1956 Track: 5 Stars Deliver in Five-Star State Track Meet

Track and field made a  leap with multiple outstanding performances in several events. All five area qualifiers scored points in the greatest state meet in history, witnessed by about 4,500 persons on a 100-degree day in Chico.

—Coach Raleigh Holt’s Hoover Cardinals won another City Prep League championship with depth in every race, jump, and throw, headed by miler Bob Monzingo, who finished third at the state meet with an all-time County best of 4:20.7.

Monzingo and Lincoln’s Luther Hayes, Mission Bay’s Jim Cerveny, El Cajon Valley’s Bill Logan, and Sweetwater’s Bill Walters were among state leaders and earned national rankings.

—El Cajon Valley, following Helix’ 1951 beginning, took a sizeable chunk of Grossmont talent and produced a first-year power that won the Metropolitan dual-meet championship and lost only to Hoover.

Mission Bay junior Jim Cerveny (third from left) tied for fifth with Riverside Poly’s Wayne Lemons in 1:54.4 in epic state 880 final, won by Willits’ Jerry Siebert in 1:53.2. Los Angeles Fremont’s Louie Miller (obscured by Siebert) was second in 1:54.1, followed by Bruce Knapp of Alhambra (1:54.1) and Tom Brown (right) of Merced (1:54.3). Three other runners ran at least 1:55.5 and the 10th-place finisher was timed in 1:56.

3/2/56

The eighth annual City Prep League Relays had a change of venue, moving from Balboa Stadium to Kearny, but the result was much the same as in 1955.

Hoover outdistanced San Diego with 66 points to 38 in  Class A, was runner-up to Lincoln in Class B, and dominated Class C.

Individual winners were La Jolla’s Lucian (Junior) Jackson in the 120-yard high hurdles and San Diego’s Roscoe Cook in the 100-yard dash.

Jackson tied the record of :15.1, set by the Vikings’ Jerry Wood in 1950, and Cook was first in :10.0.

Cook also ran the leadoff leg, connecting with Essex Hutton, Willie Jordan, and Bobby Staten, as San Diego raced 880 yards in 1:31.8, breaking the record of 1:32.2 by San Diego in 1951.

3/6/56

Dick Verdon pushed the 12-pound shot 55 feet, 4 ¾ inches, bettering his school record of 54-4 ¾ in 1955.

Verdon and his Hoover teammates eased past San Diego for the third time in four years, 60 ½-44 ½, winning seven of the 12 events and sweeping four.

Luther Hayes, who started at Lincoln in 1955, transferred to San Diego and was fourth in the Southern California broad jump, was back at Lincoln and jumped 22 feet in his first meet, an 82-22 victory over Point Loma.

3/10/56

LARGE SCHOOLS

Hoover’s Bob Monzingo smashed a 28-year-old mile record in the Southern Counties’ Invitational at Huntington Beach High.

Monzingo covered the distance in 4:28.1, compared to the 4:29.4 by Santa Ana’s Harold Breeding in 1928.

Defending state 220 champion Bob Poynter of Pasadena won the 100 in :09.7, with San Diego’s Roscoe Cook second in 09.8.

Poynter returned to run :20.9 in the 220 with San Diego’s Bobby Staten second in :21.7.

Wes Hill of Point Loma broke the 880 record with a time of 1:59.8, better than the 2:00.5 by Bob Suess of the host school in 1952.

San Diego was seventh in team scoring with 19 points

Lincoln baseball stars Bob Mendoza (left) and Brad Griffith congratulate track-and-field ace Luther Hayes, the school Key Club’s choice of athlete of the month. Mendoza and Griffith also had earned the same honor.

SMALL SCHOOLS
First-year El Cajon Valley was second with 34 points to Compton Centennial’s 46. Lincoln was third with 13.

The Braves’ Max Cheney won one of two 880 races in 2:02.7 and Bill Logan was first in the pole vault at 13 feet.

Jack Ratelle finished second in :50.5 in one 440-yard dash and La Jolla’s Mike McCartney was third in another in :51.4.

3/13/56

Roscoe Cook ran the 100 in :09.9 and Bobby Staten the 220 in :21.9 as San Diego outscored visiting Sweetwater, 64 1/3-39 2/3.

Sophomore Windell (Bill) Ernest ran :10 flat in the 100 and :23.2 in the 220 and Helix topped Point Loma, 67-36.

3/16/56

Roscoe Cook logged :09.9 in the 100 and Bobby Staten doubled, winning the 220 in :22 and the 180-yard low hurdles in :20, but Mission Bay’s Jim Cerveny made the big news with a school record, 4:37.7 mile.

San Diego won the City Prep League dual, 69 ½-35 ½.

3/18/56

Grossmont’s Jim Griswold ran 4:28.6 in the mile, but upstart El Cajon Valley outscored seven other teams at Sweetwater in the second annual South Bay Relays, a meet that copied the format of the CPL Relays.

The Braves scored 41 points, Grossmont 35, Helix 26 1/2, Chula Vista 23, Lincoln 20 1/2, Sweetwater 8, Mar Vista 6, and Coronado 2.

Griswold’s time was third fastest of the season in Southern California.

El Cajon Valley coach Joe Brooks is not sure which Hudson twin is which, Lester or Chester.

3/23/56

Bill Walters’ departure from San Diego High was even more acute.  Imagine an 880 relay team with Roscoe Cook, Bobby Staten, Walters, and Willie Jordan or Essex Hutton?

Walters became one of the fastest sprinters in Southern California after transferring to Sweetwater for his junior year in 1955.

That was punctuated by Walters’ :09.8 100-yard dash in the Red Devils’ dual meet with rival Grossmont.

There were six watches on Walters and all agreed on :09.8, according to Sweetwater coach Dick Coxe.

The visiting Foothillers won, 54-50, overcoming an 18-0, Walters-led Sweetwater sweep in the sprints.

Grossmont’s Jim Wade hurled the shot 51 feet, 8 1/2 inches, and Sweetwater’s Keith Luhnow broad jumped 21-7.

Walters also won the 220 in :22.1 and anchored a 1:32.6 win in the 880 relay.

4/6/56

El Cajon Valley, spoiling for success, knocked off Grossmont, 60-44, in a stunning statement of first-season success.

The triumph, coupled with Helix’ 68 ½-35 ½ win over Sweetwater, set up a Friday the 13th dual meet for the Metropolitan League title.

Grossmont was feeling the effects of losing several Class B and C performers to the Braves of coach Joe Brooks.

The pain was similar to what the Foothillers felt when Helix opened in 1951 and took several stars and prospects in the realignment of enrollment boundaries.

Surprise of El Cajon Valley’s diversity was a :51.9 victory in the 440 by Lester Hudson, who was expected to run the 880.

Sweetwater expected to battle Helix on more even terms but 440 star and sprinter George McElvain, with a best of :51.5, was declared out for the season with an intestinal ailment.

The Red Devils’ Bill Walters won the 100 in :10 and the 220 in :21.7 in a pair of duels with Helix sophomore Bill Ernest.

Charlie Love won the 120-yard high hurdles (:16.3), 180 lows (:21.1), broad jump (19-2), and ran a leg on the winning relay (1:37.9) for 16 ¼ points in Coronado’s 77-27 win over San Dieguito.

