1984-85: Zarecky’s Red Devils Runnin’…and Travelin’
Sweetwater, the San Diego Section’s International team.
After trips to Hawaii and Canada in recent years, Coach Gary Zarecky’s Red Devils visited the Continent this season.
They played four games in Yugoslavia after Christmas, meeting some of that basketball-savvy nation’s top junior teams.
The roadrunners from National City also found time to set a San Diego Section record for most points in one game.
Sweetwater’s 136-48 victory over Coronado in the season opener represented the 10th highest score by any team in the history of California high school hoops.
The 48 points in one quarter was the second highest and the 79 points in one half tied for fourth.
STATE SINGLE-GAME HIGHS (through 1984-85 season, courtesy Cal-Hi Sports)
YEAR
TEAM
OPPONENT
SCORE
1966-67
Geyserville
Middletown
150-81
1965-66
L.A. Jefferson
L.A. Washington
147-87
1952-53
L.A. Jefferson
Gardena
144-34
1964-65
L.A. Jefferson
Gardena
140-67
1971-72
L.A. Jefferson
L.A. Washington
140-70
1980-81
Gardena Serra
L.A. Salesian
140-59
1971-72
L.A. Jefferson
L.A. Washington
139-64
1972-73
San Bernardino Aquinas
Riverside Sherman Indian
138-60
1971-72
L.A. Daniel Murphy
Lennox
137-39
1984-85
Sweetwater
Coronado
136-48
BELGRADE INVITATIONAL CHALLENGE
Sweetwater 79, Belgrade Zvezda 67.
The Yugoslavian team, with a 19-2 record and a front line measuring 6-feet, 8 inches, 6-8, and 6-6, had trouble defending Mahlon Williams and Howard Scott, who each had 20 points.
KK Crvena Zvezda 94, Sweetwater 89.
The Reds Devils lost to a 26-1 team that, according to Coach Gary Zarecky, will play 90 games this season and has a starting lineup measuring 6-10, 6-9, 6-7, 6-6, and 6-1.
The Yugoslav team didn’t take control “until the referees fouled out four of our starters in the last four minutes of the game,” said Zarecky.
Guard Howard Scott was the lone ‘Devil starter to last through the final whistle.
Sweetwater 86, Prvi Partizan 65.
Mahlon Williams led Sweetwater with 17 points.
Sweetwater 90, Tito Vio Uzice 65.
Mahlon Williams’ 18 points led 11 Red Devils scorers.
The Red Devils won the final game, leaving with a 4-1 record, when they defeated another team from Yugoslavia, 116-114.
1984-85: It’s Poway’s Way Again
Sweetwater fired a season-opening shot to remember on Nov. 21, exploding for 136 points against Coronado in the first game (Seach 1984-85: Zarecky’s Red Devils Runnin’…andTravelin’), but the Red Devils came up short again in the playoffs as Poway, now a team of mostly juniors, ran away with the San Diego Section 3-A title.
Other moments from a long season:
11/28/84
Poway cemented its status as the team to beat come late February with a first week, 89-51 rout of Morse, an Eastern League stalwart and expected postseason contender.
The Titans outscored the Tigers, 50-23, in the second half. Jud Buechler scored 26 points.
12/12/84
“He told us if we kept playing like we had in the first half, we could watch the second,” said Poway center John Colborne.
Trailing, 31-30, at halftime, the Titans straightened out at Point Loma and eased to a 75-63 victory, punctuated by a 25-6 third quarter.
“Poway is the best team I’ve seen in San Diego since Bill Walton was at Helix and, because of their guards, Poway might be better than that Helix team,” said Pointers coach John May.
Colborne, hearing Coach Neville Saner loud and clear, led with 26 points and 14 rebounds.
12/14/84
Sixteen days after a blowout loss to Poway, Morse defeated No. 3-ranked and 9-0 Sweetwater, 80-71, as Paul Bryant scored 22 of his 28 points in the second half.
Perhaps the Red Devils were looking ahead, far ahead. They would leave in two days for a Christmas Vacation trip to Europe and play in a major event in Yugoslavia.
Sweetwater coach Gary Zarecky, his team buttressed by Castle Park transfers Mahlon Williams and Sean Styles, continued to showcase his team.
The Red Devils in previous years played in Canada, Hawaii, and at the prestigious tournament in Hobbs, New Mexico.
1/8/85
Devin Moran scored 34 points and Serra set a school record for points in a 92-72 victory over Mt. Carmel.
Point Loma made 6 of 7 free throw attempts in the last minute to edge Kearny, 76-72.
1/16/85
Patrick Henry improved to 15-0 with a 69-67 win over visiting Morse. The Patriots called up sophomore Darren Thrower from the junior varsity on the day of the game and Thrower successfully handled the ball against the Tigers’ baseline-to-baseline press.
(Twenty days later the Patriots moved to 21-0 by surviving two overtimes and winning at Morse, 63-60).
–Monte Vista led, 17-3, and 38-20 but El Capitan rallied for a 69-64, overtime victory in a game that matched teams with 7-0 Grossmont League records.
–El Camino’s Sharon Turner set a girls San Diego Section record with 60 points in the Wildcats’ 121-16 win over Ramona. Turner, 29×36 shooting from the field, brought her recent, four-game total to 197 points
–John Colborne was sidelined with an ankle injury but 6-6 Dominick Johnson, son of legendary San Diego High athlete and 16-season major league baseball standout Deron Johnson, scored 28 points and added 17 rebounds in an 80-65 triumph over Orange Glen.
1/23/84
The Point Loma girls set a San Diego Section record with their 45th consecutive win, 62-33 at Patrick Henry.
Fallbrook held the record of 44 in the 1977-78 and ’78-79 seasons.
1/25/84
Chula Vista, loser of its first four, won its 13th game in 14 with a 95-44 rout of San Diego Southwest as it prepared for a February battle with blood rival Sweetwater.
“I coach the talent,” 13-year Spartans coach Mike Collins replied to a compliment from Jeff Savage of the Evening Tribune. “We were taller last year and this year we’re shorter but quicker. We do what we have to.”
–John Colborne was back after a two-game injury but Poway struggled to get to 17-0 and 7-0 in the Palomar League with a 62-59 victory at Vista.
Dominick Johnson set a career high with 30 points and Jud Buechler added 14 for the Titans.
–Hoover came within two points of the school record in a 103-68 win over St. Augustine. The Cardinals defeated Christian, 105-46, in 1981-82.
