2018-19 Weeks 1-6: State Top 20 Eludes San Diego Squads
The San Diego Section’s Big Four, listed numerically in the weekly The San Diego Union-Tribune poll below, has beaten some very good intersectional teams but not gained traction with ratings experts.
Wins like Foothills Christian’s 83-74 over Sacramento Sheldon, the state’s No. 9 team according to Cal-Hi Sports and St. Augustine’s 64-49 victory over No. 12 Orange Lutheran have been sandwiched around missed opportunuties against other formidable opposition.
Make no mistake, San Diego’s best annually take on the best. Winning league championships and section titles are foremost but coaches also have an eye on the state playoffs and try to steel their squads for the challenges in March.
Mission Bay got most of the votes for No. 1 this week, although I voted for St. Augustine after having hung with Foothills Christian through most of December.
St. Augustine handled Mission Bay, 64-55, in in a physical, clean game in the first Western League showdown last night at St. Augustine.
The Buccaneers’ Boogie Ellis scored 14 points but did not shoot well. Ellis looked for open teammates and played his usual solid floor game, but was escorted everywhere by Saints defenders.
St. Augustine fell from its No. 18 position in Cal -Hi‘s weekly top 20 and now is a “bubble team”, along with Mission Bay, Torrey Pines, and Foothills Christian.
Max Preps ranks the Saints 16th in California, Foothills Christian 27th, Torrey Pines 37th, and Mission Bay 64th.
Union-Tribune poll through Monday, Jan. 7:
Rank
Team
Record
Points
Last Poll
1
Mission Bay (10)
8-6
131
1
2.
Torrey Pines (2)
13-5
125
3
3
St. Augustine (2)
13-4
109
4
4
Foothills Christian
10-4
98
2
5
Francis Parker
11-3
80
5
6
La Jolla Country Day
10-6
65
6
7
Santa Fe Christian
13-4
52
NR
8
San Marcos
10-6
43
7
9
Poway
15-5
29
8
10
Montgomery
12-2
10
9
Others receiving votes: Rancho Buena Vista (16-2, 8 points),Cathedral (11-7, 6). Vista (11-7, 4), Westview (15-4, 2), Valhalla (12-2, 1).
Voters: John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune; Terry Monahan, freelance; Steve Brand, San Diego Sports Association; Carlton Hoggard (CIF San Diego Section), Adam Paul, Ramon Scott, EastCountySports.com; John Kentera, Braden Suprenant, 97.3 FM, The Fan; Rick Smith, partletonsports.com; Bodie DeSilva, sandiegopreps.com; Steve Dolan, Mountain Country 107.9 FM; Christian Pedersen, S.D. Preps Insider; Aaron Burgin, Fulltime Hoops; Brad Enright, L.A. Court Report.
2018-19 Week 9A: Olive, Haupt Neck and Neck to 500
Torrey Pines’ John Olive and St. Augustine’s Mike Haupt each is bearing down on career victory No. 500.
Olive leads with 488 victories to Haupt’s 487.
Whenever they reach 500, Oliver and Haupt will join a club that has a membersship of three in the San Diego area.
El Camino’s retired Ray Johnson won 763 games. Helix’ John Singer is the leader among active coaches with 674 followed by El Camino’s Tom Tarentino with 582, according to figures provided by the Union-Tribune‘s John Maffei, partletonsports.com, and Max Preps.
Others active with at least 400 wins are Francis Parker’s Jim Tomey (456) and La Costa Canyon’s Dave Cassaw (429). Foothills Christian’s Brad Leaf has 384.
Corrections, additions, even complaints, are welcomed.