Bob Monzingo was nosed out at finish line by Fullerton’s Grady Neal in CIF Divisional mile.

4/10/56

Bobby Staten’s :19.5 in the 180-yard low hurdles was second fastest in Southern California and San Diego’s 1:30.2 in the 880 relay was third.

San Diego won a 71-33 dual-meet decision over La Jolla.  Staten also won the 220 in :22 and Roscoe Cook took the 100 in :10, while La Jolla’s Mike McCartney ran the CPL’s quickest 440, :51.1.

4/16/56

Third-year Lincoln was getting better but not ready for prime time.

The Hornets extended San Diego but the Cavers wrapped a 55-49 dual meet victory by winning the 880-yard relay in 1:30.6.

Luther Hayes was first in the broad jump, edging San Diego’s Roscoe Cook, with a 22-3 effort and the Hornets’ Benny Sanders set a school record in the mile, 4:39.1.

4/18/56

Jack Ratelle of St. Augustine lowered his County-leading 440 time to :50.1 in a meet at Sweetwater. Surveys years later determined the Red Devils’ track was about three yards short of a full quarter mile.

Sweetwater won the triangular meet with 51 1/3 points to 33 1/3 for St. Augustine and 19 for La Jolla.

4/20/56

T.C. Johnson of Kearny and Jim Cerveny of Mission Bay set school records in Kearny’s 53-51 victory.

Johnson high jumped 6 feet, 3 1/8 inches, and Cerveny ran 1:59.3 in the 880.

Hoover shaded El Cajon Valley, 57 ½-46 ½ in a dual of arguably the best teams in San Diego County.

The Braves’ Doug Benson tied his school record of :09.9 in the 100.

Charlie Love of Coronado won the 120 high hurdles in :15.2 and set a school record of :20 in the 180 lows in the Islanders’ triangular triumph, 52 1/3 points to Escondido’s 44 5/6 and Oceanside’s 31 2/3.

Jim Cerveny of Mission Bay ran fastest 880 in County history, 1:54.4 at state meet.

4/23/56

El Cajon Valley won the Grossmont League showdown with visiting Helix, 58-46, to earn at least a tie for the Metropolitan league dual-meet title.

Helix sophomore Bill Ernest tied his school record of :09.9 in the 100 and set a school record with a :22.1 220.  Ernest also anchored the Scots to a school-record 1:33 in the 880 relay.

Ernest’s teammate, Gael Barsotti, also ran a leg on the relay and set a school record of 5-11 in the high jump.

4/24/56

Roscoe Cook logged :09.9 in the 100-yard dash and Bob Waterhouse broad jumped 22-3/4 as San Diego scored a 72-32 win over St. Augustine.

4/26/56

Don Brizendine’s :51.8 in the 440 broke the Chula Vista record of :52.3, set in 1949 by Fentriss Neal.  The Spartans beat Helix, 55-49.

4/27/56

Hoover wrapped a 6-0, City Prep League season with an 88-16 win over Mission Bay, which could point to an emerging Jim Cerveny, who set an 880 school record for the second time, 1:57.5.

Bob Waterhouse broad jumped 22 feet, 7 ¾ inches, taking the team lead from Roscoe Cook, who earlier had jumped 22-6 ½ as San Diego defeated Kearny, 70-34.

Had he not transferred back to Lincoln, Luther Hayes would have made it a trio of outstanding jumpers at San Diego.  Hayes set a Lincoln school record with a jump of 23-5, best in the County since John Parker leaped 23-9 1/2 at San Diego in 1951.

Sweetwater tied a school record of 1:31.5 in the 880 relay but Grossmont won the Metropolitan loop dual, 69-35.

Gael Barsotti won the 120-yard high hurdles over Gerald King of Sweetwater but the Red Devils won, 55-49.

5/1/56

CITY PREP LEAGUE TRIALS @BALBOA STADIUM

Lincoln was a surprise leader with 15 qualifiers, followed by Hoover, 13, San Diego and La Jolla, 8 each, Kearny, 5, and Mission Bay, 3.

San Diego’s Bobby Staten tied the 100 record of :09.9 record, set in 1954 by the Cavers’ Herman Thompson.

The Cavers’ scoring chances in Class A were diminished when Roscoe Cook moved down to Class B, in which he set a record of :10 in the 100, bettering Cook’s and Bill Walters’ :10.1 in 1955.

Chuck Hansen of Hoover ran :09.1 in the 70-yard high hurdles and Lincoln’s Eddie Hartman logged 1:24.9 in the 660.

Cook returned to run :22 in the 220, a B record for the Balboa Stadium curve.  Alfred Woerner of San Diego ran :21.6 on the Kearny straightaway in 1955, aided by over-the-limit wind.

Kearny’s George Williams leaped 21 feet, 11 inches in Class B.  Field event finals were in B and C.

METROPOLITAN LEAGUE TRIALS @SWEETWATER

Grossmont’s Jim Walton hurdled the 180-yard lows in :19.6, bettering the :19.8 by La Jolla’s Art Barnard in 1947.

Eight records were set in Classes B and C which held finals in field events.

 CLASS B

Armstrong of Grossmont went 52-1 in the 10-pound shot put, topping his record of 51-3 ½ in 1955.

Doug Benson of El Cajon Valley equaled the 100 record of :10.2, set in 1948 by Jerry Weed of Grossmont and equaled by Grossmont’s Jim Walton in 1955.

CLASS C

Jerry Carlton of Grossmont hurled the eight-pound shot 56-10, topping a mark of 50 feet in 1950.

Joe Rubidoux of El Cajon Valley’s :13.9 in the 120-yard low hurdles bettered a :14.1 from 1939 and his 20-2 1/8 broad jump improved on a 20-1 1/2 in 1937. Teammate Wendell Maize ran 1:28.7 in the 660.

An :18.7 in the 180-yard dash by Paul Adams of Helix smashed a record of :19.7 in 1948. Jim Stewart of Sweetwater ran :10.1 in the 100, breaking a 19-year-old record.

Millard Woods (right) of Hoover edged Kearny’s Charles Harrod in :10.1 100-yard dash in City Prep League trials. La Jolla’s Joe Keefe was third.

5/4/56

Laguna Beach won the eighth annual Vista Relays, outscoring a field of 12 teams with 41 points.  Vista was second with 36 ½, followed by Tustin, 32 ½, Escondido 28, and St. Augustine 26.

Also in the Vista field were Valencia, Army-Navy, Ramona, Fallbrook, San Dieguito, Oceanside, and Mar Vista.

5/6/56

AVOCADO LEAGUE FINALS, @ESCONDIDO

Charlie Love did all he could but Vista won the team title with 56 7/10 points to Coronado’s 49.

Love tied the meet record with a :15.5 triumph in the 120-yard high hurdles, set a meet record of :19.9 in the 180 lows, won the broad jump at 20-1 ¼, and anchored the Islanders’ 880 relay team to a record 1:34.3.

Five other meet records were set, including a 51-foot shot put by Coronado’s Jon Crawford and 2:03 880 by Vista’s Knox.

The high jump saw five contestants in an event won at 5-9 ½ tie for third, resulting in points rounding out to tenths.