2/2/85
Oceanside was 5×14 from the free-throw line, El Camino 11×12, including eight in a row in the final 1:21, to lock a 51-47 victory in a battle of Avocado League rivals.
“That’s the way it’s gone all season,” noted Oceanside coach Bill Christopher of the team’s lack of success at the line. “No, make that all decade.”
2/8/85
Poway’s John Colborne missed another game because of flu and Torrey Pines sprung the upset of the season, 55-53, in the Falcons’ gym.
The victory elevated Torrey to 11-11 on the season and reduced the Titans to 19-1, leaving only Patrick Henry undefeated, 22-0.
–El Capitan clinched a playoff spot with a 46-36 win over Helix in a game that erupted with 1:32 left.
–A Helix foul touched off a melee in which both benches emptied and about 100 fans, players, and peace-keepers swarmed the court.
–No one was ejected. Game officials couldn’t determine who the instigator was.
BOYS SCORING LEADERS
NAME
TEAM
GAMES
POINTS
AVERAGE
Ron Howard
Vista
26
520
20.0 (10)
Howard Wright
Patrick Henry
25
501
20.04 (9)
Bill Donley
Christian
22
500
22.7 (1)
Jim Tatum
Santana
23
497
21.60 (3)
Brad Milhoan
Kearny
24
496
20.66 (5T)
Sam Aguirre
Hoover
24
475
19.8
T. Shawcroft
Granite Hills
23
465
20.2 (8)
Mahlon Williams
Sweetwater
28
473
16.9
Williams
Hoover
24
465
19.4
Paul Bryant
Morse
22
459
20.86 (4)
Dean
Madison
21
455
21.67 (2)
Dominick Johnson
Poway
25
451
18.2
Steve Burroughs
El Capitan
24
438
18.2
Edgar Harvey
Chula Vista
26
441
16.96
Larry Willson
Sweetwater
22
448
20.36 (7)
Robert Jones
El Cajon Valley
21
434
20.66 (5T)
Demetrius Lafitte
Monte Vista
24
430
17.9
Bay Dean
Chula Vista
26
426
16.4
White
Carlsbad
22
406
18.5
Darnell Woods
Chula Vista
25
406
16.24
Markowitz
Army-Navy
21
395
19.75
Jeff Barry
Santana
23
399
17.3
John Colborne
Poway
23
390
16.95
Pelletier
Valhalla
23
390
16.95
Sommer
Escondido
20
387
19.3
David Fulmer
Bonita Vista
23
382
16.6
Kennedy
Torrey Pines
23
382
16.6
Billings, Mountain Empire, 16×285, 19.0. Karl Rumpelhart, The Bishop’s 14×255, 18.2.
GIRLS
NAME
TEAM
GAMES
POINTS
AVERAGE
Sharon Turner
El Camino
29
863
31.7 (1)
Terri Mann
Point Loma
27
680
25.2 (2)
Paula Mascari
Monte Vista
25
599
23.96 (3)
Chris Sherman
Santana
24
518
21.58 (4)
Karen Chariker
Clairemont
22
471
21.4 (5)
Hranek
Vista
24
448
18.66
Evans
El Camino
27
441
16.3
Michelle Wilkes
Bonita Vista
23
431
18.7
Heidi Erpelding
University
24
424
17.7
Sheri Johnson
Santana
23
416
18.08
Donna Matthews
Hilltop
24
404
16.8
Julie Evans
Hilltop
18
402
22.33
PLAYOFFS
BOYS
3-A
QUARTERFINALS
Patrick Henry 80, Vista 58 (13-11).
Morse 76, Monte Vista 57 (22-2).
The third-ranked Monarchs had led the County with a defensive scoring average of 43.7.
The Tigers 5-foot, 11-inch Paul Bryant scored 29 points and said, “I’m used to playing under pressure, usually against cats taller than me.”
Poway 106, Bonita Vista 51 (14-9).
Dominick Johnson scored 27 points and the Titans, opening with a 35-7 first quarter, came within two points of the school record, set in 1973-74 against San Dieguito.
Sweetwater 77, El Capitan 69 (18-6).
SEMIFINALS
Morse 71, Patrick Henry 64 (23-2).
Overflow crowd of 2,700 persons at Serra saw the Tigers avenge two losses to Patriots as substitute Deshang Weaver, who played at Lincoln last season, scored 18 points and “gave us an emotional lift,” said Morse coach Ron Davis.
Poway 70, Sweetwater 64 (24-4).
The Titans’ Big Three of Dominick Johnson (23), Jud Buechler (17), and John Colborne (15) led an early, 17-8 run and the Red Devils never caught up.
–“If we play our game, hard to defense us,” said Johnson. “We’re a year older, we’re much more mature, and we’re not selfish.”
CHAMPIONSHIP
Poway 87, Morse 63 (15-7).
Johnson (23), Colborne and Buechler, 20 each, combined to match the Tigers’ total, before 7,618 persons at the Sports Arena.
“We’re not the Cinderella team we were last year.” said Coach Neville Saner.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL
L.A. Crenshaw 79, Poway 61 (24-2).
A crowd of more than 2,500 at Mira Mesa watched Poway hang in, trailing only 40-35 in the third quarter.
“They just keep coming at you; they never rest,” said the Titans’ Andy Byrne.
“This is an excellent team,” said the Cougars’ Stevie Thompson. “When we came here we didn’t think they’d be tough. They were a three-A team from San Diego and we just didn’t think they’d be very good.”
2-A
QUARTERFINALS
Oceanside 51, Hoover 47 (20-5).
El Camino 72, Hilltop 60 (9-17).
Hilltop crept to 39-38, but “I didn’t think we were in any danger,” Wildcats coach Ray Johnson told Bud Maloney of the Evening Tribune. “If you’ve seen our team play you would know we go to sleep at times.”
Chula Vista 62, Kearny 61 (18-7).
George Brynd’s two free throws with six seconds left climaxed the Spartans 11-point comeback in fourth quarter.
Mission Bay 56, Crawford 53 (11-11).
SEMIFINALS
Mission Bay 60, El Camino 52 (21-3).
Before Ray Johnson’s boys squad took the floor against and the underdog Buccaneers, Johnson coached the girls’ team to its win over San Marcos. There would not be an El Camino double final in 2-A.
Oceanside 42, Chula Vista 40 (19-7).
Junior Seau swatted George Brynd’s shot into the stands with one second left at Serra High to preserve the Pirates’ win.
CHAMPIONSHIP
Oceanside 63, Mission Bay 40 (19-6).
Pirates led only 23-21 at halftime.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL
Easton Washington Union 50, Oceanside 32 (19-7).