Union-Tribune poll through Monday, Jan. 31:
Rank
Team
Record
Points
Last Poll
1
Mission Bay (7)
7-5
133
3
2
Foothills Christian (6)
10-3
132
2
3
Torrey Pines
12-5
109
4
4
St. Augustine (1)
11-4
104
1
5
Francis Parker
10-3
68
7
6
La Jolla Country Day
10-6
60
5
7
San Macos
10-6
38
6
8
Poway
14-4
30
9
9
Montgomery
11-1
29
10
10
Vista
11-6
23
10
Others receiving votes: Santa Fe Christian (12-4, 18 points), Cathedral (10-6, 8). Ranmcho Buena Vista (16-2, 6), Carlsbad (13-2, 6), Rancho Bernardo (8-5, 5).
Voters: John Maffei, San Diego Union-Tribune; Terry Monahan, freelance; Steve Brand, San Diego Sports Association; Carlton Hoggard (CIF San Diego Section), Adam Paul, Ramon Scott, EastCountySports.com; John Kentera, Braden Suprenant, 97.3 FM, The Fan; Rick Smith, partletonsports.com; Bodie DeSilva, sandiegopreps.com; Steve Dolan, Mountain Country 107.9 FM; Christian Pedersen, S.D. Preps Insider; Aaron Burgin, Fulltime Hoops; Brad Enright, L.A. Court Report.
1970-71: Hoover Miracle Shocks, Floors Morse
Hoover trailed Morse, 70-50, with two minutes and 40 seconds remaining in their Eastern League game at Hoover on Tuesday afternoon, Feb. 2, 1971.
Hoover won, 71-70.
Let’s try that again.
Hoover won, 71-70.
The Cardinals scored the game’s last 21 points in arguably the most jaw-dropping finish in the history of area high school hoops.
“I’m glad I’m not Red Auerbach,” Morse coach Tom Williams remarked two days later, acknowledging the Boston Celtics coach Red Auerbach, who would light a cigar on the bench when his team was assured a victory.
“They got into foul trouble and we went into a 1-2-2 press,” said Hoover coach Hal Mitrovich. “I don’t think they broke center court more than two or three times in the last three minutes.”
Mitrovich thought for a moment. “If they had thrown in one more basket, they would have won.”
“I’ve got to admit I felt pretty confident,” said Williams, the winner of 443 games in a career in which he coached start-up programs at Morse and Serra.
Williams thought there was 3:40 remaining when the game took its dramatic change (Hoover officials confirmed the correct time as 2:40).
“They got every break in the book,” said Williams. “We had four starters foul out; they got 19 free throws in the fourth quarter, and then there was the last eight seconds.”
Bill Center of The San Diego Union, who was not at the game, picked up the story with Williams.
“Morse had a one-point lead and a man (the coach would not identify) at the free-throw line, shooting one and one. But he missed the first shot and, to make matters worse, stepped over the foul line—a violation,” wrote Center.
Hoover was awarded the ball out of bounds on side court.
“If he had missed without stepping over the line, Hoover would have had to rebound the ball, get it downcourt, and shoot,” Williams said. “But they got the ball out; they set up, and the time actually was double what they would have had.”
Hoover center Walt Russell dribbled across midcourt, glanced up at the clock, and then let fly with a 15-foot attempt that drained the net with two seconds left. Russell scored 13 of Hoover’s 27 fourth-quarter points and 25 for the game.
“What can you say?” said Williams. “We shoot 50 per cent from the floor and play a good game.” Morse, ahead, 56-44, at the end of three, lost its two highest scorers, Stan Rosendahl and Keith Walker to fouls, plus Mike Bento and Bill Corsello.
“We told our kids it was a once-in-a-million game,” said Williams. “If we stop and worry about this game we’re dead.”
Morse finished at 7-5 and in a tie for third with Patrick Henry in the Eastern League and was 17-11 overall. Hoover was fifth at 5-7 and 10-16 overall.
HELIX STREAK ENDS
Kearny’s Jesse Martinez stole a pass and scored a basket with 15 seconds left and then dropped in a free throw, giving the Komets an opening-game, 63-61 victory. Helix was deprived of a 50th consecutive win and faced life without Bill Walton.
Life wasn’t that bad.
