1982-83: Morse is Out of Playoffs And Then Back In

There would be state basketball playoffs this season and Morse liked its chances to represent the San Diego Section.

Ray Epton, whose 25.0 average at Madison in 1981-82 was highest in the San Diego Section, had transferred to the school on Skyline Drive, where Epton joined 6-foot, 7-inch preseason all-America Lawrence West, 6-6 Shawn Bell, and  5-11 Carl Fisher, plus a tall, deep supporting cast.

But an anonymous tip doomed the Tigers, costing them 20 forfeits and knocking Morse out of the San Diego Section playoffs.

Ray Epton, battling Kearny’s David Williams for rebound, was at center of controversy.

Epton’s family, in changing residences, moved to a home that, as it turned out, was beyond Morse’s enrollment boundary.

Tigers athletic director John Shacklett said an investigation established that Epton lived on the Mount Miguel side of a street that separates the Morse and Mount Miguel districts.

Morse officials either did not check the address or were unaware of the boundary.

Eastern League representatives, acting on the late-coming information, voted 3-2 to oust the Tigers.

Someone had ratted out the Tigers to the CIF San Diego Section not long after playoff seedings were published, creating a storm of emotion.

But…

After some shouting, pointed fingers, and foot stomping, the Tigers were let back in the door.

The issue went all the way to the office of City Schools big shots.

EX-BASKETBALL COACH

Dick Jackson, a former basketball player at San Diego High and coach when Crawford began its program in 1957-58, made the decision.

“Taking in all the facts and looking at our options we came to the conclusion that was the fairest way to handle this,” Jackson told Steve Brand of The San Diego Union.

“I’m not entirely comfortable about this because I’m not entirely comfortable about the whole thing,” said Jackson.  “However, I think it is the best decision considering all aspects.”

Jackson pointed out that the playoff time line was critical.  Four games already had been played, four more were scheduled that night, and the Epton family had sought a court injunction.

Madison, the team Epton had left, became the Tigers’ first-round opponent. “It’s not fair,” said Warhawks coach John Hannon.  “We forfeited an entire football season a few years ago and no one came to our defense.”

ANOTHER DREADED ADMINISTRATIVE GLITCH

Lincoln was 12-2 and gearing for the stretch run when it was discovered that Hornets Arthur Hamilton and Charisse Jones had unexpectedly exhausted their eligibility.

Lincoln then forfeited 12 victories, including a 76-73, double-overtime victory over Morse….




2019 Week 1: Decks Cleared in North County for Orange Glen and Escondido

Westbound traffic will pick up on Escondido’s Valley Parkway Friday night.

A neighborhood bragging rights game is scheduled when revitalized Orange Glen motors West from the eastern edge of town on the old thoroughfare to visit big brother Escondido High.

They’re only 4.5 miles apart, but the visiting Patriots and host Cougars haven’t met since 2015.

Fortunes have ebbed and flowed for both teams in a rivalry that once annually drew crowds of up to 10,000.

Orange Glen is in the midst of a renewal, following the lead of coach Gary Patterson and his son, Cael, who scored 35 touchdowns a season ago and helped the Patriots win four straight playoffs games before they bowed to San Francisco Lincoln, 24-13 in the state VI-AA finals.

Orange Glen’s 10-5 standing marked its first winning season since Rob Gilster coached it to a 9-3 record in 1997 and then moved on to open Valley Center.

Escondido has not been above .500 since 2009 and opened last week with a 45-42 loss to Hilltop, while the Patriots were on the island of Kauai and defeating Waimea, 41-16.

The Cougars lead the series, 28-18, and own a 15-game winning streak, dating to 1998.  Orange Glen had won the 13 previous crosstown matchups, from 1985-97 and  the teams’ first meeting, 14-7, in 1967, but Escondido held a 13-5 advantage through 1984.

CALIFORNIA’S BEST

Cal-Hi Sports‘ weekly state top 50 lists Cathedral No. 6, which is where the San Diego Section No. 1 club was in the newsletter’s first ranking last week.

St. Augustine is 19th, up from 21st.  Torrey Pines, off a 36-10 win over Orange County toughie Los Alamitos, jumped a whopping 16 spots, from 41st to 25th.  Helix is 31st and Lincoln joined the group at 48th.