The Panthers were of a Fresno suburb and members of the Central Section of the state CIF.
1-A
COASTAL LEAGUE PLAYOFFS
Army-Navy 73, La Jolla Country Day 52.
Lutheran 68, The Bishop’s 66.
SEMIFINALS
Lutheran 67, Army-Navy 57 (20-4).
CHAMPIONSHIP
Lutheran 61, Imperial 51.
“Once we got the ice off the rim we started hitting,” said Knights coach Michael Heidtbrink after the Mountain-Desert League playoff-winning Tigers took a 14-5 lead.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL
Avenal 74, Lutheran 61 (21-5).
BOYS CENTURY CLUB
TEAM
OPPONENT
SCORE
Sweetwater
Coronado
136-48
Sweetwater
Mar Vista
123-54
Sweetwater
Yugoslavian Club Team
116-114
Sweetwater
Mar Vista
115-36
Sweetwater
Southwest
112-39
Sweetwater
Kearny
107-83
Chula Vista
Marian
107-67
La Jolla Country Day
Victory Christian
104-34
Hoover
St. Augustine
103-68
Poway
Bonita Vista
106-51
Sweetwater
Castle Park
100-68
Poway
Fallbrook
100-44
Sweetwater
Chula Vista
100-94
GIRLS PLAYOFFS
QUARTERFINALS
3-A
Point Loma 71, Grossmont 21 (14-5).
The 23-0 Pointers converted an astounding 24 steals into easy baskets, winning their 70th in a row at home and 52nd consecutive.
Fallbrook 68, Madison 48 (12-7).
Santana 56, Sweetwater 50 (14-7).
Chris Sherman’s 25 points and 11 rebounds helped Santana (23-0) stay undefeated.
Mt. Carmel 69, Bonita Vista 66 (17-6).
Donna Gutierrez’ two free throws with 33 seconds left closed out the Sundevils’ upset of the 10th-ranked Barons.
SEMIFINALS
Point Loma 63, Mt. Carmel 29 (17-8).
The Sundevils committed four fouls in a rowdy first minute, “tactically” meaning to keep the Pointers from scoring field goals. Point Loma was scoreless from the field in the first 4:33 but free throws put the Pointers ahead, 5-1.
Fallbrook 58, Santana 53 (24-1).
“We were scared of their record, but we also thought we wouldn’t be here if we didn’t deserve it,” said the Warriors Nicole Jann, who scored 23 points and pulled 10 rebounds.
CHAMPIONSHIP
Point Loma 86, Fallbrook 52 (20-5).
Terri Mann’s 31 points included 27 in the second half, plus 15 of her 27 rebounds. Fallbrook, trailing, 40-25, at the half, called off its press.
–“I hoped it wasn’t Terri’s night, so we tried to stop some other things in the second half,” said Fallbrook Coach Buck White.
–“Then,” White added, “she went to work.”
–The move up to 3-A from 2-A this season mattered not to coach Lee Trepanier’s team.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL
DIVISION I
Point Loma 63, L.A. Crenshaw 51.
“That number 52 is the best around, period,” gushed Crenshaw coach Major Dennis. “She just intimidated us in the first half and by the time we realized she was just human, it was too late.”
Dennis was describing the Pointers’ Terri Mann to writer Steve Brand. Mann had 27 points and 17 rebounds.
Point Loma 59, Delano 49.
Terri Mann sat out almost seven minutes of the third quarter with four fouls but finished with 20 points, 16 rebounds, eight blocked shots, and seven steals
“I wasn’t worried at all,” claimed Pointers coach Lee Trepanier.
STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
Point Loma 53 (28-0), S.F. Wilson 48 (26-3).
Terri Mann drained a free throw on the front end of a 1-and-1, spun, raised her fist, and smiled. The point gave Point Loma a three-point lead with 16 seconds remaining.
The Pointers scored again and held off San Francisco Wilson for the championship at Oakland-Alameda Coliseum Arena.
–The 6-foot, 1-imch sophomore Mann scored 30 points, collected 17 rebounds, six blocked shots, and had 3 steals.
2-A
QUARTERFINALS
El Camino 96, Clairemont 42 (10-13).
University 54, Southwest 34 (12-6).
Hilltop 55, Crawford 41 (14-7).
San Marcos 55, Lincoln 50, OT (8-6).
Robin Paladino scored 27 points, forced overtime with a layup with six seconds left, and clinched for the Knights with four free throws in the extra period.
SEMIFINALS
El Camino 65, San Marcos 35 (21-6).
University 53, Hilltop 49 (19-5).
Heidi Erpelding scored 22 of Uni’s 29 points in the first half and 34 overall as the Dons, 17-point losers to the Lancers earlier in the season, scored an upset.
CHAMPIONSHIP
El Camino 75, University 42 (21-4).
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL
DIVISION II
El Camino 64, Easton Washington 58.
The Wildcats had to hold on after building a 53-35, third-quarter lead.
STATE CHAPIONSHIP
Chico Pleasant Valley 63, El Camino 49 (27-2).
The school that lost to Point Loma in the state D-II finals in 1983-84 had a 21-1 advantage at the free throw line.
“The real key though was they broke our press,” Wildcats Coach Ray Johnson told Steve Brand. “We usually get a lot of points off turnovers.”
El Camino gave up the ball 26 times, compared to 17 for the Vikings.
The Wildcats were called for 25 fouls to 11 for the champions.
El Camino trailed, 49-43, with 6:17 remaining.
1-A
COASTAL LEAGUE PLAYOFFS
La Jolla Country Day 71, The Bishop’s 31.
Calvin Christian 45, Borrego Springs 33.
COASTAL LEAGUE SEMIFINALS
La Jolla Country Day 62, Calvin Christian 42.
CHAMPIONSHIP
La Jolla Country Day 41, Holtville 34*.
The Torres survived nine, first-quarter turnovers (the losing Vikings had 11) and remained undefeated with an 18-game winning streak.
*Won Mountain-Desert League playoff.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL
DIVISION III
Woodlake 62, La Jolla Country Day 48 (18-1).
TOURNAMENT SEASON
There were at least 17 involving boys’ teams before and after the New Year and probably more, as many results were not reported or publishedThe majors were the 17th Lt. Jim Mitchell, hosted by San Dieguito; the 38th Kiwanis, and the so named Belgrade Invitational Challenge (Search: 1984-85: “Those Travelin’…) featuring global traveler Sweetwater and some of Yugoslavia’s top junior teams.