Despite finishing third in the Grossmont League to Monte Vista and Grossmont, the teams that would play for the San Diego section championship, Helix posted a 21-9 record and Mike Honz led the County with 614 points, and his 20.6 average was second highest in the County.
Helix shocked Monte Vista, 74-49, in the league opener and was 2-2 against Monte Vista and Grossmont, the teams that were accorded first and second place in a telephonic vote among principals at the end of the regular season. All three had 11-3 league records.
The Highlanders’ bid for a fourth San Diego Section championship was derailed by five-time Western League champ Madison, 80-76, in the first round of the playoffs after earlier, 77-62 and 87-72 victories over the Warhawks, but the Grossmont League continued to rule with a third champion in the last three seasons and fifth in the section’s 11 seasons.
PLAYOFFS
FIRST ROUND
–Bob Tagye scored 27 points but third seed Chula Vista (25-4) fell to Patrick Henry, the Eastern League’s No. 3 squad, 68-56, in an opening night stunner.
–John Bunting had 21 points and Monte Vista, off to a 41-21 halftime lead, ushered out Bonita Vista (16-11), 70-54.
–Reliable Mike Collier (21) and Ed Aycox (14) pushed Lincoln past Vista (14-12), 60-45.
–Marty Mayer had 17 points and Clairemont eliminated Poway (13-13), 59-49.
–Castle Park dismissed St. Augustine (17-11), 56-51.
–Grossmont’s front line of 6-foot-10, Ralph Drollinger, 6-8 Kevin Enright, and 6-7 Tom Foulds combined for 45 points as the Foothillers raced past Hilltop (19-9), 80-59.
–Madison, a 15-point loser twice to Helix, scored 52 second-half points and held off the Scots. Rockey Lee, a 6-8 sophomore, came off the bench in the first quarter and led the Warhawks with 25 points and nine rebounds.
–Carlsbad topped Kearny (20-8), 60-56.
QUARTERFINALS
–Ten free-throw points in the fourth quarter helped Monte Vista put away Clairemont, 64-57, after the Chiefs had whittled a 13-point Monarchs halftime lead to three. Bob Papciak led with 21 points and was 11×13 from the free throw line. Clairemont, 5-20 in 1969-70, finished with an 18-9 record.
–Madison broke from a 30-30 score at halftime to run off from Castle Park (24-6), 76-57.
–Patrick Henry 60, Carlsbad (22-3), 44. “Every time we shot they had a hand up and I don’t know how many times they got a hand on the ball,” said Lancers coach Dimitri Poradowski. “When we weren’t scoring our defense was fine,” noted Patriots coach Fritz Ziegenfuss.
–Grossmont scored five points in the final 55 points and sneaked past second-seeded Lincoln (24-6), 49-48.
SEMIFINALS
Attendance at the San Diego International Sports Arena was 5,295 for the two games.
–Top seeded Monte Vista got all it could handle from fourth seeded Madison (20-9), which had beaten favored Helix and Castle Park. The Monarchs trailed, 37-24, seventeen seconds into the third quarter but rallied to defeat the Warhawks, 62-60.
–Grossmont defeated Patrick Henry (21-9), 78-59, as 6-10 ½ Ralph Drollinger scored 24 points and pulled down 17 rebounds. Drollinger’s 6-8 teammate Kevin Enright had 24 points and 12 rebounds.
CHAMPIONSHIP
Attendance was 6,451 for the Saturday doubleheader for the title and third place.
Monte Vista (29-2) made it three victories in four tries against its Grossmont League rival, 49-44, pulling away from the Foothillers with a strong third quarter that gave the Monarchs a 43-34 advantage heading into the final eight minutes.
Monarchs coach Pete Colonelli, a standout guard at Lincoln in the late ‘fifties, answered those who thought his virtual ironman team of five starters (Allen Bunting, Gary Earle, Bob Pepciak, Jack Cross, and Carl Stucky), would tire from the pace of 4 games in the one-week postseason.