METROPOLITAN LEAGUE FINALS, @CHULA VISTA

Coach Tom Rice’s Chula Vista Spartans were surprising winners of the team championship, outscoring dual meet champion El Cajon Valley, 42 3/8-42 1/8.

Sweetwater’s Bill Walters came from behind to top Helix’ rising sophomore Bill Ernest in a :09.9 100 and won the 220 by 10 yards in  :21.6.

Walters’ 100 was off the meet record of :09.8, set by Oceanside’s Bill Huntales in 1937.  Walters also came close to the 220 record, held by Point Loma’s George Able, who ran :21.5 in 1938.

Wendell Maize of El Cajon Valley topped the record he set in the Class C trials with a 1:27 in the 660.  Max Cheney of the Braves lowered the B 660 to 1:26.3 and Bill Hudson the B 1320 to 3:19.7.

San Diego’s Roscoe Cook, winning City Prep League Class B 100-yard dash final, later tied world record of :09.3.

CITY PREP LEAGUE FINALS, @BALBOA STADIUM

Dual-meet champion Hoover needed a sweep of the mile and victory in the 880 relay to pass Lincoln, 50 points to 42, and win the team title.

Bob Monzingo bettered the meet record of 4:31.8, set by Kearny’s Jim Weir in 1954, with a time of 4:30.1, leading teammates John Thinnes and Bob Larsen.

The Cardinals also won the 880-yard relay in 1:32.2.

Luther Hayes’ 23-foot, 9 1/8-inch broad jump bettered the record of 23-6 by John Parker of San Diego in 1951.

Jim Cerveny’s 1:57 880 lowered the standard of 1:58.9 by Grossmont’s Jim Giyer in 1954, and McCartney’s 50-second 440 erased the :50.7 by Lee Buchanan of Kearny in 1954.

Point Loma’s Wes Hill set a fast pace with a :56 first quarter, but Cerveny pulled even in the final 200 yards and ran down Hill coming home, with the Pointer second in 1:57.4.

Roscoe Cook equaled his :10 flat 100 and anchored a 660 relay that tied the Southern California record of 1:07.  Cook’s teammates included Essex Hutton, Jiro Sato, and Willie Jordan.

Chuck Hansen of Hoover tied his Class B 70-yard high hurdles record of :09.1 and the 120-yard low hurdles record of 13.3 by Kearny’s John Rushing in 1951.

5/14/56

SOUTHERN SECTION DIVISIONAL, @SAN DIEGO STATE

Grossmont’s Jim Griswold was timed in 4:27 in the mile and finished third to Fullerton’s Grady Neal (4:25.7) and Hoover’s Bob Monzingo (4:26.3).

SOUTHERN SECTION DIVISIONAL SEMIFINALS, @ONTARIO

Roscoe Cook bettered Southern Section Class B records with a :9.7 100 and :21 flat 220 at Chaffey High, but the century record was disallowed because of a 5 miles-per-hour tail wind.

Cook, with an allowable breeze less than 4.447 m.p.h., took down the 220 record of :21.6 by Hoover’s Clyde Yakel in 1937.

San Diego’s 660-yard relay team bettered the CIF record with a time of 1:06.8 but was disqualified because Cook was judged to have cut in too soon on a Montebello runner.

Sophomore Windell (Bill) Ernest surprised with a :09.7 100 that edged San Diego’s Bobby Staten and Sweetwater’s Bill Walters.  Only two advanced in each race.

Walters came back to win his 220 heat in :21.1.

Hoover’s Bill Stephenson caught Chula Vista’s Dave Morrison at tape in Cardinals’ 1:31.3 victory in 880 relay race at CIF Division Trials.

5/28/56

SOUTHERN SECTION FINALS, @INGLEWOOD

For a while it appeared San Diego had earned at least a tie for the Class B title after Roscoe Cook’s :09.8 and :22 flat sprint victories and a third in the 100 by Essex Hutton.

But a post-meet review of film of the race showed that a Long Beach Poly runner had earned a fourth in the 100-yard dash and the Jackrabbits won the championship with 14 1/2 points. San Diego and Rosemead had 13 each.

Cook was the only winner from San Diego, but Luther Hayes tied for first with Compton’s Bobby Smith at 22-9 ¾ in the broad jump.

Hayes was hampered by the extremely short broad jump runway at Inglewood High, forcing Hayes to start his approach beside an adjacent fence.

6/2/56

STATE MEET, @CHICO

Bill Logan of El Cajon Valley upset the field with a 13-foot, 6-inch pole vault, tying for first place after finishing second in the Southern Section the week before at 13-3 ½.

Bob Monzingo of Hoover ran 4:20.7 and was third behind Ron Larrieu of Palo Alto (4:20.1) and Grady Neal of Fullerton (4:20.6) in the mile.

Luther Hayes was fourth in the broad jump at 24 feet, 1/8 inch and Jim Cerveny tied for fifth in the 880 at 1:54.4, joining Monzingo as County record holders.

Sweetwater’s Bill Walters was fourth in the 220 in :21.3.

All five San Diego-area qualifiers earned points.

Kearny student Gail Jones, believed to be the only female manager of a prep track team, met with coach Clarence Pike and sophomore George Williams, who set City Prep League meet record in Class B broad jump at 21-11.

 

 




2021 Week 11: Hat’s Off! Eighteen League Champions

League championships can be forgotten amid the giant second season of playoffs.

if a team has a pulse, no matter how few W’s and how many L’s, it’s most likely a postseason participant.

But don’t pass that along to the San Diego Section’s regular-season winners. Players identify these achievements on their letter jackets, coaches enhance their resumes, and student bodies and communities take pride.

Take a bow, champions.

LEAGUE TEAM RECORD OVERALL COACH
Avocado Carlsbad 6-0 10-0 Thadd MacNeal
Central Mission Bay 4-0 8-2 Greg Tate
Citrus Victory Christian 5-0 7-1* Earl Benson
City Patrick Henry 4-0 7-2 J.T. O’Sullivan
Coastal Santa Fe Christian 5-0 9-0 Jon Wallace
Desert Blythe Palo Verde Valley 4-0 8-2 Dominique Hill
Eastern Mira Mesa 3-0 6-3 Chris Thompson-Aurelo Morales
Grossmont Hills Helix 3-0 6-3 Robbie Owens
Grossmont Valley West Hills 6-0 10-0 Casey Ash
Imperial Valley Brawley 4-0 8-2 Jon Self
Metro Mesa Mater Dei 4-0 8-0 John Joyner
Metro South Bay Sweetwater 4-0 5-3 Ervin Hernandez
Ocean San Diego Jewish 5-0 7-0* Justin McKenzie
Pacific Escondido Charter 4-0 8-1 Greg Brose
Palomar Mt. Carmel 4-1 9-1 Drew Westling
Valley Ramona 5-0 7-3 Damon Baldwin
Western Cathedral 3-0 7-2 Sean Doyle

*Playing for San Diego Section 8-man championship.
RATINGS GAME

RANK TEAM RECORD POINTS PREVIOUS
1. Carlsbad 10-0 (16) 232 1
2. Cathedral 8-2 (9) 224 2
3. Mission Hills 8-2 180 4
4. Mater Dei 9-0 172 3
5. Torrey Pines 6-3 140 6
6. Madison 8-2 115 7
7. Helix 6-3 88 6
8. Lincoln 6-3 80 5
9. Santa Fe Christian 9-0 39 9
10. Scripps Ranch 8-1 23 10

OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES 

Mt. Carmel (9-1, 21 points), West Hills (10-0, 7), El Camino (4-6, 3) Mira Mesa (6-2, Eastlake (7-3, 2),  Poway (7-3, 2), Patrick Henry (7-2, 1).