Others included the Mt. Helix, Grossmont, Peninsula Classic, Santana, Hilltop, Bonita Vista Baron-Optimist, Rohr-Aztec, and Mountain Empire that were played locally, and out-of-town competitions Las Vegas Red Rock, Chino, San Jose Valley Christian, Wilmington Banning, Lake Elsinore, and Santa Barbara Don Volpi.
LT. JIM MITCHELL
Originally known as the Mustang Optimist in 1961-62, for the last 17 years the tournament honored the late San Dieguito High star who was killed in the Viet Nam war.
Sixteen teams, including outsiders Yuma, Arizona, Burbank Burroughs, Saugus, and Playa del Rey St. Bernard.
Poway 43, Playa del Rey St. Bernard 42.
Poway stayed undefeated with a 10th straight victory in a cliffhanger finish to win the title.
The Vikings took a 42-41 lead on a free throw with five seconds left. Poway called time.
Jud Buechler missed a 10-foot shot, but 6-7 John Colborne, who had 23 points and 12 rebounds, tapped in the rebound for the decider.
KIWANIS
Twenty-eight teams, marked by entry of the first out-of-the-area contingent since the 1978-79, got play under way in the 38th annual.
Patrick Henry 52, Monte Vista 51, Unlimited Division.
Hoover 64, Serra 62, Limited.
–Monte Vista outran the Las Vegas Wildcats, 65-57, and pushed its record to 9-0 in a 65-57 victory in the opening round of Unlimited Division play.
–“I don’t know how we won,” exclaimed University coach Zach Peck after a 44-42 win over San Pasqual.
The Dons were outrebounded, 33-27, and committed 24 fouls to the Golden Eagles’ nine.
Two free throws by reserve John Turner clinched it for the Dons with 23 seconds left.
2019 Week 6: Scots Have Sock
Half the regular season is complete for all but a handful of teams and Helix has emerged as the front runner for the longest postseason.
The Highlanders arrived at this juncture after having beaten No. 2 Cathedral and No. 3 St. Augustine, which followed a surprising, overtime loss to Utah’s Herriman West Herriman.
The loss to Herriman in Week 2 did not go over well in the foothills community. Helix had beaten the same team, 35-0, in 2017.
But Herriman is formidable.
The Mustangs are 6-1, ranked third in the state and 48th in the country, according to Max Preps (Helix is 50th). Herriman’s only loss was 21-0 to Draper Corner Canyon, Utah’s No. 1 and Max Preps’ U.S. No. 13.
10 SEASONS OF EXCELLENCE
The Highlanders embark on Grossmont Hills league play against El Capitan this week, flush with the knowledge that history is on the Highlanders’ side.
The Scots are 43-2 in league play in this decade, with only a 24-17 defeat to El Cap in 2014 and a 22-21 loss to Steele Canyon in 2018.
Since the advent of the Grossmont League and its ensuing incarnations in 1960, Helix has won or tied for first in 31 of the 59 seasons, including 15 since the turn of the century.
GOOD VIBES
–Montgomery, if it defeats Sweetwater after a bye this week, will clinch a 16th winning season in the 50 the school has played since opening in 1970.
The Aztecs’ 5-1 record has been bettered only by the 6-0 of the 1982 John DeVore-coached squad and equaled by DeVore’s 1979 team.
–Castle Park’s 6-0 start is the best since 1996 and matches similar achievements in 1982, ’75, ’74, ’69, and ’68.
The Trojans will face several obstacles before they have a piece of the school record.
Coach Gil Warren’s 1996 squad used that 6-0 start and rolled to a 13-0 record, including a 37-10 win over Carlsbad in the San Diego Section finals.
–San Diego Southwest’s first foray into overtime was a success after 432 games, dating to its first in 1977.
The Raiders spotted Clairemont a 21-0 lead in the first half but battled back to tie, 21-21, and win in the first extra session, 27-24. Ray Flores, ran 12 yards for a touchdown after the Chieftains settled for a field goal in the opening possession.
NOT SO GOOD VIBES
–Never, in a storied history that began in 1947, has Chula Vista reached this point with an 0-6 record.
The Spartans were 0-5-1 in 2005, 1962, and ’58.
–Eastlake never has been 1-5 and coach John McFadden, 131-49-4 in 15-plus seasons, is on a mandated leave.
The San Diego Union-Tribune Week 6 poll:
Points on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.
First-place votes in parenthesis. NR–Not ranked. *Includes forfeit loss.
RANK
TEAM
RECORD
POINTS
PREVIOUS
1.
Helix
4-1
310
1
2.
Cathedral
5-1
274
3
3.
St. Augustine
4-1
253
2
4.
Carlsbad
4-1
211
4
5.
Steele Canyon
5-0
187
5
6.
Oceanside
4-1
132
8
7.
Lincoln
4-1
103
7
8.
Mission Hills
3-2
70
9
9.
Madison
3-2
55
NR
10.
Torrey Pines
3-2
23
10
Others receiving votes: La Costa Canyon (3-2, 22 points), Grossmont (4-1, 22), Vista (3-2*, 14.), Granite Hills (3-1, 8), Scripps Ranch (5-0), The Bishop’s (5-0), & La Jolla Country Day (4-1), 3 points each.
Voting panel of 31 sportswriters, sportscasters, various County football honchos:
John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune
Jim Lindgren, Rick Hoff, Terry Monahan, Don Norcross, Thomas Gutierrez, freelance contributors.
Paul Rudy, Brandon Stone,Ted Mendenhall, KUSI Chl. 51
Adam Paul, ECpreps.com
Ramon Scott, EastCountySports.com
Bodie DeSilva, sandiegopreps.com
Taylor Quellman, The Mighty 1090
Steve Brand, San Diego Hall of Champions
Troy Hirsch, Kaylyn McMakin, Tabitha Lipkin, Fox 5, San Diego
Rick Smith, PartletonSports.com
Jerry Schniepp, John Labeta, Ron Marquez, CIF San Diego Section
Joe Heinz, Coordinator, Athletics, Sweetwater School District
Raymond Brown, sdfootball.net
Bob Petinak, free lance.
John Kentera, Brandon Suprenant, 97.3 FM The Fan
Steve (Biff) Dolan, Mountain Country 107.9 FM
Mike Dolan, John Carroll, San Diego Section Tournament Directors.
Christian Pederson, SoCal Prep Insider.
Joe Heinz, Athletics Director, Sweetwater School District.
Eric Williams, WBK Sports/San Diego Friday Night Lights Magazine.
