson set a Western League record with a :49.0 clocking in the 440-yard dash.
Jimmy Willson, father of John, led San Diego High to the state team championship in 1929, winning the 100-yard dash in :09.8 and 220 in :21.4 in finals at the Los Angeles Coliseum.
John Willson bettered the league record of :49.7 by Larry Godfrey of Clairemont in 1962.
Mike Person of Kearny equaled the meet record in the 120-yard high hurdles that Person set in 1971, running :14.4.
Bruce Girasole of Madison set the pace in the sprints, winning his heat in the 100 in :09.9 and 220 in :22.3.
La Jolla and Point Loma each qualified 11 for the finals and Kearny followed with 9. Madison and Clairemont each had 6, Mission Bay 5, and University 3.
GROSSMONT LEAGUE TRIALS, @EL CAJON VALLEY
Terry Cotton of El Cajon Valley won his heat in the mile in 4:14.7 and El Capitan’s Curt Hampton hurled the shot 54 feet, 8 1/4 inches but Grossmont led with 20 qualifiers.
El Capitan, Helix, and Granite Hills had 14 qualifiers each; El Cajon Valley (13), Mount Miguel (10), Monte Vista (9), and Santana (7) filled out.
EASTERN LEAGUE TRIALS, @BALBOA STADIUM
Lanard Morris’ 09.9 100 and :21.8 220 and Vernon Martin’s :15.3 and :19.9 hurdles victory represented the day’s only double victories but Crawford led with 13 qualifiers to Lincoln’s 11.
Morse was third with nine qualifiers, followed by Patrick Henry, 8; Hoover, 7; San Diego, 6, and St. Augustine, 3.
Hoover’s Phil Eisenhart won his 880 heat in 1:57.1.
Avocado and Metropolitan League team wrapped their dual meet seasons.
Bob Caulk of Coronado got off the 11th best shot put in area history, 59-6 ¾, in a 61-53 loss to Chula Vista.
Bill Harvey of Vista whirled the discus 160-2 in the Panthers 88½-38½ win over Carlsbad, whose Marquez ran the 120-yard high hurdles in :15.
5/9/72
AVOCADO LEAGUE TRIALS, @OCEANSIDE
The host Pirates advanced 15 entries to the finals, ahead of Vista’s 10, and 9 by Carlsbad, 8 each by San Marcos and Escondido, 5 each by Orange Glen and San Dieguito, and 4 each by Poway and Fallbrook.
Oceanside’s Kevin Muldoon, the top quarter miler, was given an injury bye into the finals. Teammate Kevin Cochran posted a :50.8 440.
METROPOLITAN LEAGUE TRIALS, @SWEETWATER
Gusty winds kept marks in the margins.
Mar Vista’s Marty Hauck clocked :50.8 in a 440 heat.
Mar Vista led with 12 qualifiers, followed by Castle Park, 8, Bonita Vista, 6, Chula Vista, 5, Coronado, Hilltop, Montgomery, and Sweetwater, 4 each.
The records for the Class B 880 was broken three times:
Manuel Monroy of Sweetwater ran 2:06.4 in the first heat. Ocheltree of Chula Vista ran 2:04.8 in the second heat, and Bracamontes of Sweetwater finished with a 2:03.5 in the third heat.
5/12/72
LEAGUE FINALS
Instead of the first three finishers in each event qualifying for the CIF Trials the following week, the County Coaches’ Association voted to advance the first five in the following:
100, 220, 440, 120-yard high and 180-yard low hurdles, and 440 and mile relay teams.
In addition, more competitors than the top three finishers will be allowed to move on in the 880, mile, and two-mile races, plus field events if qualifying standards were met.
Standards included 1:59 880, 4:28 mile, 9:40 two mile, 6-foot, 2-inch high jump, 22-foot long jump, 51-foot shot put, 140-foot discus, and 13-foot pole vault.
Southern League trials and finals will be at Ramona on May 13.
EASTERN LEAGUE, @BALBOA STADIUM
Lincoln outscored Morse, 66-57, for the team championship and the Tigers’ James Milton was star of the show.
Milton’s :09.5 in the 100-yard dash bettered the record of :09.6 by Vernus Ragsdale of Lincoln in 1962 and Charles Sanford of San Diego in ’63.
Milton returned to run :21.2 in the 220 on the Stadium curve for another record, although timers were thought to have been fast on their stopwatch thumbs.
There had been allowable wind in the 100 and more than allowable wind in the 220, although no wind gauge, usually available for big Stadium track meets, was not on the grounds.
Milton had been slowed by a pulled muscle in his leg three weeks before in the dual meet with Lincoln and had been byed into the league finals.
Lincoln runners David Lamar Leonard Moore, Wally Henry, and Lanard Morris ran the second fastest 440 rely in the state, their :41.6 second to Compton Centennial’s :41.4.
Morse was second in the relay in :42.3, Crawford third in :42.5.
Vernon Martin if Lincoln was a double winner in the hurdles in :14.9 and :19.6 and Hoover’s Brad Davis set a record of 57-8½ in the shot put, erasing the 56-9¾ by Lincoln’s Mike Lee in 1969.
Class B high jumper Charles Edwards of San Diego cleared 6 feet, 3 inches, to top the record of 6-2 ¾ shared by Morse’s Arnie Robinson and Lincoln’s Doug Jones in 1964 and ’66, respectively.
WESTERN LEAGUE, @MESA COLLEGE
Bruce Girasole of Madison ran :09.7 to break the record of :09.8 by Kearny’s Vince Breddell in 1970. Girasole also won the 220 in :22.4.
Mike Person of Kearny bettered his league record of :14.2 in the 120-yard high hurdles with a :14.1 effort and won the 180 lows in :19.7.