Mission Hills, 31st last week, dropped out and Carlsbad is on the bubble, which consists of teams near the top 50.

Cathedral, 42-9 over La Costa Canyon last week,  gets it first big test in the Honor Bowl extravaganza Saturday.  Three different matchups on the same day: Sherman Oaks Notre Dame versus Phoenix Desert Vista at noon, followed by Capistrano JSerra and St. Joseph’s Regional of Montvale, New Jersey, at 3:30 p.m., and the host Dons and Arizona’s Scottsdale Saguaro at 7.

QUICK KICKS

Kearny’s 65-16 rout of Calexico required a visit to the Komets’ list of all-time scores…the victory ranks third to a 66-0 win over Patrick Henry last season and a 70-0 win over Crawford in 1969…Army-Navy prepared to meet Clairemont for the first time since 1993, but the Chieftains were forced to bail when only 14 players were available… Valhalla snapped an 0-18 slump with a 35-21 win over University City and El Cajon Valley won its first after 16 losses in a row, 13-7 over Francis Parker…the San Pasqual Academy Dragons have a new coach, Tyrone Shelley, who played basketball for Steve Fisher at San Diego State and holds the San Diego Section single-game record with 76 points in 2005 for Crawford against a team from Canada….

San Diego Union-Tribune Week 1 poll:

Points on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.

First-place votes in parenthesis.

RANK TEAM RECORD POINTS PREVIOUS
1. Cathedral (22) 1-0 303 1
2. St. Augustine (8) 1-0 281 2
3. Helix (1) 1-0 247 3
4. Torrey Pines 1-0 206 4
5. Lincoln 1-0 182 5
6. Carlsbad 1-0 160 7
7. Steele Canyon 1-0 106 10
8. Mission Hills 0-1 106 6
9. Madison 1-0 41 NR
10. Otay Ranch 1-0 32 NR

Others receiving votes: La Costa Canyon (0-1, 29 points), Granite Hills (1-0, 12), Oceanside (0-1, 8), Eastlake (0-1, 6), San Marcos (0-1, 4), San Diego (1-0, 4), Grossmont (1-0, 4), El Camino (1-0, 1), Olympian (1-0, 1), Vista (1-0, 1).

Voting panel, 31 sportswriters, sportscasters, various County football honchos:

  • John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune
  • Jim Lindgren, Rick Hoff, Terry Monahan, Don Norcross, Union-Tribune correspondents
  • 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, Freelance
  • 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
  • Eric Williams, WBK Sports/San Dego Friday Night Lights Magazine
  • Thomas Gutierrez, Cal-Hi Sports

 




2019 Week 0:  Cathedral Wins Preseason Vote

Football, which used to open with 90-degree practices under blazing Labor Day suns, is back with a now usual berginning in August’s semifinal week.

The dates have changed, but not the weather.

Cathedral is the San Diego Union-Tribune voting panel’s No. 1-ranked team in the first weekly poll.

Dons coach Sean Doyle, who should become the 11th coach in County history to win 200 career games, embarks on his 24th season in a career that began in 1996 at University, which moved its campus on Linda Vista to Carmel Valley and became Cathedral Catholic in 2004.

Doyle has posted a 196-91 (.683) record and trails only Monte Vista’s Ron Hamamoto (227) and Valley Center’s Rob Gilster (224) among active coaches.

HERB MEYER ON TOP

With 23 seasons, Doyle is in a tie with Gary Blevins, who retired after the 2017 season, at 16th in longevity.  The leaders are Herb Meyer (45 seasons), Bennie Edens (43), Hamamoto (33), John Shacklett (32), and Gilster (30).

Cathedral (13-2) sustained an unlikely loss to La Costa Canyon, 19-7, in its opening game last season and then ran the table until a 21-14 defeat to Folsom in the state Division I championship.

The Dons will face off again this week against the well-regarded and neighboring Mavericks, No. 6 in the preseason poll.

Then, as is their early-season custom, Cathedral takes on a couple bluebloods.

The Dons will face state No. 3 and U.S. No 9 Corona Centennial in Week 2 and Scottsdsale Saguaro, No. 1 in Arizona and 22nd in the country, in Week 3. Max Preps, responsible for these ratings, places Cathedral at 13th in California and 45th nationally.