AS OTHERS IN CALIFORNIA SEE SAN DIEGO’S TOP 10
Team
Record
Cal.Preps.Com
Max Preps
Cal-Hi Sports
Helix
4-1
59.6/55.1
9/13
9/0
Cathedral
5-1
64.2/67.7
6/5
17/18
St. Augustine
4-1
48.3/47.5
21/23
21/22
Carlsbad
4-1
38.1/37.5
39/37
42/42
Steele Canyon
5-0
35.8/34.6
44/49
Bubble/Bubble
Oceanside
4-1
32.9/30.9
60/65
Bubble/Bubble
Lincoln
4-1
28/29.6
81/68
Bubble/Bubble
Mission Hills
3-2
27.1/26.3
89/83
NR
Madison
3-2
29.3
74
NR
Torrey Pines
3-2
25.1/24.9
101/92
NR
The second numbers or score in the three columns to the right represent last week’s ranking. Cal Preps.com and Max Preps ratings are based on computer algorithms. Cal-Hi Sports ratings are product of publisher Mark Tennis’ eye test and information from Tennis’ correspondents throughout the state..
s
2019 Week 5: Overtime Finally Pays Off for Oceanside
Oceanside and La Costa Canyon set a record when they played four overtime periods last week.
Somewhere Bennie Edens was smiling.
The late coach at Point Loma was instrumental in the city schools’ adopting overtime sessions as a way to solve the inconvenience of tie games in 1975.
The entire San Diego Section agreed in 1976 to use the state’s California Tie-breaker for the postseason.
Eventually regular-season games went into overtime along with other tweeks to the system used today.
Oceanside outlasted La Costa Canyon, 19-13, in the longest ever San Diego Section game.
RECORD WAS THREE
There had been three, three-overtime games, all in this century.
*Vista defeated Torrey Pines, 36-28, in a semifinal playoff in 2002.
*Cathedral topped San Pasqual, 37-31, for the San Diego Section Division I championship in 2013.
*Mira Mesa won, 36-28, over Escondido in a regular-season game in 2014.
There have been 129 regular and postseason games of at least one overtime since Edens got his colleagues in the city to vote 8-2 in favor of extra playing time.
The city’s pre-1976 overtime rules rewarded the team with the most yards gained after four downs.
As a headline in The San Diego Union stated, “Edens feels Sting of Own Prep Project.”
Madison was credited with a 1-0 victory when the Warhawks advanced the ball further in the first use of the so-called Edens tie-breaker in Week 8.
The California tie-breaker was introduced here the next year but not without some false starts.
BRAND CRITICAL
Part of my narrative for the season (search “1976: “Birt’s Legacy….”) included much of Steve Brand’s account of the semifinals game between Morse and El Camino.
“History-making events are supposed to be heralded with sounding trumpets and helium balloons,” noted The San Diego Union scribe.
But the writer said the 6-6 tie resulted in “disappointment and confusion”.
A long delay had taken place as game honchos sorted things out.
“A twenty minute discussion between officials, coaches, and statisticians over first downs, penetrations inside the 20-yard line, and a mysterious stopping of the clock before the (regulation) game ended,” Brand complained (he was on a morning newspaper deadline).
The teams tied in regulation play with 7 first downs each and both had made two penetrations inside their opponents’ 20-yard line.
When play resumed after the delay, Morse lost the coin toss and had first possession, which resulted in a two-yard loss after four plays and a 15-yard penalty. El Camino took over, according to Brand, “and essentially fell on the ball for four consecutive plays.’
The Wildcats were declared winners.
La Costa Canyon and Oceanside tied, 6-6, in regulation play, matched scores in the second overtime and again in the fourth before Oceanside put across one more touchdown in the fourth on Kavika Tua’s 25-yard run that ended the game.
The San Diego Union-Tribune Week 5 poll:
Points on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.
First-place votes in parenthesis. NR–Not ranked.
RANK
TEAM
RECORD
POINTS
PREVIOUS
1.
Helix
3-1
310
1
2.
Cathedral
4-1
272
3
3.
St. Augustine
4-1
252
2
4.
Carlsbad
4-1
212
4
5.
Steele Canyon
4-0
185
5
6.
Grossmont
4-0
122
8
7.
Lincoln
3-1
105
7
8.
Oceaside
3-1
91
NR
9.
Mission Hills
3-2
60
9
10.
Torrey Pines
3-2
50
6
Others receiving votes: La Costa Canyon (3-2, 15 points), Vista (4-1, 11), Poway (4-1, 11), Madison (2-3, 10), El Camino (2-2, 8), Granite Hills (3-1, 6), Scripps Ranch (5-0).
Voting panel of 31 sportswriters, sportscasters, various County football honchos:
John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune
Jim Lindgren, Rick Hoff, Terry Monahan, Don Norcross, Thomas Gutierrez, freelance contributors.
Paul Rudy, Brandon Stone,Ted Mendenhall, KUSI Chl. 51
Adam Paul, ECpreps.com
Ramon Scott, EastCountySports.com
Bodie DeSilva, sandiegopreps.com
Taylor Quellman, The Mighty 1090
Steve Brand, San Diego Hall of Champions
Troy Hirsch, Kaylyn McMakin, Tabitha Lipkin, Fox 5, San Diego
Rick Smith, PartletonSports.com
Jerry Schniepp, John Labeta, Ron Marquez, CIF San Diego Section
Joe Heinz, Coordinator, Athletics, Sweetwater School District
Raymond Brown, sdfootball.net
Bob Petinak, free lance.
John Kentera, Brandon Suprenant, 97.3 FM The Fan
Steve (Biff) Dolan, Mountain Country 107.9 FM
Mike Dolan, John Carroll, San Diego Section Tournament Directors.
Christian Pederson, SoCal Prep Insider.
Joe Heinz, Athletics Director, Sweetwater School District.
Eric Williams, WBK Sports/San Diego Friday Night Lights Magazine.
AS OTHERS IN CALIFORNIA SEE SAN DIEGO’S TOP 10
TEAM
RECORD
CAL PREPS.COM
MAX PREPS
CAL-HI SPORTS
Helix
3-1
55.1
13
10
St. Augustine
4-1
47.5
23
22
Cathedral
4-1
67.7
5
18
Carlsbad
4-1
37.5
37
42
Steele Canyon
4-0
34.6
49
On bubble
Grossmont
4-0
26.8
80
NR
Lincoln
3-1
29.6
68
On bubble
Oceanside
3-1
30.9
65
On Bubble
Mission Hills
3-2
26.3
83
NR
Torrey Pines
3-2
24.9
92
NR
Cal Preps.com and Max Preps ratings are based on computer algorithms. Cal-Hi Sports ratings are product of publisher Mark Tennis’ eye test and information from Tennis’ correspondents throughout the state..
