2019-20 Week 15: Favored Teams win 78% as San Diego Section Playoffs Move Into Semifinals

Shockers, upsets, and surprises (maybe) shook up the first week of the San Diego Section playoffs, which resume Feb. 25 following 120 games in boys and girls first- round and quarterfinals competition.

Twenty-seven games have been won by teams with less attractive (higher) seeds. Favorites won 93 games, a 77.5 winning percentage, according to results from seeds provided by the computer of Max Preps.

Taking them in reverse, we considered a victory by a number 9 seed over an 8 to be a surprise, with the “maybe” qualification.  Upsets were typically 10’s beating 7’s, 11’s topping 6’s, or 6’s nodding 3’s.

Shockers, and there were six of those, began on opening night when number 16 Point Loma defeated number 1 Bonita Vista, 58-57, in boys Division II.

Other jolts:

Fourteen seed Canyon Crest over 3 Army-Navy, 51-47, in boys’ II.

No. 13 Hoover over 4 Grossmont, 70-61, in boys’ IV.

No. 13 San Pasqual over 4 Eastlake, 48-34, in girls’ II.

No. 15 Granite Hills over 2 El Centro Southwest, 28-21, in a throwback to the 1940s in girls’ IV.

No. 10 Madison over 2 Helix, 45-44, in quarterfinals of girls’ III.

There were 12 games in which the 9 seed topped the 8, or the 5 beat the 4.  Those were the surprises, maybe.

No. 5 El Centro Central’s victory over No. 4 Monte Vista in the quarterfinals of Boys’ IV wasn’t a surprise but the score was, 61-41.

Seed numbers in italics.

BOYS PLAYOFFS

OPEN DIVISION

QUARTERFINALS

8 Christian 9 (21-6) 61, @1 Cathedral 72 (22-7).

5 Francis Parker (22-4) 70, @4 Foothills Christian 63(20-9).

6 Poway (24-5) 43, @3 Torrey Pines 74 (25-4).

7 Mater Dei (22-6) 60, @2 St. Augustine 65 (23-7).

SEMIFINALS

Feb 26.

5 Francis Parker vs. 1 Cathedral @TBA.

3 Torrey Pines vs. 2 St. Augustine @TBA.

D-I 

FIRST ROUND

UPPER BRACKET

16 Mount Miguel (4-21) 36, @1 Santa Fe Christian 75 (20-9).

9 Mission Bay (12-17) 66, @8 Rancho Buena Vista 58 (14-15).

12 Vista (10-19)  58, @5 Helix 72 (23-6).

13 The Bishop’s (11-18) 50, @4 San Marcos 73 (17-10).

QUARTERFINALS

9 Mission Bay (12-18) 51,  @1 Santa Fe Christian 60 (21-9).

5 Helix (23-7) 50, @4 San Marcos 73 (18-10).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 25.

4 San Marcos.@1 Santa Fe Christian.

LOWER BRACKET

14 Westview (12-16) 38, vs. 3 El Camino 56 (23-5) @Army-Navy.

11 Rancho Bernardo (12-15) 38, @6 La Costa Canyon 64 (18-12).

10 La Jolla Country Day 48, (12-16) @7 Mission Hills 64 (17-12).

15 Montgomery (12-16) 41, @2 Carlsbad 59 (22-7).

QUARTERFINALS

6 La Costa Canyon (18-13), @3 El Camino 50 (24-5).

7 Mission Hills 41 (17-13) @2 Carlsbad 57 (23-7).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 25.

3 El  amino @2 Carlsbad.

D-II

FIRST ROUND

UPPER BRACKET

16 Point Loma (13-16) 58, @1 Bonita Vista 57 (20-9).

9 Olympian (18-10) 55, @8 Orange Glen 63 (15-14).

12 Lincoln (11-13) 57, @5 University City 61 (18-8).

13 Serra (14-15) 73, @4 Otay Ranch 78 (19-10).

QUARTERFINALS

16 Point Loma (13-17) 51, @8 Orange Glen 54 (16-14).

5 University City 19-8) 73, @4 Otay Ranch 71 (19-11).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 26.

8 Orange Glen @5 University City.

LOWER BRACKET

14 Canyon Crest 51 (10-19) @3 Army-Navy 47 (17-12).

11 Scripps Ranch 52 (14-10) @6 Oceanside 43 (17-11).

10 Del Norte 67 (16-11) @7 Escondido 62 (20-9).

15 Patrick Henry 60 (13-15) @2 San Diego 62 (18-10).

QUARTERFINALS

14 Canyon Crest (11-19) 42 @11 Scripps Ranch 41 (14-11).

10 Del Norte (16-2) 45, @2San Diego (19-10) 52.

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 26.

14 Canyon Crest @2 San Diego.

D-III

FIRST ROUND

UPPER BRACKET

16 Madison (11-18) 60, @1 San Ysidro 93 (21-8).

9 Ramona (12-17) 49, @8 Brawley 58 (20-9).

12 Morse (14-15) 42, @5 Granite Hills 44 (16-9).

13 Hoover (11-18) 70, @4 Grossmont 61 (16-10).

QUARTERFINALS

8 Brawley (20-10) @1 San Ysidro 105 (21-8).

13 Hoover (11-19) 48, @5 Granite hills 49 (17-9).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 25.

5 Granite Hills @1 San Ysidro.

LOWER BRACKET

14 Pacific Ridge (19-10) 25, @3 Eastlake 73 (16-13).

11 Mission Vista (16-12) 80, @6 Tri-City 77 (17-12).

10 West Hills (14-14) 58, @7 Mt. Carmel 56 (10-19).

15 San Dieguito (8-21) 36, @2 Coronado 53 (19-9).

QUARTERFINALS

11 Mission Vista (16-13) 66, @3 Eastlake 94 (17-13).

10 West Hills (14-15) 39, @2 Coronado 63 (20-9).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 25.

3 Eastlake @2 Coronado, @TBA.

D-IV

FIRST ROUND

UPPER BRACKET

16 Victory Christian (13-16) 53, @1 Calexico 66 (24-3).

9 Calipatria (18-10) 48, @8 Clairemont 41 (15-10).

12 Escondido Charter (13-16) 39, @5 El Centro Central 66 (15-14).

13 Chula Vista (10-16) 55, @4 Monte Vista 67(18-11).

QUARTERFINALS

9 Calipatria (18-11) 37, @1Calexico. (25-3) 70.

5 El Centro Central (16-14) 61, @4 Monte Vista 41 (18-12).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 26.

5 El Centro Central, @1 Calexico.

LOWER BRACKET

14 Blythe Palo Verde Valley 38 (8-16), @3 High Tech San Diego 64 (17-10).

11 San Pasqual (8-19) 43, @6 El Capitan 58 (12-14).

10 Guajome Park (16-11) 32, @7 Hilltop 66 (13-16).

15 Southern California Yeshiva (11-12) 67, @2 Mabel O’Farrell 80 (24-4).

QUARTERFINALS

7 Hilltop (13-17) 56, @2 Mabel O’Farrell 63 (25-4).

6 El Capitan(13-14) 58, @3 High Tech San Diego.48 (17-11).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 26.

6 El Capitan @2 Mabel O’Farrell..

D-V

FIRST ROUND

UPPER BRACKET

1 Fallbrook (17-8), bye.

9 Health Sciences (10-14) 58, @8 Calexico Vincent Memorial 71 (14-8).

12 Liberty (11-16) 44, @5 Classical 57 (18-8)

4 Horizon Prep (20-2), bye.

QUARTERFINALS

8 Calexico Vincent Memorial (14-9) 58, @1 Fallbrook 77 (18-8).

5 Classcial (19-8), 52, @4 Horizon Prep 41 (20-3).

Feb. 25.