Cathedral has a solid 58.0 Cal Preps.com rating but Centennial’s is 76.6 and Saguaro’s 64.4.

At least the Dons’ first three tests will be at home.

QUICK KICKS—Helix, which opened No. 1 in San Diego in 2018 and then felt the Week 1 hammer of San Bernardino Cajon, 43-3, switches sites and opens as host to the Cowboys…the Highlanders are Max Preps’ 32nd rated team in California and Cajon is 56th…the Scots follow with tough West Herriman, Utah…after that?  Cathedral visits  and then comes Westlake Village Oaks Christian…sandwiched between is a game at Mesa College with St. Augustine…Carlsbad also has a strong intersectional schedule, opening with Newhall Hart, Long Beach Millikan, and Lawndale, which was 14-2 a year ago and is Cal Hi Sports’ preseason state No. 26…Torrey Pines, 41st by Cal-Hi Sports, opens with Los Alamitos, 9-2-1 last season and ranked 46th…others accorded props in the newsletter’s top 50:  Cathedral, No. 6; St. Augustine, No. 21; Mission Hills, No. 31, Helix No. 33, and Poway, out of the top 50 but with “On The Bubble” status…Max Preps ranks the Cathedral-Corona Centennial game as No. 6 in its Top 10 matchups of the season….

Points on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis.

First-place votes in parenthesis.

RANK TEAM 2018 POINTS PREVIOUS
1. Cathedral (20) 13-2 298 1
2. St. Augustine (10) 10-3 282 3
3. Helix (1) 8-5 238 5
4. Torrey Pines 10-1 179 2
5. Lincoln 11-5 154 NR
6. Mission Hills 5-7 153 NR
7. Carlsbad 6-4 116 6
8. La Costa Canyon 6-4 108 NR
9. Oceanside 6-6 51 NR
10. Steele Canyon 9-3 41 NR

Others receiving votes: San Marcos (8-2), 26 points, Eastlake (10-2), 22, Madison (6-5), 12, San Diego (12-2) 3, Otay Ranch (6-5), 1.

Voting panel, 31 sportswriters, sportscasters, various County football honchos:

  • John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune
  • Jim Lindgren, Rick Hoff, Terry Monahan, Don Norcross, Union-Tribune correspondents
  • 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, Freelance
  • 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
  • Eric Williams, WBK Sports/San Dego Friday Night Lights Magazine
  • Thomas Gutierrez, Cal-Hi Sports

 




1981-82:  Zarecky Thought He’d Seen it All

“I’m confused,” said Sweetwater coach Gary Zarecky.

“I’m baffled,” added the Red Devils mentor.

Sweetwater had just beaten Castle Park, 94-11, in a Metropolitan Mesa League game, which followed an earlier, 106-37 Sweetwater rout of the Trojans.

What made Zarecky (Zar-skee) figuratively scratch his head was that the host Trojans attempted only five shots from the field…and made two.

Castle Park actually led, 1-0, before the game started.  Sweetwater had been called for a technical foul during pregame warmups.

The first-quarter score was 22-1, 42-5 at halftime, and 66-5 after three quarters.

“Their coach (Dave Holmgren) told me their goal was to hold us under one-hundred points and they seemed very pleased to have done so,” said Zarecky.

The Trojans “strategy” worked.

“They would drive the lane and, even with a good shot, circle back under and out to eat up time,” said Zarecky.

“I’ve never been involved in a game like this,” understated the coach whose team won 20 games and a league title for the fourth year in a row.

Terry Fields led the Red Devils with 28 points followed by Tyrone Miller with 20 and Aaron Combs with 16.

Beaten by 83 points, Castle Park, which finished with a 4-17 record, had not been part of the section’s most lopsided defeat.

Mount Miguel was on the outs by 96 points in a 127-31 loss to Helix in 1969-70.

 




1981-82: No Outside Competition for San Diego Squads

Local teams were just that, local.

That’s because San Diego Section bosses, most of whom did not  know if the ball was made of leather or composed of rubber, continued to defy the state CIF.

–For the first time in the history of the game in San Diego County, going back at least 60 years, there was no out-of-area opponent on anyone’s schedule.