1983-84: Those Running Red Devils
Sweetwater coach Gary Zarecky took over a bottomed-out program in 1972-73 that was 2-22, 6-20, and 1-23 in the three previous seasons and proceeded to go 6-19, 1-23, and 11-15.
In Zarecky’s year four the Red Devils saw light at the end of the tunnel and fast-breaked past it.
Since 1975-76 Sweetwater is 196-54, a .772 winning percentage. Zarecky ioverall is 214-111 (.658) in 12 seasons. Of the 39 instances in which a San Diego Section team scored at least 100 points in a game since the 1978-79 season, Sweetwater has accomplished the feat 18 times.
The Red Devils passed 100 on six occasions this season, including 123 points, sixth highest all-time, against Marian.
Bud Maloney of the Evening Tribune wrote that the Red Devils were not getting “game-in game-out challenges” to prepare for the playoffs. They had won 39 consecutive Metropolitan Conference games and six consecutive league championships.
Zarecky was not fooled, according to Maloney.
“What am I supposed to do? wondered the coach. “We have to press to stay sharp and stay in shape. If we don’t press we’ll win about sixty to fifty and then the first time we play an Eastern League team we’ll get blown out.”
Zarecky promoted his team. He took it to a tournament in Vancouver, Canada, in 1982-83, and the Red Devils traveled to basketball hotbed Hobbs, New Mexico, this season.
Coach Neville Saner’s starters included three sophomores, Dominick Johnson, Judd Buechler, and Andy Byrne, and junior John Colborne.
The young Titans posted a 21-5 record and won the San Diego Section 3-A championship but were sidelined, 79-60, by Riverside John North in the Southern California Regional.
They would be back.
There was a glut of December tournaments and so-called “classics”, 18 in all. Despite the competition the Kiwanis Tournament was hanging in there, in its 37th year.
12/15/83
Mt. Carmel converted 30 of 40 free throw attempts and pulled away to an 80-63 upset of 5-0 Mira Mesa in a neighborhood bragging rights contest.
Rich Krigger and Pat Buchwald each scored 18 points for the Sundevils, who trailed, 33-32, at halftime.
–Orange Glen made 18×23 free throws in the fourth quarter to hold off Vista, 58-53.
1/11/84
Valhalla topped Grossmont League leader and league-undefeated (7-0) El Capitan for the second time, 62-60, to improve to 9-6 and 5-2 in the league, following seasons of 6-19, 6-16, and 7-15.
1/14/84
“I never thought we were out of it, even when we were down five in the first overtime,” said Mira Mesa coach Tim Cunningham after the Marauders opened their Eastern League campaign with a 55-53, double overtime win at Morse.
1/21/84
Mt. Carmel trailed Poway only 34-30 when Sundevils ace Pete Buchwald fouled out with 3:05 remaining in the third quarter. Poway pulled away to lead by 11 points with a minute to play and won, 57-50, in a battle of Palomar League leaders before almost 2,000 persons at Poway.
1/25/84
Patrick Henry’s 99-64 rout of front-runner Mira Mesa represented the highest point total in an Eastern League game since the 1980-81 season. The Patriots’ Randy Hennis had 27 points and 18 rebounds.
—Madison, Patrick Henry, and Mira Mesa, each with a 4-1 record, were tied for first in the Eastern League after Madison whacked Henry, 69-52, three days after the Patriots bombed Mira Mesa, 99-64.
2/1/84
Mike Haupt had 25 points and 13 rebounds but it was two free throws by Todd Williams in a 1-and-1 situation with two seconds left that allowed the Marauders to escape visiting Morse, 50-49.
—Matt Brock scored 32 points but 9-11 Mission Bay upset 16-4 University City, 56-52, in overtime.
2/15/84
—The third time was not the charm. Madison couldn’t make it three in a row over Patrick Henry, whose 81-69 victory in a playoff for the Eastern League’s second postseason berth eliminated the Warhawks from the postseason despite a 16-6 record.
—Henry’s Mark Ferguson scored a 70-foot basket at the halftime buzzer and converted 12×17 field goal attempts for 24 points, aided by Howard Wright’s 22 points and 17 rebounds.
TOURNAMENTS
BISHOP
San Pasqual 58, Bishop 52, but lost to Palos Verdes Peninsula Chadwick, 63-39.
The Golden Eagles traveled almost 400 miles to the community on U.S. 395 near the High Sierras.
CHINO
Escondido made its annual pilgrimage, a tradition observed almost every year since the tournament’s inaugural in the 1939-40 season.
La Canada 94, Escondido 69.
Escondido 49, Chino 48.
Pomona Ganesha 79, Escondido 50.
FOOTHILLER
Santana posted a 3-0 record in pool play, concluding with a 71-32 win over Granite Hills.
–Mark Howard’s two free throws with eight seconds left gave Valhalla a 54-52 win over preseason eighth-ranked El Capitan.
–Grossmont outscored Granite Hills, 11-1, in the final 1:40 to force a tie at 66 on Mike Weber’s basket with one second remaining and then pulled away to a 77-70 victory in overtime.
HELIX
La Jolla 49, Helix 38, 2 OT for championship of the eight teams.
The Vikings outscored Helix, 11-0, in the second overtime.
“We batted away a rebound (instead of controlling the ball),” noted Helix coach John Singer of the Highlanders’ missed opportunity in the first overtime. La Jolla’s Jeff Jacobs recovered the loose ball and his basket sent the game into another three minutes.
The teams tied at 34 in regulation play, which ended with a basket at the buzzer by the Highlanders’ Juan Espinoza, who scored 23 points.
HILLTOP
Finals of eight-team tournament saw Mira Mesa gradually pulled away to an 84-69 victory over Point Loma. Tournament most-valuable player Mike Haupt led the Marauders with 23 points.
–Kearny jumped on No. 3-ranked Chula Vista, 57-36.
–“They were a little arrogant walking out on to the floor,” said Komets coach Bill Peterson. “We out-quicked them. We did a great job of rebounding and we controlled the tempo.”
–Mike Haupt scored 24 points and Mira Mesa outscored Hoover, 19-5, in the fourth quarter for a 71-55 victory.
–John Scott stole the ball and passed to Charles Redding, whose 8-foot jumper eased Point Loma to a 49-47 win over underdog Kearny.
–Point Loma fell behind Sweetwater, 17-1, and then rallied for a 76-73 victory.