SEMIFINALS

5 Classical @1 Fallbrook.

LOWER BRACKET

3 Calvin Christian (14-7), bye.

11 Gompers Prep (14-6) 60, @6 Holtville 79 (14-9).

10 Ocean View (16-14) 43, @7 High Tech Chula Vista 63 (12-9).

2 Mar Vista (18-10), bye.

QUARTERFINALS

7 High Tech Chula Vista (12-10) 51 @2 Mar Vista 70 (19-10).

6 Holtville 29 (14-10), @3 Calvin Christian  46 (15-7)

SEMIFINALS

3 Calvin Christian @2 Mar Vista.

GIRLS PLAYOFFS

OPEN DIVISION

QUARTERFINALS

8 Mater Dei (18-9) 38, @1 La Jolla Country Day 74 (28-1).

5 La Costa Canyon (22-6) 56, @4 Bonita Vista 57 (21-8).

6 The Bishop’s (17-10) 52, @3 Cathedral 77 (18-10).

7 Christian (19-10) 76, @2 Westview 51 (26-3).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 26.

4 Bonita Vista @1 La Jolla Country Day.

7 Christian, @TBA.3 Cathedral.

D-I

UPPER BRACKET

FIRST ROUND

16 Mira Mesa (5-23) 19, @1 Mission Hills 67 (18-11).

9 San Marcos (15-13) 36, @8 Carlsbad 44 (21-8).

12 El Capitan (18-11) 53, @5 Del Norte 55, OT (20-9).

13 Imperial (21-8) 35, @4 Mount Miguel 59 (20-7).

QUARTERFINALS

5 Del Norte 48 (20-10), @4 Mount Miguel 63 (21-7).

8 Carlsbad 52 (22-8), @1 Mission Hills 55 (19-11).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 25.

4 Mount Miguel @1 Mission Hills.

LOWER BRACKET

14 Vista (16-13) 37, @3 Rancho Bernardo 49 (21-8).

11 Scripps Ra  nch 45, (14- 4412) @6 Poway 63 (18-11).

10 Torrey Pines (16-11), 49,@7 El Camino 44 (21-8).

15 Olympian (10-19) 38,@2 Serra 57 (17-9).

QUARTERFINALS

6 Poway 61 (19-11), @3 Rancho Bernardo 34 (21-9).

10 Torrey Pines(16-12) 50, @2 Serra 60 (18-9).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 25.

6 Poway @2Serra.

D-II

UPPER BRACKET

FIRST ROUND

16 University (11-17) 39, @1 Otay Ranch 56 (22-7).

9 Francis Parker (19-8) 52, @8 Calexico 49 (18-9).

12 Montgomery (13-16) 40, @5 Mission Vista 71 (17-9).

13 San Pasqual (14-15) 46, @4 Eastlake 34 (15-14).

QUARTERFINALS

Feb. 22

9 Francis Parker (19-9) 51, @8 Otay Ranch 60 (23-7).

13 San Pasqual 58 *(14-16). @5 Mission Vista 68 (18-9).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 26.

8 Otay Ranch @5 Mission Vista.

LOWER BRACKET

14 West Hills (13-13) 42, @3 San Dieguito 69 (15-10).

11 Our Lady of Peace (16-13) 46, @6 Grossmont 49(15-13).

10 Chula Vista (19-10) 44, @7 Morse 58 (19-10).

15 Ramona (7-20) 28, @2 Lincoln 44 (25-4).

QUARTERFINALS

7 Morse 42 (19-11), @2 Lincoln 42 (26-4).

6 Grossmont 56 (16-13), @3 San Dieguito 42 (15-11).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 26.

6 Grossmont @2 Lincoln.

D-III

FIRST ROUND

UPPER BRACKET

16 Maranatha (5-23) 16, @1 Point Loma 70 (19-2).

9 Sage Creek (12-10) 44 @8 Pacific Ridge 27 (15-7).

12 Hilltop (13-16) 37, @5 Mt. Carmel 41 (12-11).

13 Santana (15-14) 31, @4 Holtville 49 (21-7).

QUARTERFINALS

9 Sage Creek (12-11) 47, @1 Point Loma 52 (20-2).

5 Mt. Carmel (13-11) 63, @4 Holtville 50 (21-8).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 25

5 Mt. Carmel, @1 Point Loma.

LOWER BRACKET

14 St. Joseph (21-8) 38, @3 Foothills Christian 58 (25-4).

11 Escondido Charter (17-12) 31, @6 Coronado 53(19-10).

10 Madison (13-16) 41, @7 Fallbrook 37 (17-11).

15 Mar Vista (7-22) 15, @2 Helix 62 (14-11).

QUARTERFINALS

10 Madison (14-16) 45, @2 Helix 44 (14-12).

6 Coronado 33 (19-11), @3 Foothills Christian 61 (26-4).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 25.

10 Madison @3 Foothills Christian.

D-IV

FIRST ROUND

UPPER BRACKET

16 Mountain Empire (12-9) 19, @1 San Diego 61 (17-8).

9 Classical (15-13) 53, @8 El Cajon Valley 39 (16-11).

12 Mission Bay (11-18) 27, @5 Liberty 46 (19-5).

13 Escondido (6-22) 30. @4 Castle Park 34 (15-11).

QUARTERFINALS

9 Classical 44 (15-14), @1 San Diego 46 (18-8).

5 Liberty (19-6) 53, @4 Castle Park 59 (16-11).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 26.

4 Castle Park  @1 San Diego.

LOWER BRACKET

14 Valley Center (5-17) 43, @3 Clairemont 61 (17-12).

11 Sweetwater (8-20) 35, @6 Oceanside 48 (13-12).

10 Monte Vista (13-16) 40, @7Brawley 66 (13-16).

15 GraniteHills (9-18) 28, @2  El Centro Southwest 21 (17-13).

QUARTERFINALS

6 Oceanside (14-12) 42, @3 Clairemont 54 (18-12).

15 Granite Hills (9-19) 24,  @7 Brawley 40 (14-16).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 26

6 Brawley @3 Clairemont.

D-V

FIRST ROUND

UPPER BRACKET

1 Hoover (25-3), bye.

9 Valhalla (5-17) 46, @8 Blythe Palo Verde Valley 45 (4-20).

12 Victory Christian (5-14) 22, @5 San Ysidro 52 (11-17).

4 Mabel O’Farrell (18-4), bye.

QUARTERFINAL

9 Valhalla (5-18) 45, @1 Hoover 52 (26-3).

5 San Ysidro (12-17) 54, @4 Mabel O’Farrell 33 (18-5).

SEMIFINALS

Feb. 25

5 San Ysidro @1 Hoover..

LOWER BRACKET

3 Horizon Prep (20-2), bye.

11 Salton City West Shores (8-10) 21, @6 Preuss 24 (14-11).

10 The Cambridge (12-8) 33, @7 Guajome Park 45 (16-10).

2 Calexico Vincent Memorial (23-0), bye.

QUARTERFINALS

7 Guajome Park (16-11) 66, @2 Calexico Vincent Memorial 66 (24-0).

6 Preuss (14-12) 28, @3 Horizon Prep 38 (21-2).

SEMIFINALS

3 Horizon Prep @2 Calexico Vincent Memorial.

 




2019-20 Week 14: Just 27 of 133 Can Claim League Superiority

What’s in a league championship?

Especially in this era of power ratings and strengths of schedules and what they mean in playoff pairings and postseason division assignments, which will be announced today?

A league title represents essentially just bragging rights, but ask the players and coaches who achieved it and what they think when banners are hoisted in gymnasium rafters.

All will agree the accomplishment still carries weight and memories that will last.

Twenty-three league champions and four co-champions were officially crowned last night and began preparing for the second season and playoffs that start Tuesday.

LAST WEEK DECIDERS

Three races went down to the final night.

Foothills Christian, beaten at home, 68-54, two weeks before by Francis Parker, turned the tables, 80-67, in the rematch at Parker to tie the Lancers for the Coastal championship.

High Tech San Diego earned a tie for the Central championship with a 52-48 victory over co-champion Morse.

Scripps Ranch and San Diego shared the Eastern League flag after the Falcons knocked off Lincoln, 60-51, while San Diego was playing a nonleague, 70-69 win over Serra.

Calvin Christian and Classical split two league meetings and shared the Ocean circuit gonfalon.

FAMILIAR PLACE

Ray Johnson left the El Camino program after the 2013-14 season and took his San Diego Section-leading 739 career victories at the Oceanside school to college basketball.

Some things don’t change.

Johnson returned to El Camino this season and coached the Warriors to their first league championship in five seasons.

The Warriors’ Avocado East title was alphabetically first from the 23 leagues in the San Diego Section, which has 133 schools participating, compared to 18 leagues and 98 schools in football.

League Team W-L Overall
Avocado East El Camino 10-0 22-5
Avocado West Torrey Pines 10-0 24-4
Central Morse 8-2 14-14
High Tech San Diego 8-2 16-10
Citrus Victory Christian 10-0 13-15
City Coronado 8-0 18-9
Coastal Francis Parker 11-1 21-3
Foothills Christian 11-1 20-8
Desert Calipatria 5-1 17-10
Eastern Scripps Ranch 5-3 13-10
San Diego 5-3 17-10
Grossmont Hills Helix 8-0 22-6
Grossmont Valley Granite Hills 8-0 15-9
Imperial Valley Calexico 5-1 23-3
Manzanita Calexico Vincent Memorial 10-0 13-8
Metropolitan Mesa Mater Dei 9-1 22-5
Ocean Classical 7-1 17-8
Calvin Christian 7-1 14-7
Pacific Tri-City 7-1 17-11
Palomar Poway 8-0 24-4
Patriot High Tech Chula Vista 5-1 11-9
Pioneer National University Academy 7-1 7-2
Sierra Horizon Prep 10-0 20-2
Metropolitan South Bay San Ysidro 12-0 20-8
Summit Mabel O’Farrell 8-0 23-4
Valley Escondido 10-0 20-8
Western Cathedral 7-1 21-7



1989-90 I: Coaching Icons Trepanier, Saner Step Down

Two legendary mentors pulled the pin.

Point Loma’s Lee Trepanier, whose Pointers teams dominated the state and earned national recognition throughout the decade, retired after 14 seasons, with a 331-56 record and .855 winning percentage.

Neville Saner, whose Poway teams won four Division I titles in his seven seasons, retired after posting a 139-42 (.768) record.