Bud Maloney of the Evening Tribune explained:

“The situation came about because boys and girls basketball seasons in San Diego are not held at the same time.

“The girls play in the spring and thus do not have the same opportunity as boys to play against competition outside of the County.

(Everywhere but in the San Diego Section basketball was a winter sport).

“Since this is considered possible grounds for discrimination suits, the state CIF has ruled that San Diego Section boys cannot compete against out-of-county schools in basketball,” Maloney concluded.

The San Diego Section had repeatedly given the stink eye to the state CIF when the larger body suggested/implored that girls basketball and softball, which were inaugurated during the 1980-81 school year, move respectively to the winter and spring, in line with the state’s other sections.

Change would come but not this season.

MOMENTS OF THE SEASON

12/4/81—Defending champion Morse opened with a 63-55 win over visiting Oceanside, which would not lose again, posting a 22-1 record and the San Diego Section 2-A championship.

12/9/81—Sweetwater jumped to a 31-9 lead, saw it dwindle to 43-40, and then pulled away to top Morse, 79-64, in the season’s first major.

12/17/81—Things started poorly for the new Centurions of University City.  The first-year school was scoreless and trailing Lincoln, 22-0, after one quarter in a 76-29 defeat.

12/21/81—Kearny’s Lawrence Winters made a run at Wilburn Strong’s school record of 42 points with 39 but Morse scored a 75-70 Kiwanis Tournament victory over the Komets.

12/22/81—Winters had 30 points, but Sweetwater’s Terry Fields had 35 and the Red Devils beat the Komets, 99-86, in the Kiwanis.

1/9/82—Madison’s Ray Epton took the season single-game lead with 48 points in a 75-64 win over St. Augustine.

–Epton’s was the most since Serra’s Tommy Williams posted 50 points in 1979-80 but wasn’t close to the Madison record, 61 by Mitchell Lilly in 1975-76.

1/15/82—Future New York Yankees perfect game pitcher David Wells drained a free throw with 5 seconds left to clinch Point Loma’s 40-39 win over Clairemont.

1/23/82—Aaron Combs (27), Terry Fields (25), and Tyrone Miller (23) scored 75 points and their Sweetwater associates provided the rest in a 106-37 win over Castle Park. See 1981-82: “Zarecky Thought…”.

1/27/82—Morse’s hopes relied on a quick basket, foul, and free throw, which would have forged a tie and sent the game into overtime.

–The Tigers’ Carl Fisher did score with one second left but was whistled for charging.  Patrick Henry escaped with a 60-57 victory.

2/2/82

Tag Glithero, whose father starred at Lincoln in the late 1950s; Rick Oscarson, and sophomore Mike Haupt led a fourth-quarter, 27-16 Mira Mesa surge that stunned Morse, 68-55.

–Haupt converted nine of 10 free throw attempts in the final eight minutes, just one of many personal highlights in a career that would lead to coaching championships at St. Augustine.

Fallbrook’s Dominic Johnson’s 24.4 scoring average was second among San Diego Section sharpshooters.

2/5/82

San Diego made only 7×22 from the free throw line and Norman Baker, the County’s leading scorer, was 6×23 from the field.

University, meanwhile, made 14×17 free throws and the 9-12 Dons shocked the 15-2 Cavers, 58-55.

PATS & TIGERS SWAP HAYMAKERS

2/11/82

Morse defeated Patrick Henry, 75-71, in another battle of closely matched titans.  Henry, not counting forfeits in its first two games this season, had won 46 of its last 48 games, both losses to the Tigers.

Henry held a 4-2 edge over Morse during the 48 games, winning by three points in three of the games and by one point in the fourth.

Morse’s other victory over Henry was 52-50 in the 1980-81 San Diego Section 3-A finals.

PLAYOFFS

QUARTERFINALS

3-A

Morse 51, Helix 47 (18-7).

For the second season in a row the underdog Tigers went into a league champion’s gymnasium in the first round.

Lawrence West’s steal with 31 seconds left, followed by Carl Fisher’s layup, put the Tigers in front, 49-47, and Fisher iced the victory with two free throws at :14.

Hilltop 50, Vista 49 (19-5). 

Fred Haley knocked down a 20-foot jump shot with two seconds left.  “I just wanted us to take the best shot we could, whenever it came,” sighed relieved Lancers coach Jan Chapman.