FRANCIS PARKER
Eight small schools involved. Army-Navy edged Parker, 41-40.
The host Lancers had a chance to win the championship after overcoming an eight-point deficit but missed a 1-and-1 free throw and a 20-foot shot in the final seconds.
ELSINORE
Big Bear City Big Bear edged Army-Navy, 60-59, and Wildomar Elsinore thumped Julian, 80-23.
KIWANIS
The 37th annual opened with 28 teams, up from 24 last season. The event still was the largest in San Diego but was fighting an image battle as many squads were drawn to other tournaments.
Madison defeated Eastern League rival Patrick Henry, 62-56, and Mission Bay edged Western League foe, 44-42, for the Unlimited and Limited Division titles, respectively.
–Kearny, behind, 33-15, at halftime and 43-27 three minutes into the third quarter, stormed on a 23-2 run to beat Hilltop, 57-55, in overtime on Lionel DeMorst’s rebound and basket in the final second.
–There was no time left in overtime when Steve Jones hit the front end of a 1-and-1 free throw to get unbeaten University City (7-0) past La Jolla, which sustained its first defeat in eight games, 36-35.
LT. JAMES MITCHELL
Joe Hillman scored 51 points, his third half-century achievement in four games, to lead Glendale Hoover to a 93-91 win over Las Vegas Western and championship of the event honoring the San Dieguito star who was killed in Viet Nam.
–Sixteen teams, including six from out of the area, made this arguably the most attractive on the December calendar.
— Hillman passed 50 points for the second time with a 52-point effort in a 95-69 win over Escondido.
–Hillman, who came into the game with a 39-point average, was not pleased with his defense. The Indiana University-bound Hillman said he expected IU coach Bobby Knight would “make me play much better and tougher D.”
–Hillman’s 20-foot jump shot at the buzzer got Hoover past Torrey Pines, 62-60. The Tornadoes had managed to control the ball for more than four minutes with the score tied at 60. Hillman finished with 50 points.
— Greg Bowman’s layin with two seconds left in overtime was the difference in Poway’s 83-81 win over Burbank Burroughs.
–Poway, trailing, 36-23, at halftime won the consolation championship, 56-45 over Newport Beach Newport Harbor.
MONTGOMERY
Six teams entered, with Castle Park emerging as champion in the inaugural event, 60-43 over El Cajon Valley.
DOS PUEBLOS
The high school in Santa Barbara was host.
–Mt. Carmel 85, Santa Barbara Bishop Garcia Diego 61.
WILMINGTON BANNING
San Pedro 87, Morse 74.
Morse 62, Los Angeles Fairfax 56, OT.
Morse 60, Harbor City Narbonne 47.
Compton 48, Morse 39, consolation championship.
HOBBS, NEW MEXICO
The 26th annual Holiday Invitational.
Sweetwater earned third-place honors by defeating Abilene, Texas, 89-77.
–Sweetwater 77, El Paso Austin 61. The Red Devils scored 20 points in a row in the fourth quarter.
–Sweetwater led, 47-39, after three quarters but bowed to Altus, Oklahoma, 62-55.
PENINSULA CLASSIC @POINT LOMA
University City 43, Burbank 41.
The Centurions, 1-18 and 7-12 in their first two seasons improved to 10-1 by coming from five points down in the fourth quarter.
Matt Brock, a 6-foot, 5-inch forward and future NFL player, scored 16, 21, and 24 points in the three-games and was tournament most-valuable player. Brock’s father, Clyde, also played in the NFL.
–Eight teams played round-robin, two games each a day.
BARON-OPTIMIST
Madison (10-2) ran past Mira Mesa (8-2), 96-75, for the championship after taking a 20-8, first-quarter lead and not looking back.
SANTANA
Mt. Carmel 60, Patrick Henry 48.
The Sundevils lagged, 37-28, with five minutes remaining in the third quarter and then went on a 15-3 run.
–“The team was waiting for me to take control,” said Clairemont’s Keith Landham after two starters had fouled out and the Chieftains trailed host Santana by 10 points in the third quarter.
–Landham scored three consecutive field goals and the Chieftains went on to a 56-52 victory.
–“The refs seemed to be calling a one-sided game, but we didn’t let it bother us,” said Landham.
LAS VEGAS WESTERN RED ROCK
San Dieguito 61, Henderson Basic, Nevada 55.
Las Vegas 60, San Dieguito 34.
Western 86, San Dieguito 58.
Western 81, San Dieguito 68.
WEST COAST CLASSIC @SAN JOSE
Christian 94, Turner Cascade, Oregon 44.
Christian 65, Rippon 59.
Christian 56, Shoreline King’s, Washington, 46. Bill Donley scored 19 of his three-game total of 62 and led the Patriots to the championship.
SEASON SCORING LEADERS
NAME
TEAM
GAMES
POINTS
AVERAGE
Duane Hurd
Carlsbad
24
566
23.5
Aaron Rico
Sweetwater
25
527
20.68
Kirk Hansen
Fallbrook
22
511
23.2
Jan Styles
Torrey Pines
23
480
20.8
Charles Redding
Point Loma
23
461
20.04
Steve Eyler
Army-Navy
21
460
21.9
Neil Bernstein
La Jolla
23
452
19.7
Sam Aguirre
Hoover
21
434
20.66
Brad Milhoan
Kearny
24
430
17.9
Juan Espinoza
Helix
22
422
19.18
Mark Lazoya
Valhalla
22
409
18.59
Mike Haupt
Mira Mesa
24
408
17.0
Matt Brock
University City
22
402
18.27
Fred Farnsworth
Marian
21
389
18.52
John Colborne
Poway
21
385
18.33
Gary Gottschall
El Capitan
21
383
18.23
Mike Robinson
Serra
21
381
18.1
Scott Lanham
Granite Hills
19
362
19.05
Maurice Lewis
Madison
21
361
17.2
Crawford, Montgomery, 18×336, 18.66. Shawn Bell Morse, 16×292, 18.25. 1-A: Julio Troche, Borrego Springs, 16×342, 21.37. Richard Winter, The Bishop’s, 15×328, 21.86.
(Search 1983-84 “Those Running Red Devils” for team 100-point games).
PLAYOFFS
BOYS
First Round
3-A Patrick Henry 46, Monte Vista 43 (19-5). “The only thing that makes me happy about this game is the final score,” to the Tribune’s Bud Maloney said Patriots coach Fritz Ziegenfuss, unhappy with the way his team ran offensive and defensive sets.” Poway 77, Sweetwater 68 (21-4). Favored Sweetwater was bounced in the first round for the second year in a row in a row, a long winning streak broken each time. This season the Red Devils carried a 14-game run into the playoffs; it was 16 in 1982-83 and 16 in 1981-82. Mira Mesa 57, Castle Park 47 (2-18).