CLARK WINNER IN DISPUTE

Barely two weeks remained before the first game and Tony Clark still wasn’t eligible to play.

Clark had transferred from Valhalla to Christian at the start of the school year, but Valhalla principal Bob Avant, an athlete and former 7-foot high jumper at the University of Southern California, had refused to sign the necessary public-private school transfer waiver.

San Diego Section commissioner Kendall (Spider) Webb also had denied the transfer, citing two reasons:

There had been a private dinner several months before at which Clark and other 11th-grade players from around the area had been hosted by a Christian booster and the school principal.

Webb also noted that a Christian coach had improperly approached another area athlete.

Clark appealed and a three-member committee of the section board of managers, unanimously sided with the player and made Clark eligible.

The committee supported the charges against Christian, but said, “Denial of the opportunity to compete in his senior year will be a penalty placed against Tony Clark because of the possibility of improper actions of persons other than himself.”

There had been a strained relationship between Clark’s father, who had coached freshman basketball at Valhalla, and Manny Silva, the Valhalla varsity mentor.

Clark, bound for the University of Arizona on a basketball scholarship and a future No. 1 draft choice by baseball’s Detroit Tigers, set a San Diego Section record with a 30.3 scoring average in 1988-89 at Valhalla and would average 43.1 for Christian..

Clark was winner competitively and legislatively.

MORE AND MORE POINTS

Individual scores in the 30s were common.  Tony Clark and Christina Adams of Grossmont routinely posted numbers in the 40s and 50s, Clark even going as high as 64. San Pasqual junior Erik Meek averaged 28 points and would later captain the 1994-95 Duke University team and play eight professional seasons in Europe.

No less than a record 23 games were won by the team that scored at least 100 points.  Sixteen different squads reached triple digits, including five by Mt. Carmel, which came close to Sweetwater’s all-time record of 136 in 1983-84 in a 132-58 win over Orange Glen.

12/2/89

San Diego 80, Castle Park 50.

Talk about a full day’s work in the first game.  Clark James had 37 points, 29 rebounds, 4 assists, and 4 blocked shots for the Cavers.

12/3/89

Christina Adams completed a three-game onslaught at the El Cajon Valley-Santana tournament by outscoring Serra with 49 points in a 59-48 Grossmont victory.

Adams averaged 40.5 points in the event, although sitting out the second half with a sore ankle versus Bonita Vista after scoring 36 points in the first two quarters.

The 5-foot-6 Adams, who averaged 15 points for the Foothillers in 1988-89, also rocked Hilltop with 47 points.

12/5/89

Christina Adams scored 50 points in a 79-50 win over Sweetwater, including 27 points on nine, three-point baskets.

12/6/89

Tony Clark remembered converting only nine three-point attempts at Valhalla in 1988-89. He hit five in his first game with Christian and scored 46 in a 71-68 win over Capistrano Valley Christian.

12/9/89

Tony Clark’s 58 points, third highest total in San Diego County history, gave him 142 in three games and a 79-60 win over Mountain Empire.

Mitchell Lilly had scored 61 in one game and Tom Shaules and Rob Petrie each scored 60.

—The Helen Bush School of Seattle defeated The Bishop’s, 72-43, in the Small Schools Invitational and then the tournament selection committee awarded the most-valuable player award to the Blazers’ team, although Christian’s Tony Clark scored 225 points in five games averaging 45.

Tony Clark’s game included the occasional slam dunk.

“I don’t think anyone except Tony Clark should score 40 points in a high school game,” said Monte Vista’s Jeff Polinsky, who added, “When you’re on you’re on,” after scoring 45 in a 76-58 win over San Pasqual.

The Golden Eagles’ 6-foot, 10-inch Erik Meek scored 32, but sustained a foot injury.

—Santana took a 22-6, first-quarter lead and then held on to beat Christian, 54-52, despite 36 pints by the Patriots’ Tony Clark.

—Derek Wastila had 26 points and 26 rebounds to lead Coronado past Mount Miguel, 65-60.

12/16/89

J.J. Stokes, a future NFL No. 1 draft choice by San Francisco, scored 20 of his 29 points in the second half and  Point Loma, trailing, 50-42, after three quarters, rallied for a 65-64 win over Christian, which couldn’t convert Tony Clark’s 47 points.

12/20/89

Torrey Pines, getting 17 points each from Bart Brandenburg and Kyle Armstrong, won the 29th Jim Mitchell Tournament, 61-52, over  Dana Point Dana Hills.

12/22/89

Patrick Henry cut a 25-point deficit from an earlier, 79-44 loss to Poway, but still lost to the Titans, 59-54, in the championship game of the 43rd Kiwanis Tournament.

—Mira Mesa, with late-arriving football players J.J. Rowlett and Mark Ziegler combining for 51 points and 24 rebounds, won the Spartan Classic at Chula Vista, 95-82 over Oceanside.

Joe McDowell was central figure in Sweetwater-Chula Vista battles.

12/28-29 1989

Another big game for Tony Clark (49 points) but another loss for Christian, which bowed, 80-65, to San Dieguito in the Aztec Christmas Classic at Montgomery.

Clark scored 54 points as Christian topped the Montgomery B team, 92-28.

12/30/89

Despite the loss of injured Tracy Halton and his 28-point average, Crawford edged Morse, 62-60, on Tito Singleton’s basket with seven seconds left for the Baron-Optimist championship at Southwestern College.

San Dieguito topped El Centro Central, 79-49, for the Aztec title.

1/3/90

Christina Adams was virtually unstoppable with 45 points but Helix scored a 70-61 win over rival Grossmont.

1/4/90

Clark James, averaging 31.3 points, was held to 15 as Kearny employed a “Diamond and One” defense in a 72-59 defeat of fourth-ranked San Diego.

“Carlos (Morgan) did a helluva job,” said Komets coach Bill Peterson.  “The whole game, he denied James the ball.”

1/6/90

Turnabout is fair play, even if not against the same opponent.

Two days following a 108-93 loss to Mt. Carmel, San Dieguito regrouped and defeated Vista, 112-87.  Six players scored in double figures led by Brian Malewicz and Matt de la Pena with 20 each.

“It was Morse-Lincoln from the first slam until the final shot,” wrote Ed Graney of The San Diego Union, noting that for the first time in 10 years neither team was ranked in the newspaper’s top 10, but as competitive and high-flying as ever.

Morse outlasted the neighboring Hornets with “a tough, man-to-man defense” and won, 63-61, before 1,800 persons at Mesa College.

Clark James tied single-game and set season record in points for San Diego.

Unofficial leading scorers by average/points

*Incomplete totals.

NAME TEAM GAMES POINTS AVERAGE
Tony Clark Christian 31 1,337 (1) 43.12
Clark James San Diego 23 659 (2) 28.65
Erik Meek San Pasqual 21 586 (4) 27.90
Jeff Hooper Lutheran 22 603 (3) 27.41
Tobin Wilkins Midway Baptist 20 521(12) 26.05
*Jeff Polinsky Monte Vista 19 463 24.36
*Darryl Parker Rancho Buena Vista 24 584 (5T) 24.33
Shannon LeFever Mount Miguel 22 510 (13) 23.18
J.J. Stokes Point Loma 24 530 (11) 22.08
Carlos Campbell Sweetwater 27 569 (7T)
Travis Gilley El Camino 25 551 (10) 22.04
Carlos Campbell Sweetwater 27 569 (7T) 21.07
*Chris Goergens Granite Hills 17 358 21.05
*Tony Lee Valhalla 23 488 21.21
Joe McDowell Sweetwater 29 584  (5T) 20.13
Darryl McMillan Lincoln 29 556 (9) 19.17

Tracy Halton, Crawford, 9×242, 26.9. *Alfonso de la Nuez, Ramona, 13×290, 22.30.

1/11/90

Dee Boyer, El Camino’s 6-foot, 9-inch center who missed the first 14 games with a fractured knee cap, scored 11 points in his return and the Wildcats won, 78-64, over San Pasqual, playing without 6-10 Erik Meek, out with strep throat.

1/18/90

Joe McNaull’s 6-foot, 11 inches, were all over the floor for Monte Vista as he scored 29 points and pulled down 32 rebounds in an 80-65 win over Granite Hills.

–Eight of Mt. Carmel’s nine, dressed-out players (they usually suited 12) scored from 11 to 23 points (Tom LaBuda 9×9 from the field, 5×6 on free throws) and they pin-balled to a 132-58, Palomar League victory over Orange Glen.

The Sundevils came close to Sweetwater’s record 136 in 1984-85.

–Christian evened its record at 7-7 as Tony Clark scored 49 points in 79-55, Harbor League win over Marian.

1/20/90

Chula Vista, on the road, led Sweetwater by 13 in the first half and 67-60 entering the final quarter but couldn’t hold on as the Red Devils, behind Joe McDowell’s 37 points, scored a 77-75, Metropolitan League win.  The Spartans had led Sweetwater by 15 in a December tournament and lost.

1/24/90

Among four players in double figures for Lincoln was 5-foot, 1-inch (yes, 5-1) ninth grader Archie Robinson, who had 11 points in a 95-67 roll on Madison.