“I think we were in just a little better shape than anyone else,” Colonelli told Bill Center, “and I think the second team can be thanked for that. The second ream gave the starters all they wanted in practice.
“When fatigue sets in there is a lot of reaching and the tired club will draw the fouls,” said Colonelli. “We were under 20 the last two nights.”
THIRD PLACE
Madison claimed the consolation prize for the third time in five years, defeating Patrick Henry (21-10), 70-59.
SMALL SCHOOLS
Ramona measured San Diego Military, 63-53, for the Class A championship as 6-foot-6 Dale Eberwein scored 24 points and came away with 17 rebounds at La Jolla. The Bulldogs, 19-7, also topped the Eagles (16-5), 70-64 for the December Southern Prep League tournament gonfalon.
TOURNAMENTS
KIWANIS
Forty-two teams in three divisions, playing as many as 65 games in four days, represented the 24th annual event, largest in California. Junior colleges Grossmont, Southwestern, Palomar, and Mesa were hosts for games the first three days, with finals at San Diego State’s Peterson Gym.
Diane Ridgway, widow of the Mount Miguel coach, Dick Ridgway, who passed suddenly before the season, was the honored guest at the tournament tipoff luncheon at U.S. U.S. Grant Hotel.
–San Diego, 2-6 and a decided underdog to 5-2 Helix, upset the second-seeded Highlanders in the quarterfinals, 61-57.
–Carlos Mina, a 6-foot, 8-inch forward destined to play for Jerry Tarkanian at Long Beach State, set a tournament record with 50 points as El Centro Central won the Classified Division, 80-79 over Bonita Vista.
–Monte Vista won its 11th in a row, topping Grossmont, 56-47, for the Unlimited Division crown.
–Two free throws by Bob Peterson with 1:20 remaining gave Castle Park a three point lead and Trojans held on to win the Limited Division over Chula Vista, 67-66.
POST-CHRISTMAS
Thirty-six teams competed in the University, Chino, Covina, Newport, El Centro, and Bonita Vista events, all sponsored by various Kiwanis, Optimist, and Elks clubs.
UNIVERSITY
Sixteen teams in the sixth annual Uni carnival played all games in the University of San Diego gym, some starting as early as 8:30 a.m. and finishing around 9:30 p.m.
–St. Augustine defeated Kearny, 53-42, for the championship.
–John Slater, son of Kearny football coach Birt Slater, scored nine of Mount Miguel’s 14 points in overtime and had a game high of 34 in the Matadors’ 73-66 win over Hoover.
–Castle Park outscored El Capitan, 22-8, in the final eight minutes to overcome a 57-49 deficit and win, 71-65, in a game in which 56 personal fouls were called. Six players fouled out. El Capitan missed 18 of 45 free throws and Castle Park missed 16 of 41.
COVINA
Despite entering with a 6-4 record, Helix played strongly in the prestigious event.
–Dan Coleman’s last-second layin gave the Scots a 78-77 win over Gardena Serra. Coleman and Mike Honz each scored 22 points.
–Poway went to the consolation bracket following a 98-68 loss to Sherman Oaks Notre Dame.
–John Singer’s two free throws with nine seconds left in overtime lifted Helix to a 74-72 win over Lakewood, after Singer missed two free throws with one second remaining in regulation play. Singer had been fouled while he launched a desperation, half-court shot with the score tied at 70.
–Poway headed home after a second loss, 64-48, to South Pasadena in the consolation round.
–Helix ousted host Covina, 72-61, in the quarterfinals.
–Honz, Coleman, and Dennis Dupree each scored 21 points as Helix hammered Huntington Beach Marina, 85-74, to gain the finals for the second year in a row.
–Mike Honz scored 31 points, but the Scots bowed to West Covina, 72-57. Honz led all tournament scorers with 96 points and made the all-tournament team with Coleman.