VOTING PANEL
Twenty-four sportswriters and sportscasters throughout San Diego County.

  • John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune.
  • Steve Brand, Thomas Gutierrez, Rick Hoff, Jim Lindgren, Terry Monahan, Eric Williams, Thomas Gutierrez, freelance contributors.
  • John CarrollNick Pollino, KUSI Ch. 51.
  • John Kentera, Braden Suprenant, 97.3-FM The Fan).
  • Adam Paul, ECPreps.com.
  • Bodie DeSilva, scorebooklive.com.
  • Rick Smith, Partletonsports.com.
  • Christian Pedersen, San Diego Sports Association.
  • Troy Hirsch, Fox 5 San Diego.
  • Raymond Brown, sdfootball.net.
  • Joe Heinz, Todd Cassen, Ron Marquez, Mike Dolan, CIF San Diego Section.
  • Ramon Scott, Eastcountysports.com.
  • Steve (Biff) Dolan, Mountain Country, 107.9-FM.

How others see San Diego’s Top 10:
*The second entry in each rating is from the previous week.

Team Record Cal-Hi Sports MaxPreps CalPreps
2. Cathedral 7-2 17/16* 14/15 59.2/58.3
1. Carlsbad 9-0 14/14 18/18 55.4/55.2
4. Mission Hills 7-2 19/21 29/28 50.6/49.9
5. Lincoln 6-3 31/31 36/37 48.3/46.8
3. Mater Dei 8-0 27/30 37/39 47.8/46.3
8. Helix 5-3 Bubble/NR 68/65 39.4/39.2
6. Torrey Pines 5-3 37/37 46/47 45.1/43.6
10. Scripps Ranch 7-1 NR/NR 79/78 36.5/35.7
7. Madison 7-2 Bubble/Bubble 61/76 40.5/36.4
9. Santa Fe Christian 9-0 NR-NR 158/153 25.1/4/6



2021 Week 10: Oldies Still Are Goodies

Big Brother split with Little Brother in two traditional games last week.

Younger Helix made it a quarter century of continued success with a 25th consecutive win over older Grossmont, 29-14, and older Mira Mesa topped younger Scripps Ranch, 38-35.

Helix now is 46-18-2 against Grossmont since 1951, when the fledgling school divided enrollment and geographic borders with the Foothillers and struck out on its own.

Mira Mesa, honoring their late coach, Chris Thompson, who passed during the season, won its fifth game in a row under coach Aurelo Morales and took a 21-7 lead over Scripps Ranch in a rivalry the schools trumpet as “The Battle of Interstate 15”.

Scripps Ranch, which opened in 1994, is less than 2.5 miles from Mira Mesa and separated by I-15.

The Marauders (6-2), who played their first game in 1976, had the Falcons (7-1) on their heels, leading 14-0, 21-7, and 35-21 well into the third quarter. The game was tied at 35 when Mira Mesa freshman Eddy Medina kicked a 24-yard field goal as time expired.

According to Don Norcross of The San Diego Union-Tribune, the Falcons’ student section was shouting,  “No pressure! No pressure! No pressure!”

Medina replied to Norcross, “Were they?  I didn’t hear them.”

The Falcons twice had called timeout in an attempt to “ice” Medina.

Steady Eddy.

OVER-AND-OVER TIME

The Oceanside-Ramona thriller which went three overtimes before the visiting Pirates escaped with a 35-33 win was a record fourth triple extra since the first between Torrey Pines and Vista in 2002.

Other three-overtime games matched Cathedral and San Pasqual in 2013 and Escondido and Mira Mesa in 2014.

There have been 79 San Diego Section games since 1976 that were forced into an extra session, including 58 that ended in the first overtime and 17 that necessitated two, according to Henrik Jonson, who maintains our scores database and coordinates our website.

Jonson pointed out that the period of 2012-2014 favored frantic finishes.  There were 9 in 2012, 5 in ’13, and 7 in ’14.

RATINGS GAME

RANK TEAM RECORD POINTS PREVIOUS
1. Carlsbad 9-0 (15) 231 1
2. Cathedral 8-2 (9) 226 2
3. Mater Dei 8-0 180 4
4. Mission Hills 7-2 172 5
5. Lincoln 6-3 111 3
6. Torrey Pines 5-3 106 7
7 Madison 7-2 99 10
8. Helix 5-3 85 8
9. Santa Fe Christian 9-0 38 9
10. Scripps Ranch 7-1 22 6

OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES 

Mt. Carmel (8-1, 12), Mira Mesa (6-2, 11), El Capitan (8-1, 4),West Hills (9-0, 3), Eastlake (6-3, 2), Patrick Henry (7-2, 1), Poway (6-3, 1).

VOTING PANEL
Twenty-four sportswriters and sportscasters throughout San Diego County.

  • John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune.
  • Steve Brand, Thomas Gutierrez, Rick Hoff, Jim Lindgren, Terry Monahan, Eric Williams, Thomas Gutierrez, freelance contributors.
  • John CarrollNick Pollino, KUSI Ch. 51.
  • John Kentera, Braden Suprenant, 97.3-FM The Fan).
  • Adam Paul, ECPreps.com.
  • Bodie DeSilva, scorebooklive.com.
  • Rick Smith, Partletonsports.com.
  • Christian Pedersen, San Diego Sports Association.
  • Troy Hirsch, Fox 5 San Diego.
  • Raymond Brown, sdfootball.net.
  • Joe Heinz, Todd Cassen, Ron Marquez, Mike Dolan, CIF San Diego Section.
  • Ramon Scott, Eastcountysports.com.
  • Steve (Biff) Dolan, Mountain Country, 107.9-FM.

How others see San Diego’s Top 10:
*The second entry in each rating is from the previous week.

Team Record Cal-Hi Sports MaxPreps CalPreps
2. Cathedral 7-2 13/19* 15/16 58.3/56.7
1. Carlsbad 9-0 14/14 18/24 55.2/52.7
4. Mission Hills 7-2 21/22 28/33 4.99/48.9
5. Lincoln 6-3 31/15 37/25 46.8/51.1
3. Mater Dei 8-0 30/33 39/31 46.3/45.7
8. Helix 5-3 NR/NR 58/65 39.2/36.8
6. Torrey Pines 5-3 37/38 47/40 43.6/40.0
10. Scripps Ranch 7-1 NR/NR 78/54 35.6/39.8
7. Madison 7-2 Bubble/NR 76/104 36.4/27.9
9. Santa Fe Christian 9-0 NR-NR 153/175 24/6/20.8

 




2021 Week 9: Grossmont Tries Again to Beat Helix

Grossmont is going to beat Helix one of these years.  Maybe this week.

The way things have gone the last 40-odd that’s a lukewarm maybe.

The teams will meet for the 66th time with host Helix holding a 45-18-2 record in the all-time series.