1/25/90

All 12 players scored, led by 24 points each by Shane Knight and Mike Graves, elevating Mt. Carmel to a 117-80 in over Vista.

1/27/90

Patrick Henry’s Alan (Fritz) Ziegenfuss coached his 400th career victory, 84-64 over Mira Mesa.  “Yes, four-hundred wins is a special thing, but I credit longevity and talent a whole lot more than coaching,” Ziegenfuss said to writer Steve Brand.

–J.J. Stokes scored 41 points for Point Loma (9-9), but Lincoln won its fifth in a row, 75-70.

–Tony Clark was 21×32 from the field and 6×8 from the three point arc and equaled his season high with 58 points as Christian (9-9) topped Clairemont, 88-52.

Feb 1, 1990

Tony Clark converted 22×32 field-goal attempts and his 55 points marked Clark’s sixth game with at least 50, but Christian fell to St. Augustine, in its first game after 14 forfeitures due to the ubiquitous, dreaded, administrative glitch, 87-79.

St. Augustine had not completed paper work on public-private school player transfer waiver.

–Poway, trailing by 15 points with less than six minutes to play, edged Mt. Carmel, 80-78.

2/7/90

Tony Clark scored 50 points.  It was his fourth consecutive game with at least that many and his seventh of the season.  Christian topped visiting Marian, 91-45.

2/10/90

Andre Toussaint’s basket with 10 seconds left gave Lincoln a 68-63 victory at San Diego as the Hornets claimed their fifth straight Central league title.

There was nothuing meek about 6-foot, 10 Erik, who led the San Pasqual Golden Eagles.

Feb. 13, 1990

“Yes, we probably got too conservative,” said Spartans coach Mike Collins, whose team led, 68-61, with 2:13 remaining and then attempted to take the air out of the ball, passing but passing up shots.

Joe McDowell’s two free throws with 0.07 on the clock clinched the Metropolitan League championship for the Red Devils, 73-71.

Feb. 15, 1990

Tony Clark’s 36 points gave him a season total of 961, breaking the record of 960 by Helix’ Bill Walton in 1969-70. Christian improved to 12-10 with a 66-50 victory over Coronado.

–Visiting Rancho Buena Vista outscored Mt. Carmel, 103-97, reversing an 82-57 loss to the Sundevils..

Brad Grubaugh set a school record with 43 points. Darryl Parker, son of former NBA player Sonny Parker, added 37 and the Longhorns shot 70 per cent from the field.

Feb. 16, 1990

Christina Adams set a San Diego Section record with 21 consecutive free throws in a 58-47 win over El Cajon Valley. Adams, who missed on her 22nd attempt, finished with 31 points.

Feb. 17, 1990

Tony Clark scored 46 points but Christian bowed to Clairemont, 80-67.

Feb. 17, 1990

Mt. Carmel closed the regular season with a 124-65, Palomar League victory over Vista.  The outburst tied the Sundevils with Marian for the fourth highest score in County history.

 




1989-90 II: Sports Arena Out, Golden Hall In

For the first time in 14 years the San Diego Section championship games did not take place in the Sports Arena (13,700 capacity) on Midway Drive or Peterson Gymnasium (3,668 capacity) on the San Diego State campus.

The championships were played at Golden Hall, a downtown facility of 3,200 seats that was more known as a host for concerts and artists such as the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, the Grateful Dead, and others.

But basketball had a history at the C Street venue.  It was home of the San Diego Conquistadores of the American Basketball Association in the 1970s.

“If he (San Diego Section commissioner Kendall Webb) had gotten to me sooner, we would have been able to accommodate them,” said Sports Arena executive Norm Smith.

Coaches were split.

“The Sports Arena is a nice place to play in for the kids, but let’s face facts,” said Lincoln’s Ron Loneski.  “You go in there and there’s about 700 or 1,000 people.  I would rather play in Golden Hall.  The Sports Arena is not conducive to basketball when there’s no one in the place.”

Poway’s Neville Saner:  “I believe the Sports Arena is the best location because you can get 7,000 in there.  I remember when Poway and Serra played in 1986 there were over 7,000 people there.”

NOT ALL INVITED

The season also signaled an end to the 2-year-old open playoff format, in which every team was eligible for a postseason berth.  Divisions I and II were limited to 16 teams each, although all teams in D-III, IV, and V were eligible.

STATE FINALIST

Christian, propelled by record-shattering Tony Clark, earned a trip to the state D-V championship, the third San Diego Section team in the last three seasons.  Lincoln in D-IV and Calipatria in D-V advanced in 1987-88.

John Gilbert, dribbling around Mt. Carmel’s Bill Wooton, scored 21 points as Sweetwater claimed Division I championship.

BOYS PLAYOFFS

(seeding numbers in italics)

DIVISION I

FIRST ROUND

Mira Mesa 66, Fallbrook 52 (16-11).

2 Mt. Carmel 84, Hilltop 72 (14-14).

Poway 53, Morse 49 (12-15).

1 Sweetwater 96, Granite Hills 53 (10-16).

Sweetwater led, 52-40, in the third quarter.  Four minutes later the score was 73-44.

4 San Diego 78, San Dieguito 61 (10-15).

Chula Vista 75, Point Loma 59 (12-13).

The Spartans closed with a 24-7 fourth quarter.

Rancho Buena Vista 79, Bonita Vista 50 (15-9).

3 Patrick Henry 65, Castle Park 57 (11-13).

QUARTERFINALS

1 Sweetwater 80, Mira Mesa 55 (18-9).

2 Mt. Carmel 76, Poway 56 (18-7).

4 San Diego 88, Chula Vista 85 (21-8).

Clark James scored 41 points to tie the Cavers’ school record by Oscar Foster in the 1966-67 season and added 18 rebounds.

3 Patrick Henry 70, Rancho Buena Vista 52 (15-10).

SEMIFINALS

2 Mt. Carmel 67, 3 Patrick Henry 46 (23-5).

Sixteen years after the school opened and following seven losses in the semifinal round, the Sundevils advanced. “I finally got the monkey off my back,” said Coach John Marincovich.

1 Sweetwater 64, 4 San Diego 54 (18-5).

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 Sweetwater 78, 2 Mt. Carmel 71.

Sweetwater couldn’t stop Lynwood and Earnest Killum in three-overtime thriller.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

5 Lynwood 82 (31-2, Southern), 4 Sweetwater 79, 3 OT (29-2).

Sweetwater could have won but missed free throws near the end of the first and second overtimes.

The Knights’ Earnest Killum, who scored 45 points, converted a pair of free throws with 14 seconds left in the third extra session.  The Red Devils followed with two, missed three-point tries.

“We had to keep our composure in front of a hostile crowd down here,” said Lynwood coach Bill Notley.  “We really had to fight.  That is one fine team.”

D-II

FIRST ROUND

Monte Vista 81, Oceanside 57 (12-13).

3 El Camino 99, El Capitan 57 (10-16).

4 Valhalla 68, Escondido 40 (7-14).

University City 89, Carlsbad 68 (7-14).

2 San Pasqual 69, Mission Bay 45 (4-17).

The Golden Eagles prevailed despite the absence of 29-point scoring, 6-foot, 10-inch Erik Meek, idle with a sprained ankle.

Crawford 74, Grossmont 71, OT (13-9).

Helix 49, Serra 47 (7-14).

1 Torrey Pines 89, Hoover 53 (5-20).

QUARTERFINALS

2 San Pasqual 74, Crawford 56 (18-9).

1 Torrey Pines 58, Helix 46 (13-8).

University City 83, 4 Valhalla 82 (20-9).

Jerome Price’s fadeaway, 20-foot jump shot with three seconds left and his 24 points earned the Centurions a surprise victory over the better seeded Norsemen.

3 El Camino 82, Monte Vista 62 (19-7).

“Dee (Boyer) was out 14 games and Travis (Gilley) missed four…this is the first time we’ve come together with everything in focus,” said El Camino coach Ray Johnson.

Steal by Henry Lundy was not enough to get Helix past Torrey Pines.

SEMIFINALS

5 University City 75, 1 Torrey Pines 58 (27-3).

The Centurions’ Anthony Hill scored 22 points and held the Falcons’ high-scoring Kyle Armstrong to one field goal.  “I told coach (Tom Medigovich) that I wanted him,” said Hill, who described Armstrong as cocky.

3 El Camino 63, 2 San Pasqual 49 (20-6).

“We wanted to pound it right at (Erik) Meek and take our chances with the referees,” said El Camino center Dee Boyer.  Meek went to the bench with his fourth foul and the Golden Eagles leading, 26-23, at the 6:12 mark of the third quarter.

El Camino, working easily in the low post with Meek out of the game, finished with a 40-23 run.

CHAMPIONSHIP

3 El Camino 68, University City 65.

The Centurions, trailing, 50-36, late in the third quarter, rallied and could have sent the game into overtime but Jerome Price’s 20-foot jump shot with two seconds remaining clanked off the rim.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

2 Glendora 51 (27-5, Southern), 7 University City 45 (24-5).

4 El Camino 92, 5 Compton (22-8, Southern) 78, OT.

Poway’s Kyle Milling rebounded in front of Morse’s Darnell Cherry in Titans’ D-I playoff win.