Mark Perry of La Jolla nosed out Mission Bay’s Rory Trup in the 880, 1:56.3 to Trup’s 1:56.4.
Madison outscored Kearny, 50-47, for the team title. Point Loma had 43, Clairemont 34, La Jolla 25, Mission Bay 17, and University 8.
GROSSMONT LEAGUE, @MONTE VISTA.
Terry Cotton’s 4:10.1 mile shattered the record of 4:13.4 by El Cajon Valley’s Tom Davidson in 1968, when Cotton was an eighth grader waiting to enroll the following year at El Cajon Valley.
El Cajon Valley won the team championship with 49 ½ points to Grossmont’s 48. Trailing were Granite Hills, 37, Helix 32, El Capitan 31½, Mount Miguel 27, Santana 19, and Monte Vista 12.
METROPOLITAN LEAGUE, @SWEETWATER
Mark Kreisher of Mar Vista set the meet’s only record with a 6-5 1/4 high jump that topped the 6-4 1/4 by Grossmont’s Bill Jones in 1961.
Tom Schutte, Kreisher’s teammate, was second at 6-4-1/2.
The Mariners’ Marty Hauck raced to a 1:56 clocking in the 880 and doubled back to win the 440 in :51.1.
Mar Vista outscored Chula Vista, 59-42, for the team title.
SOUTHERN LEAGUE, @RAMONA
Donald Tavie of San Diego Military won the 100 in :10.4 and 220 in :23.5 and led San Diego Military Academy to the team championship.
The Eagles had 47 points to Christian’s 41, and Ramona’s 40. La Jolla Country scored 35, Julian 20, Army-Navy 14, Mountain Empire 13, San Miguel 8, and Francis Parker 6.
Mitchell of Ramona logged a 2:01.7 in the 880 that broke the 2:03.5 record by McMullen of Brown Military in 1946.
King of Ramona ran :51.6 in the 440 to better the record of :52.4, set in 1967 by Burton of La Jolla Country Day, and Arthur of Julian ran 4:48.1 in the mile, better than the 4:51.8 by Darrough of Ramona in 1955.
AVOCADO LEAGUE, @ESCONDIDO
No team scores were kept, but Oceanside had to feel good, especially Robert Mosley, who won the 120-yard high hurdles, 180-yard lows, broad jump, and anchored the winning 440-yard relay team. Mosley’s times were :14.8 and :19.7 in the hurdles. He jumped 22-10 ¾, and the Pirates’ :42.9 easily won the baton race.
Oceanside Sophomore and future world triple jump champion Willie Banks was fourth in the high hurdles in :15.1 and second in the broad jump at 21-11 ¼.
Vista’s Vic Scimo was second in :50.3 to the 50.1 of Oceanside’s Kevin Muldoon in the 440 and set a meet record of 1:55.7 in the 880, better than the 1:56.4 the Panthers’ Stan Leonard logged in 1971.
5/18/72
SAN DIEGO SECTION DISCUS TRIALS, @BALBOA STADIUM
Greg Baer of Grossmont led with a throw of 157 feet, 1 inch, beating favored Bill Harvey and Haskell Hallmark of Vista.
5/20/72
SAN DIEGO SECTION TRIALS, @BALBOA STADIUM
Madison’s Bruce Girasole, who won the class C 180-yard dash for Southern Section team champion Costa Mesa Estancia in 1971, logged a :09.8 100 and :21.6 220. Morse’s James Milton also ran :09.8 in his 100 heat but pulled up with recurring muscle soreness in his leg in the 220.
Oceanside’s Robert Mosley, the County leader with a broad jump of 23-11 ¼, couldn’t reach 20-11 3/4, which would have qualified, and barely advanced after running :15.3 in the 120-yard high hurdles.
El Cajon Valley’s Terry Cotton won his mile heat in 4:10.3, beating Armando Velasco of Fallbrook. Velasco, who’d given Cotton problems during the cross country season, ran his all-time best, 4:14.7.
Nine runners timed :50.8 or faster in the 440, led by Point Loma’s John Willson at :48.6.
Nine runners ran 1:58.2 or faster in the 880, led by Vista’s Vic Scimo at 1:55.
5/27/72
SAN DIEGO SECTION FINALS, @BALBOA STADIUM
Madison’s Bruce Girasole won the 100-yard dash in 09.6 and 220 in :21.4, both meet records.
“I just kept looking ahead (in the 100),” said Girasole. “because I thought (Lanard) Morris would make a charge.
“I would have been more psyched up if (James) Milton had been in there. I knew he’d make an effort because he was No. 1 all year.
Lincoln’s Lenard Morris was second in :09.8 in the 100 but Milton, with leg problems all year, scratched after anchoring Morse to fourth in the 440 relay.
Girasole had traveled to Norwalk the night before to watch the Southern Section finals. “I was in bed by 1, though. I still like to keep track of those guys.”
Vista’s Vic Scimo ran the 10th fastest 880 in County history, 1:53.5 and teammates Jay Semensow and Bill Harvey won the shot put and discus, respectively, at 59-2 ¾ and 164-9.
Kearny’s Mike Person tied the high hurdles record of :14.1, shared by Lincoln’s David Edwards (1966), Doug Jones (’68), and Wes Babcock (’71).
Oceanside sophomore Willie Banks won the broad jump with a leap of 23-4 ¼.
Best mark of the day was by El Cajon Valley’s Terry Cotton.
Cotton ran laps of :60.1, :62.4, 65.6, and :60 that got Cotton home in 4:08,1.
Pre-meet favorite Lincoln was fifth with 13 points as Vista (32) and Oceanside (30) formed a powerful, North County 1-2. Madison was third with 21.6.
6/2/72
54TH STATE TRACK TRIALS, @LAS PLUMAS HIGH, OROVILLE