Fallbrook 86, Sweetwater 83 (23-2).

The headline in the Evening Tribune screamed:  “Fallbrook Win Over Sweetwater Almost Defies Description”

Coach Jack Sandschulte started at Fallbrook in 1956 and this was his most satisfying, and unexpected, victory.

“We need to play a perfect game,” said the Warriors coach of his seventh-ranked team (and second in the Avocado League) going to the No. 1 Red Devils’ gym and its environmentally unfriendly atmosphere, created by 6-8 Aaron Combs, 6-7 Tyrone Miller, and 6-1 playmaker Terry Fields.

“Sweetwater has the best physical talent since Bill Walton played at Helix,” Sandschulte told writer Bud Maloney after the Warriors’ surprising victory.

Sweetwater’s Tyrone Miller elevates over Fallbrook’s Jeff Adams (40) and Don Adams (24) in rousing playoff battle.

“They did what they should do against us. They took the ball inside (Brian Busch at 6-3 was Fallbrook’s tallest player) and scored a lot of points off the offensive boards.

“But we did what we do well,” said Sandschulte.  “We shot well and made them play some defense.”

“I didn’t think we had a chance,” the veteran mentor admitted.  “Nobody did,” especially after Sweetwater took a 60-47, third-quarter lead.

Dominic Johnson led the winners with 30 points, including a 40-footer at the end of the third quarter that cut Sweetwater’s lead to 67-65, and two free throws with seven seconds remaining.

Brian Busch’s five-foot jumper with 11 seconds left had finally put Fallbrook in front, 84-83.

Busch added 20 points and Jeff Adams 19, including 9×9 from the free throw line.  Tyrone Miller scored 24 for Sweetwater.

Patrick Henry 68, Monte Vista 44 (14-9).

Playoff top seed Henry converted 29×51 shots from the field for 57 per cent.

2-A

Hoover 97, San Marcos 84 (14-10).

Charlie Steel’s 33 points and a flock of other Cardinals scorers were enough to subdue the Knights and Charlie Panos (19) and Brent Barnes (20).

Oceanside 66, Marian 55 (15-11).

Five-foot, 4-inch Mike Lee scored 15 points and the Pirates overcame a 19-11 Marian lead at the end of one quarter.

San Diego 63, Lincoln 53 (19-4).

The Cavers won the season series, two games to one, as 6-5 Herman Webster finished with 21 points and 19 rebounds.

La Jolla 68, Chula Vista 41 (15-9).

1-A

Santa Fe Christian 87, Borrego Springs 58.

Rob Rittgers scored 22 points and Lance Saber pulled down 20 rebounds.

Army-Navy 61, Francis Parker 35.

Parker’s run of six straight trips to the finals came to an end.  Uchenna Agu led the Warriors with 22 points.

SEMIFINALS

3-A

Patrick Henry 66, Morse 58 (16-8).

The Patriots’ Troy Thrower, who attended Mount Miguel as a sophomore and Helix as a junior, led Patrick Henry with 23 points and nine rebounds.

–Henry broke to a 17-point lead in the third quarter, after which Morse cut the margin to 54-49, but Billy Washington scored on a pair of layups and Thrower finished the Tigers with another score for a 60-49 advantage.

Successful coaching at Lincoln, Bill Peterson moved to Kearny, joined by high scoring Lawrence Winters.

Fallbrook 71, Hilltop 51 (21-6).

Brian Busch missed 11 of his first 13 shots but converted all seven he attempted in the fourth quarter and the Warriors bolted with a 26-10 run after Hilltop pressed, 45-41, at the end of three.

2-A

San Diego 78, Hoover 65 (21-4).

Herman Webster again overshadowed County leading scorer and teammate Norman Baker with 18 points, 19 rebounds, and 3 blocked shots.

“Norman has been sick this week and it was my job to take over,” Webster told Linda Murphy of The San Diego Union.

Oceanside 48, La Jolla 46 (18-6).

The Pirates survived a barren fourth quarter after winning the third period, 27-14, to escape La Jolla, which outscored Oceanside, 8-3, in the final eight minutes.

1-A

Santa Fe Christian 49, Army-Navy 46.