Wildcats coach Ray Johnson drew up a “home run” with two seconds remaining in regulation play.  Travis Gilley then “circled the bases” with a 18-foot basket that etched a tie at 73 and sent the game into overtime.

The game-tying play, according to writer Pedro Gomez, began under the opposite basket.  Shaun Scurry launched a 55-foot pass toward 6-foot, 9-inch Dee Boyer, who was standing at the free throw line.  Instead of catching the ball, Boyer tapped the pass to Gilley, situated just inside the three-point line.

Compton was done.

Twenty-nine seconds into the extra session Scurry drained a 12-foot shot and El Camino had its first lead since midway of the second quarter.

SEMIFINALS

1 Artesia (27-2, Southern) 74, 4 El Camino 70 (23-7).

The Pioneers’ Ed O’Bannon had 30 points and nine rebounds and six consecutive free throws in the final minutes to keep the Wildcats at a distance.

“We couldn’t get that one spurt to take us over the hump,” said Wildcats Coach Ray Johnson.  “If a couple calls go our way, it might have been a different outcome.”

University’s Greg Santos scored over defense of Lincoln’s Brian Parks in D-III final.

D-III

QUARTERFINALS

St. Augustine 87, Ramona 58 (14-8).

Clairemont 85, Kearny 76 (16-11).

2 Lincoln 78, La Jolla 60 (4-19).

SEMIFINALS

1 University 90, St. Augustine 69 (7-21).

2 Lincoln 106, Clairemont 56 (7-15).

CHAMPIONSHIP

2 Lincoln 83, 1 University 66 (17-7).

Steve Brand of The San Diego Union wrote that “Lincoln Prep held a board meeting last night at Golden Hall.”

The Hornets, outrebounding the University Dons, 54-23, won their third consecutive D-III title.

“We knew all five of our guys would have to crash the boards to have a chance,” said Uni coach Jim Tomey.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

4 Goleta Dos Pueblos (18-13, Southern) 72, 5 University 46 (17-8).

7 Corona Del Mar 67 (20-10, Southern), 2 Lincoln 65 (22-9).

D-IV

QUARTERFINALS

3 Army-Navy 66, West Hills 44 (1-16).

4 Mountain Empire 67, Holtville 58.

Sweetwater’s Joe McDowell maneuvers against Mt. Carmel’s Shane Knight.

SEMIFINALS

1 Coronado 60, 4 Mountain Empire 39 (8-6).

2 Imperial 69, Army-Navy 52 (11-14).

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 Coronado 63, Imperial 53.

The Tigers were 0 for 13 from the field in the third quarter.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

5 Laguna Beach (24-6, Southern) 71, 4 Coronado 37 (19-9).

1 Oxnard Santa Clara (26-0, Southern) 67, 8 Imperial 37 (16-9).

D-V

FIRST ROUND

Calexico Vincent Memorial 51, Borrego Springs (11-10).

La Jolla Country Day 98, Tri-City Christian 52 (7-11).

Marian 61, Calvin Christian 49 (12-12).

The Bishop’s 70, Victory Christian 43 (3-12).

Francis Parker 79, Midway Baptist 66 (7-13).

Lutheran 78, Santa Fe Christian 67 (9-16).

Christian 96, Julian 36 (6-19).

Tony Clark set San Diego Section records with 64 points in playoff versus La Jolla Country Day.

QUARTERFINALS

Christian 103, La Jolla Country Day 65 (18-8).

Tony Clark scored 10, three-point baskets and finished with a San Diego Section record 64 points. “I had no idea how many I had,” Clark told Ed Graney of The San Diego Union.  “I first found out when they announced it.”

Clark became the third San Diego County player with as many as 60 points in one game.  St. Augustine’s Tom Shaules and Julian’s Rob Petrie had 60 in 1957-58 1969-70, respectively, and Madison’s Mitchell Lilly 61 in 1976-77.

Clark had 29 at halftime and 44 when he went to the bench for the final 1:33 of the third quarter.  Christian Coach Randy Wright set Clark free for his 20-point fourth quarter.

The Bishop’s 62, Calexico Vincent Memorial 39.

Marian 59, Lutheran 41 (15-9).

Calipatria-Francis Parker, no score.

SEMIFINALS

Calipatria 47, Marian 39 (9-16).

Christian 57, The Bishop’s 50 (22-5).

Tony Clark scored 18 of Christian’s 20 third-quarter points and the Patriots held on before 2,000 persons at San Dieguito.  Clark scored 40 but was 17×37 from the field.

CHAMPIONSHIP

Christian 65, Calipatria 48.

The Hornets triple-teamed Tony Clark, whose 22 points were his lowest total of the season and half of his 44-point average.

“We won; that’s all that matters,” said Clark.  “The points don’t mean anything.”

Christian teammate Dave Piester stepped up with 20 points, 10 rebounds, and three blocked shots as the Patriots ended Calipatria’s run of three consecutive titles.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

Happy camper Dave Piester celebrated win over Paramount Brethren.

Christian 72, Capistrano St. Margaret (21-7, Southern) 52.

Tony Clark’s 52 points matched the Tartans’.

Canoga Park Baptist (Southern) 67, Calipatria 52 (21-6).

The Hunters broke from a tie score at the end of three quarters with a 29-14 fourth quarter.

SEMIFINALS

Christian 44, Paramount Brethren (20-10, Southern) 43.

CHAMPIONSHIP

Christian 80, Canoga Park Baptist (21-11, Southern) 72.

STATE CHAMPIONSHIP

Colusa (28-2, Northern) 62, Christian 48 (19-12).

Coach’s son Jayson Vossler missed all 12 of his three-point attempts in the first half but buried  another attempt with five minutes left in the game, breaking a 41-41 tie and launching the Redskins on a 21-7 run to the title.

Tony Clark scored 27 points in his final high school game.

Unhappy campers Dave Piester, Malik Jordan, and Kasey Foulk watch Colusa pull away in final minutes.

GIRLS PLAYOFFS

DIVISION I

FIRST ROUND

1 Mt. Carmel 63, Mount Miguel 27 (7-12).

2 Santana 57, Orange Glen 37 (7-16).

Vista 49, Chula Vista 47 (11-13).

Mira Mesa 41, San Diego 34 (11-12).

3 Rancho Buena Vista 81, Hilltop 42 (9-14).

4 Poway, 80, Southwest 31 (9-13).

Fallbrook 59, Bonita Vista 39 (17-6).

Granite Hills 73, Montgomery 59 (17-8).

QUARTERFINALS

1 Mt. Carmel 60, 8 Mira Mesa 34 (12-12).

2 Santana 73, 7 Vista 56 (13-13).

3 Rancho Buena Vista 73, 6 Granite Hills 49 (12-14).

4 Poway 58, 5 Poway 35 (17-11).

Point Loma sought another state championship with (from left) Stacy Wainwright, Robin Rabello, and Tyeast Brown.

SEMIFINALS

2 Santana 57, 3 Rancho Buena Vista 42 (21-7).

“We just wanted to get away from Point Loma,” said Santana coach Wade Vickery of his decision to enter the Sultans in the D-I playoffs instead of going D-II and possibly meeting the Pointers.

1 Mt. Carmel 51, 4 Poway 48 (21-5).

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 Mt. Carmel 56, 2 Santana 55 (21-5).

There were 3,125 persons on their feet in downtown Golden Hall, as Rebecca Aase’s free throw bounced off the rim.  No time remained and Mt. Carmel  dodged a Santana bullet.

The Sundevils, playing their last game under Coach Peggy Brose, who would become athletic director at the new Rancho Bernardo High in the fall, was in front, 48-42, with 5:09 left when Vicki de Jesus (20 points, 17 rebounds) fouled out.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

5 Mt. Carmel 65, 4 Newhall Hart (25-5, Southern) 42.

The Sundevils bused 156 miles and beat a team that had not lost a home game in more than two years.  They led, 40-13, at halftime.

“We have no illusion of winning it,” Peggy Brose told Laura Palmer of the Los Angeles Times the day before.  “We just want to go up there and represent San Diego the best we can.”

The loss was “a little stunning,” understated Indians coach Dave Monroe.

SEMIFINALS

1 Inglewood Morningside (30-3, Southern) 78, 5 Mt. Carmel 42 (23-6).

“I talked about not being intimidated before the game, but we still were,” Sundevils coach Peggy Brose told Ed Graney.

Tara Schwerin got hug from Coach Peggy Brose after Mt. Carmel’s Division I championship.

D-II

FIRST ROUND

1 Point Loma 59, Madison 29 (9-13).

Grossmont 51, Crawford 37 (15-8).

Serra 55, Monte Vista 46 (13-9).

2 San Pasqual 41, Mission Bay 23 (10-14).

Torrey Pines 63, University 28 (12-8).

Oceanside 59, Helix 25 (11-10).