CHINO
—Chula Vista advanced with a 65-49 win over Montclair and 81-60 triumph over Chino before bowing in the semifinals to Upland, 78-69. The Spartans defeated Clairemont, 79-61 for third place. Escondido lost to Ontario, 87-59, and Pomona Garey, 91-54.
NEWPORT BEACH
–Monte Vista was 2-0 in tournaments after beating Victorville Victor Valley, 64-63; three-time Nevada champion Las Vegas Clark, 61-55, and Camarillo, 46-44 on Gary Earle’s basket with 15 seconds left.
–Oceanside lost to Newport Harbor, 72-62, and La Jolla to Camarillo, 73-63, pushing the two San Diego teams into a consolation bracket game which Oceanside won, 80-71, despite 33 points by La Jolla’s Gary Kloppenburg. Costa Mesa topped the Pirates, 72-51, for the conso’ title.
EL CENTRO
Six County schools were among the 14 entered in the fourth annual event.
–Patrick Henry, coming on in its third season, ran past Morse, 56-51, for the championship.
Carlos Mina’s 27 points escorted El Centro Central past Madison, 66-64, for third place. Future National Basketball Association standout Lionel Hollins scored 24 to lead Las Vegas Rancho to a 78-50 win over Coronado for fifth place.
BARON-OPTIMIST
Bonita Vista was host for the inaugural event.
–San Diego blew a 14-point lead but outscored Mar Vista, 11-2, in overtime for an 81-72 victory.
–Crawford made 30×35 free throws to top Bonita Vista, 76-72, but the Colts lost to El Cajon Valley, 53-43, in the championship game.
SCORING DOWN?
Production was off only at the top, as four players, compared to 20 in 1969-70, averaged at least 20 points a game.
There were 29 individuals who scored 400 or more points, one more than the previous season.
Hilltop junior Steve Copp had the highest single-game total, 45, in a 95-51 win over Montgomery. El Capitan’s Don Sutton scored 43 in an 83-61 triumph over Granite Hills.
Helix led the way with 100-point games, winning their 35th in a row at home, 105-60 over El Capitan. The Scots, whose 75.6 game average was the second highest in section history among major schools to Helix’ 83.2 in 1969-70, also topped Santana, 106-52.
Christian passed the century mark when it beat San Miguel School, 101-82.
Leaders:
NAME
TEAM
GAMES
POINTS
AVERAGE
Mike Honz
Helix
30
614
20.5 (3)
Bob Tagye
Chula Vista
29
585
20.2 (4)
Steve Copp
Hilltop
27
571
21.5 (1)
Gary Earle
Monte Vista
31
563
18.2
Mike Collier
Lincoln
29
552
19.0 (8)
John Service
Patrick Henry
31
533
17.2
Kevin Enright
Grossmont
30
523
17.4
Dale Eberwein
Ramona
26
496
19.1 (7)
James Ross
Kearny
29
491
16.9
Ron Wrigley
St. Augustine
28
493
17.6
Dennis Core
Santana
27
487
18.0
Phil Efseaff
San Marcos
25
483
19.4 (6)
Emlow Henry
Hoover
26
481
18.5 (9)
Louie Yap
Sweetwater
26
479
18.4 (10)
Gary Kloppenburg
La Jolla
24
469
19.5 (5)
Dave Bartholomew
Kearny
29
469
16.2
Allen Bunting
Monte Vista
31
468
15.1
Dan Coleman
Helix
29
461
15.9
Steve Vickery
El Capitan
24
459
17.1
Roger Davis
Lincoln
30
450
15.0
Ralph Drollinger
Grossmont
30
448
14.9
Tom Lines
Bonita Vista
27
446
16.5
Vern Rye
San Dieguito
21
435
20.7 (2)
Bill Howard
Mar Vista
25
432
17.3
John Slater
Mount Miguel
24
427
17.8
Stan Rosendahl
Morse
28
424
15.1
Rich Hastings
Madison
26
423
16.3
Marty Mayer
Clairemont
27
420
15.6
Braestrom
Vista
26
413
15.9
SIGN OF THE TIMES
Bill Walton returned to San Diego as a freshman basketball standout at UCLA and scored 29 points as the Brubabes toyed with a Mesa College team, 132-95.