CHAMPIONSHIP

3-A

Patrick Henry 67 (23-3), Fallbrook 66 (21-4).

The Patriots overcame a dreaded administrative glitch when their starting center was ruled ineligible and Henry’s first two games, both victories, were forfeited.

Center Randy Hennis, up from the junior varsity, proved an excellent addition to Billy Washington and Troy Thrower, and scored nine points with nine rebounds against Fallbrook, while Thrower’s free throw with six seconds remaining was the decider.

The Warriors’ Dominic Johnson led all with 35 points.

2-A

Oceanside 60 (22-1), San Diego 58 (21-4).

Mike Lee slipped under the defense and laid up the basket that broke a 58-58 deadlock with nine seconds to play.

1-A

Calipatria 87 (21-1), Santa Fe Christian 71.

The losing Navigators’ Rob Rittger was the evening tripleheader point leader with 36.

CENTURY CLUB

TEAM OPPONENT SCORE
Sweetwater Montgomery 122-57
Sweetwater Southwest 117-57
Patrick Henry Christian 108-50
Granite Hills Grossmont 108-94
Sweetwater Castle Park 106-37
Hoover Christian 105-46
Sweetwater Grossmont 103-71
Sweetwater Mt. Carmel 100-66

CHRISTMAS TOURNAMENTS

MT. HELIX INVITATIONAL

Lincoln 50, Helix 43, championship.

San Diego 84, La Jolla 77.

–The Cavers’ Norman Baker (34) and the Vikings’ Craig Weiss (33) traded hoops in third-place game.

HILLTOP-CHULA VISTA JAYCEES

All games were at Hilltop over four days, involving Granite Hills, Hilltop, Hoover, Mar Vista, Montgomery, Mount Miguel, Point Loma, and Santana.

Point Loma 78, Hoover 76, championship.

–Derrick Riley scored 28 points as Point Loma, trailing, 60-53, after three quarters, closed with a 25-16 fourth period.

GROSSMONT

Also known as the “Foothiller-Monarch” and the “Foothiller” tournament in news accounts.

Actually the event was a round-robin series of nonleague games involving Grossmont, Monte Vista, San Dieguito, Castle Park, El Capitan, and Serra.

Three games were played on each of three days at Grossmont or Serra.

No champion was declared.

FRANCIS PARKER

Army-Navy 69, Santa Fe Christian 60.

–Tournament most-valuable player Uchenna Agu scored 23 points for the Cadets and Albert Gonzalez 20.

RAMONA

San Marcos 72, Ramona 58.

The ball obviously draws a crowd, but where is it? San Diego and La Jolla players gather for rebound.

Lt. JIM MITCHELL MEMORIAL

Oceanside 71, Mira Mesa 58.

–The Pirates’ 5-foot, 4-inch Mike Lee took most-valuable-player honors and scored 13 points, while teammate Eddie Anselmo added 18.

KIWANIS

The 35th annual, continually feeling the pinch from other, ambitious events, was dying a slow death.

Kiwanis, once the largest and premier tournament in the state in the 1950s, had become a round-robin event with 32 Unlimited and Limited Division teams.

The tournament started before Christmas and renewed after the holiday.

–A rare Kiwanis bonus:  The No. 1 and 2 seeded teams, Sweetwater and Patrick Henry, met in the Unlimited finals, with the Patriots emerging on top, 73-70.

–Terry Fields scored 30 for Sweetwater, not enough to offset Billy Washington’s 29 and Troy Thrower’s 24.

–Hoover’s 28-14 fourth quarter overtook San Diego, 76-70, for the Limited crown.

POINT LOMA

Point Loma 51, Ramona 45.

Four teams in round robin play, El Cajon Valley, Point Loma, Ramona, and Mar Vista.

Point Loma was 3-0 and upped record to 8-0.

BARON-OPTIMIST

Sweetwater 67, Vista 65.

–Wes Saleaumua’s basket with five seconds remaining got the Red Devils past the Panthers, whom Sweetwater had dominated, 85-66, three weeks earlier.

Fourteen teams participated, with the championship played in the New Year, Jan. 2.

SANTANA

Helix 61, Santana 39.

–Two days after its Kiwanis victory, Henry needed Troy Thrower’s follow shot with two seconds remaining to beat Clairemont, 47-45.