4 Castle Park 64, San Marcos 39 (12-12).

3 El Cajon Valley 63, Carlsbad 52 (11-12).

QUARTERFINALS

1 Point Loma 66, Serra 38 (15-11).

2 San Pasqual 74, Grossmont 48 (13-7).

The Golden Eagles hit a season high in points and all-time scorer Christina Adams had 33 in her final game for the Foothillers.

4 Castle Park 49, Oceanside 42 (18-8).

3 El Cajon Valley 60, Torrey Pines 58 (16-9).

SEMIFINALS

1 Point Loma 53, 4 Castle Park 42 (18-6).

2 San Pasqual 71, 3 El Cajon Valley 59 (21-7).

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 Point Loma 62, 2 San Pasqual 34.

“They couldn’t match up with us,” Pointers coach Lee Trepanier told Steve Brand of the Union after a fifth San Diego Section championship in six years.  “They’re a nice little team, but we were ready.”

Trepanier’s ream did not need a pregame pep talk.  “If I have to preach to them about getting up, I’m in the wrong gym.”

Tyeast Brown scored 25 points and blocked five shots for the Pointers.

Christina Adams set state record with, 38.3 average.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

3 Pasadena Muir (Southern) 56, 6 San Pasqual 39 (24-6).

1 Point Loma 66, 8 West Torrance (23-6, Southern) 36.

SEMIFINALS

1 Point Loma 39, 5 Westminster La Quinta 36.

Tyeast Brown held Amy Jalewalia, the state’s second-leading scorer with a 33.7 average, to eight points and Robin Rabello, an ex-soccer player playing basketball for the first time, scored 14 points and drew 12 rebounds as the host Pointers overcame a two-point deficit after three quarters.

FINALS

3 Pasadena Muir (28-5, Southern) 43, 1 Point Loma 38 (29-4).

“The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh way,” Pointers coach Lee Trepanier said of the loss.  “Our defense played well, but the difference was their defense.  I sure thought we’d score more than ten points in the second half.”

D-III

QUARTERFINALS

3 Our Lady of Peace 74, La Jolla 34 (2-22).

2 University 65, Clairemont 22 (2-18).

4 Kearny 60, Ramona 35 (6-17).

Freshmen twins Melissa (24 points) and Shelly (7 points 12 rebounds, 5 assists) Krause set the pace for the Komets.

Point Loma’s Robin Rabello is congratulated by teammates and assistant coach Dee Trepanier after a big playoff performance.

SEMIFINALS

1 Lincoln 47, 4 Kearny 44 (18-10).

3 Our Lady of Peace 54, 2 University 47 (18-4).

CHAMPIONSHIP

3 Our Lady of Peace 67, 1 Lincoln 60.

The Pilots reversed an earlier, 12-point loss to the Hornets and Coach Yvonne Sanchez noted to Ed Graney, “We went back to what works, straight, man-to-man defense.  I made some coaching mistakes the last time.  I redeemed myself.”

Lincoln’s Sheila Dixon had 29 points and 20 rebounds but “we lost because we didn’t box out and we hurried our shots.”

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

7 Palos Verdes Peninsula Palos Verdes (27-6, Southern) 53, 2 Our Lady of Peace 37 (24-5).

1 Brea-Olinda (31-0, Southern) 66, 8 Lincoln 32 (15-8).

Lone Pine defender outscrambled La Jolla Country Day’s Isabel Schoepflin in D-V playoff.

D-IV

SEMIFINALS

1 Holtville 47, Mountain Empire 28 (5-17).

2 Coronado 42, 4 West Hills 34 (3-22).

CHAMPIONSHIP

Holtville 57, Coronado 31.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

4 Holtville 57, 5 Cerritos Valley Christian (21-6, Southern) 56.

1 Santa Maria St. Joseph (Southern) 89, 8 Coronado 29 (14-12).

SEMIFINALS

1 Santa Maria St. Joseph (27-3, Southern) 71, 4 Holtville 32 (19-10).

Niece of the legendary Terri Mann. Point Loma’s Tyeast Brown was a star in her own right, averaging more than 20 points.

D-V

FIRST ROUND

Julian 74, Calexico Vincent Memorial 44.

Three-time Coast League player of the year Vicki Teter scored a school-record 55 points, elevating her to a tie for fourth behind all time behind leader Terri Mann, (65), Linda Nielson (60) and Sharon turner (60).  Kristen Cummings and Mann also had 55.

The Bishop’s 64, Lutheran 32 (4-8).

Francis Parker 70, Tri-City 11 (4-9).

QUARTERFINALS

2 Christian 71, Francis Parker 34 (10-12).

1 La Jolla Country Day 66, Marian 50 (7-15).

Calvin Christian 69, Julian 29 (11-3).

The Bishop’s 46, Calipatria 40.

SEMIFINALS

1 La Jolla Country Day 59, Calvin Christian 57, OT (14-7).

2 Christian 62, The Bishop’s 57 (11-10).

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 La Jolla Country Day 70, Christian 63.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

5 Lone Pine (23-6, Southern) 57, 4 La Jolla Country Day 53 (18-3).

2 Rosamond (19-7, Central) 43, 7 Christian 34 (12-12).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 




2019-20 Week 11: San Ysidro Cougars Continue to Run

San Ysidro is making noise again. Not enough to earn a top 10 ranking, but the Cougars have won five in a row and scored more than 100 points for the fifth time this season, including a post-poll vote,106-30 victory over Castle Park last night.

The fall of the Trojans marked the third time in the last 12 days that the also identified “Border Boyz”  have reached triple digits.

Century scores are not common, but not rare. There have been hundreds in the thousands of games played in San Diego County since the first, a 104-19 St. Augustine romp over San Diego Vocational at the still-standing Municipal Gym in Balboa Park on Jan. 12, 1952.

MIKEY’S MATES SCORE, TOO

The Cougars are not a one-man (freshman Mikey Williams) show.  Jurien Dixon (551 points, 24.0 average) and Kailen Rains (445 points, 20.2) have added to the firepower of Coach Terry Tucker’s team, which has an 87.1 average.

Dixon, a 6-foot, 4-inch freshman, scored 29 points against Castle Park. Rains had 33 and Williams 24.

Williams leads California with a 32.6 average in 21 games (he missed two) and has scored 685 points. According to Max Preps, Williams ranks 22nd in the country, behind another frosh, Marcus Robinson, who has a 45.3 average for an 8-8 team in Penfield, N.Y.

Jailen Nelson of Carlsbad (24.3) is 23rd, a notch ahead of Dixon, giving the San Diego Section three of the top 25 scorers in California.  Not all teams, however, contribute individual scoring stats to Max Preps.

BROKE 14-YEAR-OLD RECORD

Williams set a County record with 77 points in a 116-42 win over Kearny on Dec. 13, one day short of the 14th anniversary of the 76, by Crawford’s Tyrone Shelley, coached by Tucker, in a 138-26 win over a British Columbia team on Dec. 14, 2005.

The Colts’ outburst, tied for second all-time in the County with Vista (138-57, Bonita Vista, 1992-93), behind La Jolla Country Day (143-60, Mountain Empire, 1991-92), was their only 100-plus effort.

San Ysidro is 15-8 after last night’s game but not yet on the trajectory of that Shelley squad, which was 23-9 and lost to Rancho Santa Margarita, 51-46, in the Southern California Regional playoffs.

A youngster on that Santa Margarita club was a 6-foot, 3-inch sophomore, Klay Thompson, now of much greater renown with the Golden State Warriors.

First-place votes in parenthesis.  NR—No ranked.

Union-Tribune Team

 

Record Points Last Week Max Preps Cal-Hi Sports
1. Cathedral 16-6 (10) 122 T-1 30 Bubble
2 St. Augustine 19-4 (3) 120 3 19 19
3. Torrey Pines 17-4 99 4 44 NR
4. Foothills Christian 15-7 80 T-1 43 NR
5. Francis Parker 16-2 79 7 31 Bubble
6. Mater Dei 17-3 73 5 38 NR
7. Poway 18-4 60 6 37 NR
8. Christian 17-4 39 8 71 NR
9. Santa Fe Christian 16-6 20 9 68 NR
10. Carlsbad 15-7 10 10 134 NR

Others receiving votes: 11. Helix (17-6, 3 points), 12. El Camino (16-5, 3) 13. San Ysidro (14-8, 2), 14. Bonita Vista (16-6, 1).

Panel:  John Maffei (The San Diego Union-Tribune), Terry Monahan, (Union-Tribune) correspondent, Aaron Burgin (Fulltime Hoops), Steve Brand (San Diego Sports Association), John Kentera, Braden Suprenant, (97.3 FM The Fan), Steve (Biff) Dolan (Mountain Country 107.9 FM), Christian Pedersen (SoCal Preps Insider), Bodie DeSilva (scorebooklive.com); Adam Paul (ecpreps.com), Brad Enright (L.A. Court report), Rick Smith (partletonsports.com).




1988-89: Kane Raised Cavers From Depths

As Steve Brand of The San Diego Union wrote, Dennis Kane began preparing the day after San Diego High concluded the 1986-87 season.  The coach moved to quickly put the worst year in school history in the Cavers’ rear view mirror.