A victory for the Foothillers over their so-called younger sibling took place so long ago that those who played now are nearing their fifties. It happened in 1991 when Judd Hurlburt’s squad beat the Highlanders of coach Jim Arnaiz, 28-14.

Others have forgotten or perhaps gone to the gridiron in the sky since an earlier Grossmont win.  That was in 1978 when Pat Roberts’ team, which finished with a 5-3-2 record, beat a 10-2 Arnaiz club, 21-7.

Arnaiz won the CIF championship that season and, after losing his first four games in the rivalry, posted a career, 19-6-2 record against the Foothillers.

‘Twas not always.

Grossmont built a 16-11 series edge from 1951-77, when Arnaiz’ program kicked in and the Highlanders took off.

METRO LEAGUE SUES FOR RELIEF

Grossmont’s enrollment soared in the 1940’s, creating such a student body numbers mismatch that the Foothillers were ousted from the Metropolitan League, in which they had been a 1933 charter member with Sweetwater, Escondido, Oceanside, Army-Navy, La Jolla, and Point Loma.

Grossmont was bursting at the seams.

Enter Helix in 1951, about 4 miles West in La Mesa on University Avenue.

The Foothillers would have a new rival, after years being a traditional foe of Sweetwater.

Helix’ campus still was under construction when school opened, forcing Grossmont to share its digs for a year.

Grossmont students attended school in the morning and hosted Helix students in the afternoon.

The pubescent Highlanders joined Grossmont in the City Prep League, which had been created and included Grossmont in 1950.  Both schools re-entered the Metropolitan loop in 1955 and were charter members of the Grossmont League in 1961.

BELL TOLLS

Brawley and El Centro Central players can hear the clanging their sleep. They’ll go at it again next week in the historic desert rivalry.

Brawley leads El Centro Central, 50-27-1, since a  Bell trophy first rung in 1944, but the squads reportedly played twice a year most seasons from 1921 through 2003.

An actual bell was purchased by the student bodies of each school for a sum of $50  from a seafaring, San Diego vessel in 1943.

El Centro Central has won the last four meetings.

RATINGS GAME

RANK TEAM RECORD POINTS PREVIOUS
1. Carlsbad 8-0 (15) 230 1
2. Cathedral 6-2 (9) 223 2
3. Lincoln 6-1 180 3
4. Mater Dei 7-0 162 4
5. Mission Hills 6-2 154 5
6. Scripps Ranch 7-0 110 7
7 Torrey Pines 4-3 94 6
8. Helix 4-3 59 9
9. Santa Fe Christian 8-0 29 10
10. Madison 6-2 27 NR

OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES 

Poway (6-2, 17 points), Mt. Carmel (7-1, 8), Ramona (6-2, 7), Eastlake (5-3, 4), Rancho Bernardo (5-3, 4), West Hills (8-0, 3), Mira Mesa (5-2, 2), El Capitan (7-1, 1).

VOTING PANEL
Twenty-four sportswriters and sportscasters throughout San Diego County.

  • John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune.
  • Steve Brand, Thomas Gutierrez, Rick Hoff, Jim Lindgren, Terry Monahan, Eric Williams, Thomas Gutierrez, freelance contributors.
  • John CarrollNick Pollino, KUSI Ch. 51.
  • John Kentera, Braden Suprenant, 97.3-FM The Fan).
  • Adam Paul, ECPreps.com.
  • Bodie DeSilva, scorebooklive.com.
  • Rick Smith, Partletonsports.com.
  • Christian Pedersen, San Diego Sports Association.
  • Troy Hirsch, Fox 5 San Diego.
  • Raymond Brown, sdfootball.net.
  • Joe Heinz, Todd Cassen, Ron Marquez, Mike Dolan, CIF San Diego Section.
  • Ramon Scott, Eastcountysports.com.
  • Steve (Biff) Dolan, Mountain Country, 107.9-FM.

How others see San Diego’s Top 10:
*The second entry in each rating is from the previous week.

Team Record Cal-Hi Sports MaxPreps CalPreps
Cathedral 6-2 19/20* 16/16 56.7/56.8
Carlsbad 8-0 14/14 24/24 52.7/51.2
Mission Hills 6-2 22/25 33/45 48.9/46.0
Lincoln 6-1 15/15 25/25 51.1/50.4
Mater Dei 7-0 33/36 31/31 45.7/47.1
Helix 4-3 NR/NR 65/64 36.8/37.1
Torrey Pines 4-3 38/34 40/40 40.0/43.7
Scripps Ranch 7-0 NR/NR 54/54 37.8/39.8
Madison 6-2 NR-NR /104 /27.9
Santa Fe Christian 7-0 NR-NR 175/176 20.8/18.2

 




2021 Week 8: Rivals Will Be Too Close for Comfort

Three neighborhood rivals with long histories resume their versions of trench warfare this week.

Chula Vista and Sweetwater, 2.9 miles apart and the oldest schools south of the San Diego city limits, play for the 74th consecutive year in a chain that began when Chula Vista opened in 1947.

The Spartans lead the Red Devils, 39-33-3, in the longest continuous series in the County.

Chula Vista (4-2) is on a 2021 four-game win streak and Sweetwater (2-3), delayed by two cancelations because of Covid implications, is looking for a third straight victory.

HISTORY FAVORS OCEANSIDE

Carlsbad is ranked No. 1 in John Maffei’s Union-Tribune weekly poll below, but Oceanside is 38-18-6 against the Lancers.

The series began in 1958 when the schools, 3.9 miles apart, were coached by the legendary Herb Meyer (Oceanside) and Sveto (Swede) Krcmar, who had been an assistant at Oceanside when Meyer was a player there.

Meyer was 10-4-1 against Carlsbad when he moved to the new El Camino in 1976, but Krcmar’s Lancers won two small school CIF championships in head-to-head battles, 13-6, in 1962 and 12-3 in 1965.

SO CLOSE

Crawford is 1.5 miles east of Hoover, having opened and taken a chunk of Cardinals enrollment in 1957.  The two played every year from 1958-75 and then went their separate ways, only to return.

Over the decades Hoover and Crawford have been partnered in the Eastern, Western, Central, and Harbor leagues and are back together in the Central. The off-and-on relationship favors the Colts, 29-17.

HOLY BOWL

Not as close geographically as when Cathedral was University, with a Linda Vista address instead of Carmel Valley,  St. Augustine and Cathedral bring the heat, no matter the venue.

University began playing in 1957 and became Cathedral in 2004. The schools didn’t meet until 1966. Cathedral will take a 38-22 lead into their game at home this week.

RATINGS GAME

RANK TEAM RECORD POINTS PREVIOUS
1. Carlsbad 7-0 (15) 230 1
2. Cathedral 5-2 (9) 223 2
3. Lincoln 6-1 189 3
4. Mater Dei 6-0 1177 4
5. Mission Hills 5-2 141 6
6. Torrey Pines 4-2 139 5
7 Scripps Ranch 6-0 87 7
8. Mt. Carmel 7-0 71 9
9. Helix 3-3 32 10
10. Santa Fe Christian 7-0 25 NR

OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES
Madison (5-2, 12 points), Poway 5-2, 8), Eastlake (5-2, 7), Ramona (5-2, 3), El Capitan (6-1, 1), San Diego (7-1, 1). 