An earlier victory over Clairemont was one of two forfeits Patrick Henry had sustained.

–With only six players in uniform, Henry dismantled Christian in the second round, 108-50.  Troy Thrower (26), Billy Washington (24), Randy Hennis (20), and Kevin Brown (16) led the way.

–Still dressing out only six players, Henry won a semifinal game against Mount Miguel, 65-48.

–More players were in uniform and seven scored as the Patriots took the title game over Santana.

Eight teams competed with the championship on Jan. 2.

The Evening Tribune all-County first team:. Billy Washington, Patrick Henry (center) and (clockwise from upper left) Troy Thrower, Patrick Henry; Dominic Johnson, Fallbrook; Norman Baker, San Diego; Tyrone Miller, Sweetwater.

SCORING LEADERS

Name School Games Points Average
Dominic Johnson Fallbrook 25 610 24.4 (3)
Norman Baker San Diego 24 598 24.9 (2)
Ray Epton Madison 23 575 25.0 (1)
Terry Fields Sweetwater 25 561 22.4 (7)
Charlie Panos San Marcos 24 555 23.1 (6)
Lawrence Winters Kearny 22 523 23.7 (4)
Troy Thrower Patrick Henry 26 523 20.1
Todd Iseminger Grossmont 22 511 23.2 (5)
Charlie Steel Hoover 24 508 21.16 (9)
Paul Nelson Marian 24 498 20.8 (10)
James Wilson El Camino 23 488 21.21 (8)
Billy Washington Patrick Henry 26 488 18.8
Jim Douglas Vista 24 462 19.3
Aaron Combs Sweetwater 25 456 18.2
Lawrence West Morse 24 455 19.0
Brian Busch Fallbrook 24 454 18.91
Brent Barnes San Marcos 24 453 18.87
Craig Weiss La Jolla 23 451 19.6
Tyrone Miller Sweetwater 25 449 18.0
Herman Webster San Diego 24 440 18.3
Russ Swier Ramona 21 409 19.5
Paul Taylor Chula Vista 24 404 16.8
Dally Orange Glen 21 385 18.3
Rob Rittgers Santa Fe Christian 21 383 18.2
Scott Fite Serra 20 382 19.1

JUMP SHOTS

The arrival of Tommy Fields as a transfer from Chula Vista was the third recruiting (?) coup by Sweetwater Coach Gary Zarecky in three seasons…Darren Lee came in 1979-80 and Tyrone Miller in 1980-81…Floyd Evans, head coach at Riverside Poly, was reprimanded by Ivy League bosses and his school principal, who said in a statement that Evans “did not operate within the CIF Athletic Principles and Code of Ethics,” after leaving star Cheryl Miller in a game in which Miller scored 105 points and the Bears defeated Riverside Arlington, 179-15….




1980-81: Red Devils Break Scoring Record

Records are made to be broken, but it took 11 years, until Jan. 23, 1981, for  Bill Walton and Helix  to surrender the San Diego Section’s signature team scoring achievement.

Helix slammed Mount Miguel, 127-31, in the 1969-70 season and the Highlanders’ record seldom was in trouble, other than a couple 122-point assaults by free-wheeling small schools Francis Parker in 1974 and Army-Navy in 1977.

Montgomery, 1-21 for the season and with a defensive average of 84 points, including 111 in an early-season Sweetwater game, was a perfect target in a rematch with the Red Devils, who gang rushed the Aztecs to a pinball machine-tilt of 130 points against 51.

DUBIOUS CLAIM

The San Diego Union reported that all but one starter on coach Gary Zarecky’s squad left the game in the middle of the third quarter (suggesting no return), which is hard to believe because Aaron Combs scored 38, Calvin Murrell 33, Tyrone Miller 23, and Juan Aguirre 20 for a total of 114 points.

Even if the Red Devils kept floor general Aguirre in the game, Sweetwater would have scored only another 16 points, if the newspaper account, reported by Sweetwater coach Gary Zarecky or a student manager, since the Union did not have a representative at the game, was accurate.

The box score in the newspaper suggested differently.

The Red Devils led by quarterly scores of 28-15, 60-29, and 99-44, before closing with a 31-7 final eight minutes.