San Diego had bottomed out at 0-20 in Kane’s first season.

No Cavers squad, dating to the first in 1904-05, had been so unsuccessful.

“We put the players into a 7 a.m. gym class, shooting 100 times every day,” Kane remembered. “They were so used to losing, they wouldn’t believe in me or themselves.  We asked them to put forth the effort if they wanted to win.

“Our priorities were to establish a ninth-grade program, to get the school credibility, and to stop losing some of our better kids (to other schools or to lack of interest),” said Kane, who eventually built the basketball team its own team room and developed a program for incoming freshmen.

Kane’s players began to feel good about themselves, going 5-2 in a spring league and 10-2 in the summer.  They went from winless to the playoffs, improving to 15-9 in the coach’s second season. The Cavers had been a cumulative 81-161 since 1975-76.

Things came full circle this season.  San Diego lost to Poway in the San Diego Section Division I finals, 64-49, but the 20-5 record was the best since 1981-82 and the Cavers survived despite the late-season loss of 21-point scorer Raynard Wells because of academic ineligibility.

Chris Stevens (left) and Kyle Armstrong of Torrey Pines surround Artesia’s Deaundre Austin.

HIGH REGARD

Three San Diego teams were seeded No. 1 in their divisions for the Southern California Regional tournament, Torrey Pines in boys Division II, Lincoln in D-III, and the Vista girls in D-II.  Point Loma was a second seed in girls D-1.

BOYS PLAYOFFS

(Seedings in italics)

DIVISION I

FIRST ROUND

Hilltop 71, Mount Miguel 56 (2-21).

San Dieguito 74, Bonita Vista 52 (5-18).

SECOND ROUND

1 Poway 89, Hilltop 46 (11-17).

2 San Diego 62, San Dieguito 51 (8-18).

3 Sweetwater 60, Mira Mesa 51 (4-22).

The Marauders winners of four games against 21 losses, scored the first 10 points and led, 24-6, after one quarter.

“We told the team to take the game little by little, that we would climb back into it,” said David Ybarra, whose Red Devils improved to 25-2.

4 Monte Vista 64, Chula Vista 40 (13-15).

5 Mt. Carmel 71, Santana 49 (13-10).

6 Valhalla 77, Orange Glen 69 (7-19).

7 Southwest 57, Patrick Henry (13-12).

8 Granite Hills 74, Morse 59 (10-13).

Morse led, 15-0, after four minutes.  After a timeout, “to calm the jitters,” said coach Jeff Armstrong, the Eagles outscored the Tigers by 30 in the last 28 minutes, led by John Russell’s 22 points.

QUARTERFINALS

5 Mt. Carmel 79, 4 Monte Vista 73 (18-5).

6 Valhalla 97, 3 Sweetwater 89, 2 OT (25-3).

Tony Clark scored 47 points and Rafid Kiti, recovering from a reported collapsed lung sustained during a school day, had 32 to upset the Red Devils, led by Carlos Campbell’s 34.

1 Poway 92, 8 Granite Hills 85 (18-9).

Adam Jones (31) and Jay Blankenbeckler (30) provided the firepower that saved the Titans from an upset.

2 San Diego 59, 7 San Diego Southwest 55 (20-8).

“When we lost Raynard, I told Clark James (23 points) and Milton Miller (21) they would now be the offense,” said Cavers coach Dennis Kane.

SEMIFINALS

2 San Diego 79, 6 Valhalla 67 (19-9).

1 Poway 52, 5 Mt. Carmel 46 (18-9).

CHAMPIONSHIP

Poway 64, San Diego 49 (20-5).

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

L.A. Crenshaw 79 (22-2, L.A. City), Poway 62 (23-5).

Dominguez’ DiJon (Mustard) Bernard dribbles away from Torrey Pines’ Kevin Flanagan in Southern California playoff, won by the Dons, 78-70.

D-II

FIRST ROUND

Escondido 76, Hoover 51 (2-23).

Mission Bay 67, El Capitan 58 (9-17).

San Pasqual 72, Mar Vista 53 (6-19).

Carlsbad 52, Kearny 49 (10-16).

“They didn’t win this game; we lost it” complained Komets coach Bill Peterson “We’re normally a very good free-throw shooting team.” Kearny was 5×15, the Lancers’ 13×15.

Grossmont 61, University City 59, OT (16-10).

Todd Jaeger’s basket with three seconds remaining in the extra session elevated Grossmont (7-17) in the postseason’s first stunner.

Fallbrook 76, San Marcos 47 (7-18).

Rancho Buena Vista 77, Castle Park 72 (8-16).

Oceanside 73, Vista 55 (6-19).

Erik Meek, 6-foot, 9-inch San Pasqual sophomore had season promising outstanding career.

SECOND ROUND

1 Torrey Pines 71, Escondido 50 (13-12).

7 San Pasqual 66, 2 El Camino 59 (20-6).

Another stunner. San Pasqual was only 13-11 but 6-foot, 9-inch sophomore Erik Meek had 24 points and 24 rebounds.

3 Point Loma 58, Carlsbad 48 (8-17).

4 Helix 45, Grossmont 43 (7-18).

5 Rancho Buena Vista-La Jolla, no score (15-10).

6 Serra 62, Fallbrook 53 (13-13).

7 Madison 69, Oceanside 59 (13-11).

8 Crawford 54, Mission Bay 52 (16-9).

QUARTERFINALS

3 Point Loma 78, 6 Serra 61 (15-10).

Leading, 51-48, Point Loma advanced after making 16×20 free throws in the last quarter.

4 Helix 73, Rancho Buena Vista 59 (14-14).

1 Torrey Pines 91, 8 Crawford 43 (17-9).

7 Madison 73, San Pasqual 71 (13-12).

Monte Bohannon’s rebound and reverse layup with two seconds remaining came off a missed shot by Robby Robinson, who led the Warhawks with 30 points.

–Erik Meek kept his unseeded team in the hunt with 39 points, 24 rebounds, and eight blocked shots.

SEMIFINALS

7 Madison 58, 3 Point Loma 55 (17-11).

1 Torrey Pines 58, 4 Helix 40 (19-7).

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 Torrey Pines 75,  7 Madison 49.

Torrey Pines claimed its first title since 1977-78 and headed to the state tournament as the No. 2-ranked team in the division by Cal-Hi Sports.

Courtie Miller led Torrey Pines to school’s all-time best record.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

Torrey Pines 62, Lakewood Artesia 51 (22-7, Southern).

The Falcons went on a 13-2 run after the Pioneers’ Ed O’Bannon received a third personal foul with 5:22 remaining in the first half.

The Falcons led, 45-28, early in the third quarter and withstood a run that cut Artesia’s deficit to eight with 2:16 left in the game,

After sitting until halftime, O’Bannon, considered by some as the state’s best player, finished with 23 points and 6 rebounds.

San Bernardino 78, Madison 54 (17-14).

The Warhawks were out of it after a 28-10 first quarter by the host Cardinals.

SEMIFINALS

Compton Dominguez (26-4, Southern) 78, Torrey Pines 70 (32-2).

The Falcons’ inside play, Courtie Miller 31 points, 8 rebounds, and Kevin Flanagan, 16 points, 8 rebounds, was not enough to overcome their 4×20 shooting from the three-point line.  Dominguez was 8×12.

Torrey Pines fell behind by 21 points in the first half, fought back to trail, 42-40, and then was shaken by a 17-2 run by the visiting Dons.

The Falcons came back again to lag, 67-61, with 3:52 remaining but got no closer.

D-III

Ramona 83, St. Augustine 67 (2-19).

SEMIFINALS

1 Lincoln 95, Ramona 54 (19-4).

The victory was the 100th for Hornets coach Ron Loneski, who was Wilt Chamberlain’s college roommate as a freshman at Kansas and a starter on the Jayhawks’ national collegiate runners-up as a senior.

2 Clairemont 72, University 60 (11-11).

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 Lincoln 89,  2 Clairemont 59.

Is it how you dress?  Lincoln coach Ron Loneski wore a green blazer and tie.  Clairemont coach Greg Lee  was in shorts and sweat shirt.

Joe Temple was offensive thrust for Lincoln, averaging school record 27.1 points and scoring 758.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

Inglewood Morningside (22-5, Southern) 81, Lincoln 65 (27-2).

“It’s the coach’s job to have his players ready,” said Lincoln’s Ron Loneski.  “I take the blame.  We weren’t ready.”

Leading, 33-32, at halftime, Lincoln couldn’t come back when the Monarchs, who were an at-large entry after losing in the Southern Section playoffs, converted two technical foul free throws and stole an inbounds pass for a basket and 44-35 lead.

Trabuco Hills (23-6, Southern) 87, Clairemont 60 (13-17).

D-IV

SEMIFINALS

 1 Christian 74, 4 Holtville 47.

2 Coronado 76, 3 Army-Navy 57.

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 Christian 70,  2 Coronado 60.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

Whittier Christian 70 (23-6, Southern), Coronado 58 (11-15).

The Islanders led, 45-44, entering the fourth quarter but turned the ball over four times in the final five minutes.