VOTING PANEL
Twenty-four sportswriters and sportscasters throughout San Diego County.

  • John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune.
  • Steve Brand, Thomas Gutierrez, Rick Hoff, Jim Lindgren, Terry Monahan, Eric Williams, Thomas Gutierrez, freelance contributors.
  • John CarrollNick Pollino, KUSI Ch. 51.
  • John Kentera, Braden Suprenant, 97.3-FM The Fan).
  • Adam Paul, ECPreps.com.
  • Bodie DeSilva, scorebooklive.com.
  • Rick Smith, Partletonsports.com.
  • Christian Pedersen, San Diego Sports Association.
  • Troy Hirsch, Fox 5 San Diego.
  • Raymond Brown, sdfootball.net.
  • Joe Heinz, Todd Cassen, Ron Marquez, Mike Dolan, CIF San Diego Section.
  • Ramon Scott, Eastcountysports.com.
  • Steve (Biff) Dolan, Mountain Country, 107.9-FM.

How others see San Diego’s Top 10:
*The second entry in each rating is from the previous week.

Team Record Cal-Hi Sports MaxPreps CalPreps
Cathedral 5-2 20/20* 16/16 56.8/53.7
Carlsbsd 7-0 14/13 24/20 51.2/51.7
Mission Hills 5-2 25/25 35/32 46.0/43.8
Lincoln 6-1 15/15 25/27 50.4/47.7
Mater Dei 6-0 36/41 31/35 47.1/42.9
Helix 3-3 NR/NR 64/70 37.1/33.1
Torrey Pines 4-2 34/35 40/42 43.7/40.9
Scripps Ranch 6-0 NR/NR 54/62 39.8/35.6
Mt. Carmel 7-0 NR-NR 104/119 27.923.3
Santa Fe Christian 7-0 NR-NR 176/171 20/18.2

 




1955 Baseball: Grossmont Wins Big One That Eludes San Diego

Another outstanding San Diego High team (27-4) was unexpectedly bounced from the playoffs but Grossmont won a Southern Section championship, joining the similarly successful 1951 squad.

Only one team from each league was invited to the playoffs, so Hoover was a non-participant despite a record that was a reported 24-4.

San Diego junior Deron Johnson was Southern California player of the year.  Johnson batted .466 in 118 at-bats and compiled a 14-2 pitching record.

Johnson was the fourth Cavers player to win the honor, preceded by Floyd Robinson (1953), Andy Stagnaro (1948), and Gene Richardson (1946).

San Diego second baseman Jim Gilchrist also made the all-CIF team and pitcher Kent Haws was 4-0 in City Prep League play with an 0.21 earned-run average.

San Diego coach Les Cassie could rely on second baseman Jim Gilchrist, pitcher Deron Johnson, and catcher Joe Dini (from left).

3/2/55

Chula Vista pushed over a run in the top of the ninth to edge Point Loma, 4-3. Bob Franklin relieved Raymond (Teeny) Gurule after the Pointers tied the score with three runs in the eighth.

3/4/55

Staffed with several members of the 1954 Post 492 national champion American Legion squad, Hoover still had to scrap to a 2-1 victory at Chula Vista.

Joel Mogy, with relief from Joe Cottrell in the eighth inning, out-pitched the Spartans’ Bob Franklin. Mogy and Cottrell allowed two hits.

Ron Miller, Vince Kilpela, and Brad Griffith teamed to pitch Lincoln to a no-hit, 8-0 win at Mar Vista.

3/5/55

Dick Daugherty and Tim Carroll were the Mission Bay battery in the first game of a double header at San Dieguito and Bob Lasoya and Mel Rizzo in the second game.

The Buccaneers won both ends, 4-3, and 10-6.

Deron Johnson was pitching and slugging star and Southern California player of year for San Diego High.

3/8/55

Home team Point Loma probably could live with a 12-11 loss to Escondido, but Mission Bay, a double winner three days before, couldn’t sustain, taking a 21-1 licking from Grossmont.

3/11/55

Deron Johnson and Joe Banks each drove in four runs and hit three-run homers and Johnson and Phil Rico held visiting Alhambra Mark Keppel to three hits in a 12-4 San Diego win.

3/12/55

Hoover scored a run in the bottom of the seventh inning to win a Saturday morning game with El Centro Central, 3-2, and blanked Alhambra Mark Keppel, 3-0, in a nine-inning afternoon contest.

Meanwhile, Ontario Chaffey topped San Diego in the morning in eight innings, 4-3, but lost to La Jolla in the p.m. nightcap, 8-2.

3/15/55

Hoover improved to 6-0 in a rematch, 14-2 victory over Chula Vista. The Cardinals’ Ron Wilkins homered and pitched through the eighth inning, when all involved agreed to call it a day, citing cold weather.

John Bates hit a home run and scattered six hits and Helix socked Lincoln’s ace, Vince Kilpela, 8-3, with a six-run fourth inning.

San Diego’s Dave Conger dives back into first base ahead of Vince Kilpela’s kickoff throw to first baseman Doyle Seely. San Diego edged Lincoln, 2-1.

3/17/55

Hoover stood at 9-0 before a weekend trip to Long Beach after a 10-0 win over Sweetwater, propelled by Jim Galasso’s three hits and the two-hit pitching of Larry Elliot and Dick Meza.

San Diego’s Kent Haws shut out guest Helix, 10-0, on two hits, and Lincoln lost at Grossmont, 8-5.

3/18/55

Intersectionals had become popular. Hoover dropped the first of a three-game swing in the North to Long Beach Wilson, 7-5, on the Long Beach City College diamond.

Lefthander Joel Mogy was hit with a pair of three-run homers in the seven-inning loss.

Jim Gilchrist homered and was 4 for 4, sophomore John Harmon was 3 for 4, and centerfielder Pete Gumina doubled and was singled out for nifty defensive play as San Diego topped visiting Lynwood, 4-0.

LIONS ROAR

A press luncheon at the San Diego Club was hosted by the San Diego Lions Club, which announced a 24-team field for the fifth annual event April 4-6.

Sixteen teams, with San Diego as defending champion, will take part in the Unlimited Division, minus defending CIF champion Fullerton, whose Spring Vacation is one week later than San Diego area schools’.

Mar Vista will defend the Limited Division championship in an eight-team bracket, after Ramona and Fallbrook compete in a “play-in” contest.

Hawthorne, Santa Monica, Trona, Inglewood, Inglewood Morningside, and Banning, teams traveling more than 75 miles, will be housed at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot.

Inglewood’s Dick McFerson knocked ball loose from Kearny’s Butch Flaming, but Komets won Lions Tournament game, 9-8, in 10 innings,.

3/19/55

Hoover defeated Long Beach Poly, 10-5, in the morning and Long Beach Jordan, 7-6, in the afternoon in seven-inning games to run its record to 11-1.

—Kearny won at San Bernardino, 3-0, in the morning and lost in the afternoon, 8-1, at Colton in a pair of nine-inning jousts.

3/21/55

Joe Banks’ three-run home run started a San Diego onslaught in a 13-0 win over Sweetwater, as part of a South Bay invasion by the Cavers.  San Diego had beaten Sweetwater in February, 30-2.  That’s not a misprint.