Mt. Carmel 51, Helix 49 (11-9).
2-A Point Loma 77, St. Augustine 50 (12-11).
La Jolla 48, Christian 43 (16-7). Six-foot, 9-inch Neil Bernstein provided half of La Jolla’s 48 points and added 22 rebounds. Chula Vista 70, Carlsbad 68 (5-14).
Oceanside 62, Hilltop 51 (13-12).
1-A
Army-Navy 45, Francis Parker 41.
Borrego Springs 83, The Bishop’s 37.
Semifinals
3-A Poway 70, Mira Mesa 59 (20-4). The Titans outscored the Marauders, 34-23, in the fourth quarter after a 36-36 standoff through three quarters.
Poway coach Neville Saner’s “triangle and two defense” helped hold San Diego Section player of the year Mike Haupt to 10 points.
Dominick Johnson, a 6-foot, 4-inch forward and son of legendary San Diego High athlete Deron Johnson, led the Titans with 22 points. Patrick Henry 48, Mt. Carmel 47 (20-4).
2-A Oceanside 48, La Jolla 43 (12-7).
Chula Vista 63, Point Loma 62 (18-6), OT “There was this sort of glow in their eyes. It was like they were in a state of shock,” said Spartans coach Mike Collins after his team’s 11-point lead turned into a 12-point deficit in less than a quarter of play. “Finally, I had to do something,” said Collins. “I called timeout and yelled at them.” David Willard, who led the Spartans with 26 points, converted a 1-and-1 free throw with 16 seconds remaining to force the overtime and was 4×4 in the extra session.
1-A COASTAL LEAGUE
Army-Navy 60, Borrego Springs 59.
DESERT–MOUNTAIN LEAGUE
Holtville 60, Calipatria 50.
3-A CHAMPIONSHIP Poway 57, Patrick Henry 51 (20-6). Among the Poway starters, only John Colborne is old enough to drive an automobile, according to Bud Maloney of the Evening Tribune. “When we want to go anywhere we all pile into John’s car,” said teammate Judd Buechler.
Andy Byrne, one of three sophomore starters, scored 19 points and 6-7 ½ junior Colborne added 18.
2-A
Oceanside 57, Chula Vista 55 (16-10). Donald Harris’ 22 points and two free throws with 21 seconds left made a last-second Spartans basket meaningless.
1-A
Army-Navy 46, Holtville 42 (19-4). Coach’s son Chris Maffucci’s two free throws throws clinched the victory.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL
D-I Riverside North 79, Poway 60 (21-5).
D-II Oceanside 47, Los Angeles Lutheran 46.
CHAMPIONSHIP
D-II Oceanside 68, City of Industry Workman 54. Reggie Owens scored 22 points and the Pirates defense held their opponents to 36 per cent shooting from the field.
“We took them apart. Who in the state can control a game like that?” enthused Pirates coach Bill Christopher.
Despite the school name and the relative community in which it is located, Workman was not a generic appellation but named for William Workman, and the mascot is a Lobo.
D-III Pasadena Poly 63, Army-Navy 38 (18-3). The Cadets were byed into the finals but over matched.
STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
Modesto (33-2) 50, Oceanside 47 (26-2).
“I think Modesto knows we could have won it…we had plenty of chances”, said Pirates coach Bill Christopher.
Donald Harris (7×14) and Reggie Owens (5×10) hit 50 per cent of their field goal attempts. The rest of the team was 5×39, 13 per cent.
PLAYOFFS
GIRLS
FIRST ROUND 3-A Sweetwater 55, Poway 53 (17-4). Karen Taetafa scored two free throws with 15 seconds remaining for the victory. Santana 62, Madison 31 (11-11).
Patrick Henry 60, Bonita Vista 45 (16-8)
Fallbrook 61, Monte Vista 56 11).
El Camino 76, Southwest 33 (14-6). Sharon Turner, the County’s leading scorer with a 28.5 average, scored 26 for the Wildcats.
2-A Point Loma 73, Lincoln 31 (9-7). Freshman Terri Mann scored 19 points and had 14 rebounds. University 47, Chula Vista 46 (22-2).
Ramona 60, Crawford 46 (15-5).
1-A Francis Parker 47, Santa Fe Christian 32.
La Jolla Country Day 45, Julian 42.
SEMIFINALS A Santana 75, Sweetwater 46 (14-7).
Patrick Henry 61, Fallbrook 46 (14-7). “My mom told me before the game that there’s no tomorrow, so I played like there was no tomorrow,” said Henry’s Brooke Davis of her 32 points that included six, three-point baskets, plus 14 rebounds.
2-A El Camino 55, University 51 (17-5). Illness that caused breathing problems brought on by hives forced leading scorer Sharon Turner to the locker room but teammate Sheri Williamson scored six unanswered points to create a 52-39 lead and the Wildcats rode out a late storm.
Point Loma 76, Ramona 34 (18-4). Point Loma’s 6-foot-3 Suzanne Eagye scored 32 points in three quarters and then rested.
COASTAL LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP
Francis Parker 63, Julian 47.
CHAMPIONSHIP
3-A Santana 54, Patrick Henry 50 (18-7).
2-A
Point Loma 64, El Camino 47 (23-2). “We’re much more ready for the Southern Cals this year,” said Suzanne Eagye. “Terri (Mann) has helped us so much. We had a hard time with El Camino last year, but this game shows how much we’ve improved.”
Mann, a 6-foot-1 ninth-grader, Mann led all scorers with 22 points.
1-A
Holtville 47, Francis Parker 25 (17-5). SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA REGIONAL
D-I
Los Angeles Fairfax 52, Santana 49 (24-2). Outrebounded, 44-27, and trailing at one point, 36-22, coach Wade Vickery’s Sultans scrapped back to take a 45-44 lead but fell short.
D-II
Point Loma 70, Santa Maria St. Joseph 51.
CHAMPIONSHIP
D-II
Point Loma 57, Indio 36.
STATE CHAMPIONSHIP
Point Loma (29-0) 64, Chico Pleasant Valley 55 (27-1). “When we play as a team we’re awesome. When we don’t we’re horrible,” said the Pointers’ Beth Thompson, reflecting on a second-quarter deficit of 26-12 and 16 turnovers in the game’s first 10 minutes.