Orange Lutheran 72 (24-4, Southern), Christian 64 (14-12).

Valhalla was relevant with Rafid Kiti (scoring) and Tony Clark.

D-V

FIRST ROUND

3 Marian 88, Tri-City 26.

4 Calipatria 66, Victory Christian 30 (3-12).

5 La Jolla Country Day 96, Borrego Springs 51 (6-17).

6 Lutheran 53, Julian 41 (4-17).

7 Francis Parker 54, Calvin Christian 44 (7-12).

8 Midway Baptist 59, Calexico Vincent Memorial 57.

QUARTERFINALS

1 The Bishop’s 55, 8 Midway Baptist 38 (15-11).

2 Imperial 67, 7 Francis Parker 51 (20-5).

3 Marian 57, 6 Lutheran 40 (15-9).

4 Calipatria 65, 5 La Jolla Country Day 56 (15-10).

SEMIFINALS

2 Imperial 52, 3 Marian 45 (7-16).

4 Calipatria 47, 1 The Bishop’s 35 (21-3).

The Hornets were 13×16 on free throws in fourth quarter.

CHAMPIONSHIP

4 Calipatria 58, 2 Imperial 45.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

The Bishop’s 58, Calipatria 57 (18-8).

SEMIFINALS

Reedley Immanuel (22-5, Central) 45, The Bishop’s 35 (22-4).

The Eagles reversed a 51-48 loss to the Knights in last year’s regional.

GIRLS PLAYOFFS

DIVISION I

FIRST ROUND

Mount Miguel 51, Hilltop 42.

Montgomery 38, Granite Hills 31.

San Diego 44, Sweetwater 43.

Cavers advanced on Melanie Covey’s three-point basket at the buzzer.

Christine Enger was dominant during career at Vista.

SECOND ROUND

1 Point Loma 85, Mount Miguel 22.

2 Santana 75, Montgomery 24 (8-15).

3 Mira Mesa 66, San Diego 31 (11-14).

4 Poway 54, Monte Vista 36 (8-17).

5 Bonita Vista 55, Orange Glen 51 (7-19).

6 Patrick Henry 52, San Dieguito 39 (8-15).

7 Mt. Carmel 65, Morse 38 (11-14).

8 Chula Vista 51, Southwest 49 (15-10).

QUARTERFINALS

3 Mira Mesa 52, 6 Patrick Henry 43 (18-8).

4 Poway 65, 5 Bonita Vista 45 (21-6).

1 Point Loma 64, 8 Chula Vista 12 (13-13).

2 Santana 54, 7 Mt. Carmel 46 (14-13).

SEMIFINALS

3 Mira Mesa 63, 2 Santana 38.

1 Point Loma 48, 4 Poway 29.

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 Point Loma 44, 3 Mira Mesa 25.

“Yes, it was an ugly game, but a great defensive game,” said Pointers coach Lee Trepanier of his team’s fifth section title in six years.  “I guess you could say the first four were Terri Mann’s (the all-America Pointer) and this one was mine.”

Monica Filer averaged 22.1 points and was Point Loma’s floor leader.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

Point Loma 51, Santa Barbara 29 (21-9).

The Pointers’ pressing, man-to-man defense harassed the visiting Golden Tornado.

“Their coach. Andrew Butcher, asked me if we ever play a zone defense,” coach Lee Trepanier related to Pedro Gomez of The San Diego Union.  “I told him, ‘When the sky turns gray and the atom bomb goes off we might consider it.’  You have to play man-to-man on this level.”

SEMIFINALS

Point Loma 54, Newhall Hart 47.

CHAMPIONSHIP

Inglewood Morningside 45 (32-1, Southern). Point Loma 44 (32-2).

Six-foot, 5-inch Lisa Leslie’s turn-around jump shot with 57 seconds left held up for the Monarchs, although Point Loma could have won but for a missed shot with five seconds remaining.

Leslie scored 22 points and had 13 rebounds after sitting with 4 fouls for 11 minutes.

The Pointers’ Monica Filner was brilliant in her final game, scoring 20 points with 9 assists and leading the Pointers back from a 17-0 deficit at the outset.

“I’m shedding no tears,” Filer told Steve Brand.  “We did the best we could.  I enjoyed every minute of this.”

D-II

FIRST ROUND

San Pasqual 53, Crawford 32 (16-9).

Fallbrook 1, Hoover 0, forfeit (2-23).

Helix 58, Escondido 26 (2-21).

University City 60, El Cajon Valley 50 (10-12).

Mar Vista 59, Grossmont 43 (6-18).

Valhalla 38, Madison 36 (6-18).

Rancho Buena Vista 59, Kearny 30 (6-17).

Serra 52, El Camino 46 (4-17).

El Capitan 53, Carlsbad 52 (6-15).

SECOND ROUND

1 Vista 63, San Pasqual 41 (9-16).

Christine Enger buried the Golden Eagles with 41 points, 29 rebounds, and eight blocked shots.

2 San Marcos 72, Serra 44 (5-19).

Susie O’Brien, the County’s top scorer, upped her 29.9 average with 47 points.

3 Mission Bay 58, Valhalla 41 (7-18).

4 Castle Park 61, Mar Vista 44 (11-14).

5 Oceanside 38, University City 20 (7-16).

6 Torrey Pines 54, Rancho Buena Vista 49 (15-11).

7 La Jolla 61, El Capitan 51 (18-7).

8 Fallbrook 51, Helix 48 (12-10).

QUARTERFINALS

3 Mission Bay 53, 6 Torrey Pines 48 (16-10).

5 Oceanside 49, 4 Castle Park 42 (20-7).

1 Vista 72, 8 Fallbrook 44 (13-13).

2 San Marcos 59, 7 La Jolla 40 (16-10).

Mission Bay’s Christina Willis (left) fights for possession with San Marcos’ Danette Norrid.

SEMIFINALS

1 Vista 64, 5 Oceanside 34 (18-9).

2 San Marcos 63, 3 Mission Bay 45 (21-7).

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 Vista 65, 2 San Marcos 51.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

Vista 82, Anaheim Canyon (22-6, Southern) 38.

Panther Christine Enger scored 43 points, pulled 27 rebounds, and blocked 11 shots.

Anaheim Katella 56, San Marcos 39 (21-8).

SEMIFINALS

Vista 59, Placentia Valencia 38 (21-10, Southern).

Vista’s Dana Christopherson (left) battles for rebound against Anaheim Katella.

CHAMPIONSHIP

Anaheim Katella (29-3, Southern) 56, Vista 50 (28-4).

Christine Enger and Katella’s Joni Easterly battled for a rebound with 5:05 remaining in the game. A game official’s whistle blew.  It could have been Easterly’s fifth personal foul but it was Enger’s fourth.  Easterly broke a 48-48 tie with two free throws and the Knights scratched out a few more points.

“That was a good call,” said Enger.  “I did reach over to get the rebound.  It was a dumb foul.  Sometimes you get away with it; sometimes you don’t.”

Enger finished with 20 points, 12 rebounds, and eight blocks.  Easterly had 24 points and 13 rebounds.

D-III

4 Lincoln 58, 5 Clairemont 32 (12-16).

SEMIFINALS

1 Ramona 62, 4 Lincoln 52 (16-6).

3 University 51, 2 Our Lady of Peace 44.

CHAMPIONSHIP

3 University 54, 1 Ramona 46.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

Brea-Olinda (28-2, Southern) 81, Our Lady of Peace 36 (19-7).

Reedley (12-13, Central)  54, Ramona 25 (19-5).

Palm Desert (23-3, Southern) 65, University 50 (13-9).

Anaheim Canyon was no match for Vista’s Christine Enger.

D-IV

4 Mountain Empire 61, 5 West Hills 26.

SEMIFINALS

3 Coronado 39, 2 Christian 38.

1 Holtville 48, 4 Mountain Empire 26.

CHAMPIONSHIP

1 Holtville 44, 3 Coronado 30.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

QUARTERFINALS

Oxnard Santa Clara 54 (25-1, Southern), Coronado 24 (13-12).

D-V

FIRST ROUND

4 Marian 1, Victory Christian 0, forfeit.

5 Julian 66, Calexico Vincent Memorial 23.

6 The Bishop’s 73, Lutheran 31.

7 Borrego Springs 47, Tri-City 9.

8 Francis Parker-Midway Baptist, no score.

QUARTERFINALS

1 Calvin Christian 56, 8 Francis Parker 27 (6-11).

2 La Jolla Country Day 53, 7 Borrego Springs 18 (10-12).

4 Marian 36, 5 Julian 31 (12-11).

3 Calipatria 37, 6 The Bishop’s 29 (9-9)

SEMIFINALS

1 Calvin Christian 59, 4 Marian 41 (3-20).

2 La Jolla Country Day 42, 3 Calipatria 41.

CHAMPIONSHIP

2 La Jolla Country Day 49, 1 Calvin Christian 47.

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

L.A. Pilgrim (21-3, Southern) 56, La Jolla Country Day 54 (17-6).

Hemet Baptist (23-3, Southern) 39, Calvin Christian 38 (22-3).