3/22/55

Joe Banks doubled home Jim Gilchrist and Deron Johnson in a three-run 10th inning as San Diego  edged Chula Vista, 5-2 and upped its record to 9-1.

3/23/55

Lincoln’s Brad Griffith hurled a two-hit shutout and the Hornets blanked host Sweetwater, 3-0.

San Diego’s Steve Allen stole second base in Cavers’ 13-0 playoff win over Baldwin Park.

3/29/55

Hoover, with many of the 1954 Post 492 squad, which won the national American Legion championship, fired the first shot in the City Prep League opener.

The Cardinals’ Billy Capps homered and Joel Mogy out- pitched Deron Johnson as Hoover capitalized on four San Diego errors and won, 7-1.

—Grossmont erupted for 12 runs in the first inning and beat its historically most important rival, Sweetwater, 15-5.

—Helix rolled Mar Vista, 21-0; the Highlanders’ Jim Bates stopped the Mariners on one hit.

—Lincoln’s Vince Kilpela won a 2-1 duel from Point Loma’s Bob Imlay.

4/2/55

Point Loma evened its CPL record at 1-1, edging La Jolla in a tension-filled 11 innings, 5-4.

After three hours and 35 minutes, Point Loma catcher Jim Lunsford, taking advantage of what an Evening Tribune reporter said was “relief hurler Dave Jordan’s (slow) windup and the encroaching darkness to swipe home like the proverbial thief in the night.”

Lunsford’s theft came after starter Jack Cravens walked Lunsford, who was replaced by Jordan. Lunsford advanced on a wild pitch and to third on Joe Welch’s sacrifice.

Cravens battled his way out of a jam in the eighth inning when the Pointers loaded the bases with no outs. Vikings coach Jim Bass brought in an outfielder as an extra infielder to successfully thwart a potential squeeze play.

—Joe Banks had three hits and Jim Gilchrist and Joe Dini homered in San Diego’s 11-1 win over Kearny.

Bob Mendoza tripled in two runs and scored the deciding run on a botched relay in Lincoln’s 11-10, seven-inning win over visiting Grossmont.

Kearny coach Paul Deacon addresses lineup with (from left) Tommy Gonzalez, Butch Flaming, Leon Mayes.

4/4/55

San Diego was the three-time defending champion, but Hoover was the Unlimited Division favorite in the fifth annual Lions Tournament.

The Cavers blanked Escondido in their opening game and Hoover slugged Sweetwater, 9-1. Second-year Lincoln, lying in the weeds, surprised Inglewood Morningside, 2-1.

San Diego’s Kent Haws gagged Escondido on one hit and Hoover’s Dick Meza struck out 13.

The most compelling game was Lincoln-Morningside, which went eight innings and almost into darkness at Navy Field.

Lincoln lefthander Vince Kilpela allowed four singles and struck out 18.

Morningside led, 1-0, when the Hornets’ Bob Mendoza singled and came all the way home when the ball got past the rightfielder.

Lincoln broke the deadlock when pinch hitter George Hook opened the eighth with a walk, gave way to pinch runner Ron Miller, who was sacrificed to second base by Doyle Seely.                                                          Miller scored when Mendoza drove a pitch to deep right centerfield.

Kearny won a marathon, three-hour, 25-minute, 9-8 decision over Inglewood after leading, 8-2.

El Centro Central’s Matt Haughan allowed one hit and beat Ramona, 4-2, in a Limited Division contrast.

Lincoln’s Vince Kilpela (left), Lions Tournament most-valuable player, shared moment with Hoover’s Tommy Rinks, holding championship trophy, and Lincoln co-captains Percy Campbell and Leonard Arevalo.

4/5/5

San Diego nipped Kearny, 4-3, but lost to Lincoln, 4-3, and Hoover slammed Santa Monica, 14-1 and Hawthorne, 7-2.

Kent Haws gave up a two-run single to Jerry Stryker, but the San Diego pitcher, who relieved Phil Rico in the top of the seventh with the bases loaded, got Tommy Gonzalez on a short fly-out and Butch Flaming and Bud Romero to end the game.

San Diego coach Les Cassie saved his ace, Deron Johnson for the afternoon semifinal at Navy Field against Lincoln, 8-5 quarterfinals winner over Point Loma.

Lincoln’s victory over the Cavers, by far its most significant in the school’s two-year history, came with a knotty problem for coach George Pearson.

San Diego rallied for three runs in the sixth inning, chasing starter Brad Griffith and forcing Pearson to call on his ace lefthander, Vince Kilpela.

Kilpela put out the fire and got through a difficult seventh that landed the Hornets in the Unlimited final against Hoover.

Lions pitchers, by rule, could work a maximum of 16 innings in the tournament.

That meant Kilpela was eligible for only three more innings in the finale at Lane Field.

Pearson had a decision to make: Start Kilpela and hope the cavalry can hold the fort beginning in the fourth inning, or start Griffith or Ron Miller, and bring on Kilpela to protect a possible lead.

Umpire Tom Flecky made out signal on Hoover’s Ron Wilkins, tagged by Lincoln catcher Leonard Arevalo in Lions Tournament final. Interested observer was Cardinals’ Gene Leek. Hoover won, 9-3.

4/6/55

Lincoln coach Pearson started right hander Miller, who gave up five runs in two innings. Griffith allowed four more, although two were unearned.

Hoover won, 9-3, and Kilpela pitched only one inning.

The game was shortened from seven to five innings so the San Diego Padres and San Francisco Seals could start their Pacific Coast League contest with minimal delay of the scheduled 8:15 p.m. first pitch.

Hoover coach Bill Matthie had a rested starter, Larry Elliot, a lefthander who struck out nine and walked six. The Cardinals’ Gene Leek hit a three-run home run over the 360-foot sign in right field in the top of the second.

Kilpela was named the tournament’s most-valuable player.

4/15/55

Grossmont pounded Helix, 11-1, behind Earl Carlton’s home run and six-hit pitching and battery mate Al Hall’s five hits—three singles, double, and home run.

—Lincoln was surprisingly leading the CPL with a 3-0 record (Hoover and Sn Diego were 3-1) after Brad Griffith’s four-hitter set down Kearny, 6-2.

Leroy Dotson’s single scored Percy Campbell for a 1-0 lead in the fifth inning and George Hook’s two-run homer in the sixth was enough for the win.

—Deron Johnson was 3 for 4 with four runs batted in and Jim Gilchrist was 3 for 6 as San Diego beat Mission Bay. 21-2.

4/19/55

Gene Leek hit two home runs and Tommy Rinks and Parker Olsen hit back-to-back home runs as Hoover slugged Lincoln and lefthander Vince Kilpela, 9-0, on the Hoover field.

—Grossmont took a two-game lead in the Metropolitan League with an 18-0 win over Mar Vista, while Helix beat Chula Vista, 6-4, to tie the Spartans for second place.

4/22/55

Art Thomson gave up one hit and struck out 15, and the Ramona offense did the rest in a 27-0 win over San Miguel School.

—Grossmont moved to 6-0 and clinched a tie for the Metropolitan League title with two games remaining.

—The Foothillers beat Sweetwater, 7-1, behind Skip Fenn’s three-hit pitching.

—Rudy Rudzinski tripled to drive in three runs in Helix’ four-run eighth inning that was the difference in a 5-4 win over Mar Vista.

4/29/55

Chula Vista pitcher Bill Collins outlasted Chester Carlton and Skip Fenn and the Spartans stayed alive in the Metropolitan circuit with a 7-6 victory over Grossmont.

The Foothillers were 6-1 and Chula Vista was 5-2, tied with Helix after the day’s action.

—John Poplis scattered five hits and Mar Vista won its first league game, 8-5, over Sweetwater.

—Deron Johnson hit an opposite field home run beyond the press box that looks down on the Hoover grandstand and baseball field as the Cavers topped the Cardinals and moved into first place in the CPL, each with a 5-0 record.

Kent Haws, the Cavers’ No. 3 pitcher at the start of the season, blanked the Redbirds on four hits.

5/2/55

Hoover recovered from its loss to San Diego by punishing neophyte Mission Bay, 26-6, after opening with a 13-run salvo in the first inning and firing another of eight runs in the eighth.

Gene Leek hit a grand slam home run in the first inning, big blow of the Cardinals’ 21 hits. Larry Elliot allowed three hits and struck out 18 and held the Buccaneers scoreless until they scored three each in the eighth and ninth innings.

5/5/55

Mel Bratley homered and Dick Williams allowed two hits in Grossmont’s 14-0 win over Mar Vista.

—George Van Es hit a three-run homer and pitched San Dieguito to an 11-3, Avocado League win over Oceanside.

—Deron Johnson gave up two hits, struck out 15, did not walk a batter, and won a 1-0 duel against La Jolla’s Jack Cravens as San Diego pushed across a run in the ninth inning.

The Cavers’ Dave Conger reached base on an error and Steve Allen pinch ran. John Harmon’s double scored Allen from first.

San Diego (8-1) maintained a one-game, City Prep League lead over Hoover, which beat Point Loma, 3-0.

Gene Smith of Puente stole second base when ball eluded Grossmont’s Don Hall. Lynn Simpson (left) pursued ball. Grossmont won, 8-0, for second CIF championship since 1951.

5/15/55

Point Loma took a first-inning, 4-0 lead over visiting San Diego and kept the Cavers at a distance until San Diego scored a run in the eighth inning and three in the ninth to tie.

The Cavers manufactured three runs in the 11th inning to win, 7-4.

The rally include a bunt hit, fielder’s choice, sacrifice bunt, catcher’s error for one run, a sacrifice fly for another run, a base on balls, and Joe Dini’s double, which scored John Harmon.

—Dave Jordan’s one-hitter was enough for La Jolla to handcuff Lincoln, 3-0.

—Grossmont (10-1) locked  the Metropolitan League title with an 8-2 win over Chula Vista (8-3) at Grossmont.

Dick Williams, Allen Hall, and Jerry Barrows each hit home runs for the Foothillers.

—Brown Military had 14 hits, but took more advantage of 13 Julian errors in a 29-6 victory in the mountain community.

5/19/55

San Diego won its second straight CPL title and third in the six-year history of the league with a 2-1, 10-inning victory over visiting Lincoln.

Deron Johnson’s double with one out in the 10th scored Don Leslie from second base and gave the Cavers a league record of 11-1, all 11 wins coming after an opening-game, 7-1 loss to Hoover.

Hoover finished second at 10-2. Lincoln, which lost three of its last four, was third at 6-6, followed by La Jolla and Point Loma, each 5-7; Kearny, 4-8, and Mission Bay, 1-11.

Lincoln’s Vince Kilpela and the Cavers’ Kent Haws battled into the 10th, when Haws walked Kilpela to start the inning and was relieved by Johnson, who retired the side.

Johnson (6-1) was credited with the victory, but the league’s winningest pitcher was Hoover’s Larry Elliot (7-0).

—Elliot relieved Joel Mogy in a 5-5 game in the top of the sixth inning. The Cardinals scored 13 runs in the bottom of the sixth for an 18-5 victory over Kearny.

Alhambra Mark Keppel’s Mike Pursell slid safely back to first base as San Diego’s John Seavello stretched for pickoff throw. Cavers won, 12-4.

5/20/55

Grossmont, which toiled in the City Prep League from 1951-54 and won the CIF Southern Section championship in ’51, was back home in the Metropolitan loop and a 11-1 success.

Coach John Hancock’s Foothillers drubbed Helix, 11-2, in the final league game to finish two games ahead of Chula Vista (9-3). Helix was 6-6 and Mar Vista and Sweetwater, each 2-10, brought up the rear.

5/25/55

Hoover’s baseball season was over, but many of the Cardinals already were preparing for the opening of the American Legion Post 492 season.

Meanwhile, Post 6, winner of national championships with largely San Diego High players in 1938 and ’41, was resuming competition after several years’ absence.

Legion qualification was for players age 13-19.

5/27/55

Deron Johnson struck out 16, allowed 4 singles, and tripled and singled in three runs as San Diego stunned Baldwin Park, 13-0, in a second-round playoff (the Cavers received a first-round bye) at Beeson Field on the Marine Corps Recruit Depot base.

Jim Gilchrist doubled twice and had four hits. John Harmon and Dave Conger each had a single and double and combined for five runs batted in.

The Braves did not advance a runner past second base.

Grossmont hurdler Skip Fenn struck out 16 and his teammates lashed Oceanside pitching for 18 hits in a 21-2 Foothillers’ small schools, semifinals playoff romp.  Grossmont was scheduled to play Army-Navy in the first round, but the cadets declined to participate, forfeiting.

Allen Hall homered twice and Gary Freymiller doubled and homered, positioning the La Mesans for a championship game against Puente, which topped Thermal Coachella Valley, 6-3, in the other semifinal.

Grossmont coach John Hancock was CIF champion for second time.

6/2/55

The usually reliable San Diego defense betrayed the Cavers with seven errors that led to four unearned runs and a stunning, 7-3 loss to the 22-6 Fullerton Indians, who shocked the Cavers in the 1954 playoffs.

The game was played at La Palma Park in Anaheim, two miles South of the Fullerton campus.

The Cavers took a 2-0 lead in the first inning on Jim Gilchrist’s home run.  They broke a tie in the fifth to lead, 3-2, when Deron Johnson’s third consecutive double scored Gilchrist.

Johnson replaced Kent Haws on the mound in the sixth inning and was the victim of two unearned runs that gave the Indians a 6-3 lead.

Fullerton, which lost to Los Angeles Loyola in the 1954 finals, would bow again in the finals, losing in 14 innings, 6-5, to Montebello.

6/3/55

Gary Freymiller doubled and tripled and drove in four runs, and Skip Fenn pitched Grossmont to an 8-2 championship game victory over Puente.

Fenn struck out 11, giving him 105 in his last 81 innings and an overall record of 14-2.

Coach John Hancock was at the helm when the Foothillers won the Southern Section title in 1951.

Some members of Hoover’s 1955 American Legion Post 492 team (from left): Coach Fulton Vickery, Alex Cremidan, Kent Berry, Larry Elliot, Walt Baranski, Steve Evans, Bob Haley, and Jim Galasso. Vickery became the Hoover Cardinals’ varsity coach in 1956.