“We expect Walton to start for the varsity next year,” declared frosh coach Gary Cunningham. “We’re a balanced ball club and he’s an excellent team player, which is why he’s averaging only 19 points a game.”
JUMP SHOTS
Grossmont opened a new gymnasium on campus and took a while to get settled, trailing Bonita Vista, 39-30, at halftime before pulling out to a 73-65 victory…Lincoln’s 6-foot-9 Roger Davis scored 23 points and set a school record with 37 rebounds in a 71-57 win at Vista…Davis’ 522 career rebounds broke the record of 516, set by Bruce Anderson in 1967…Tom Snow, 98-59 in six seasons, stepped down and Nate Wallace became head coach at Castle Park…Crawford led Granite Hills only 40-34, but won, 68-38, with a 28-4 last quarter…Ralph Drollinger had 36 points and 24 rebounds in Grossmont’s 81-64 win over Mount Miguel…Kearny’s James Ross was identified as Ross James in one newspaper account…Uni coach Hector Macis was not a happy camper…a 77-54, home-game loss to Madison included 30 fouls to the visitors’ nine, and five Uni players fouled out…not to be outdone, 7 San Miguel players departed as the Knights committed 46 fouls against Christian, which sank 41×67 free throw attempts and defeated the former National City school, 101-82…San Miguel merged with The Bishop’s in 1971…eight players were in double scoring figures in Helix’ 106-52 win over Santana…Castle Park ended a 32-game home winning streak for Chula Vista, 62-59…Tony Baron’s looper with 15 seconds remaining lifted San Miguel to a 74-72, three-overtime victory over La Jolla Country Day…Grossmont outlasted a stall by Granite Hills, 28-12, after Lincoln was successful in a similar game with Crawford, 37-25…San Diego’s 8-19 record was the Cavemen’s poorest since a 2-10 finish in 1925-26 and their first losing season since a 6-8 campaign in 1934-35…the Cavers had one measure of success…they took a 1-8 record into a game with 7-1 rival Lincoln and came out ahead, 70-67….
2018 Week 18: Cathedral State’s No. 7 Team
Despite defeat, Cathedral got respect and cred in Cal-Hi Sports’ final rating of the state’s top 2018 teams.
Coach Sean Doyle’s team could not take down mighty Folsom, losing, 21-14, in overtime to the Sacramento-area power that had punished San Diego clubs in the past, but Cathedral’s stout performance in the Division 1-AA final at Cerritos College in Norwalk elevated the Dons from eighth to seventh behind, in order, blue bloods Santa Ana Mater Dei, Bellflower St. John Bosco, Concord De LaSalle, Corona Centennial, and Folsom.
Westlake Village Oaks Christian nosed out the Dons for sixth.
Doyle’s clubs hit a bump in the road every once in a while but they travel with the elite and schedule the big boys.
Cathedral figures to make another run in 2019, returning several battle-tested players, starting with quarterback D.J. Ralph. They’ll have to replace running back Shawn Poma, the San Diego Section player of the year who hit with howitzer force and was the heartbeat of the Dons’ offense.
Torrey Pines was 14th in Cal-Hi Sports’ final, St. Augustine 48th, and Helix 52nd. Carlsbad, Eastlake, and Lincoln each was given honorable mention.
Cathedral ranked ninth in the state and 35th in the country, according to Max Preps. Torrey Pines was 23rd in California, St. Augustine 35th, and Helix 45th.
Cal Preps.com gave Cathedral a 64.7 grade, Torrey Pines 53.8, St. Augustine 49.0, and Helix 44.7.
CAVERS PREVAIL
San Diego was the only champion of the four San Diego Section finalists. The Cavers, after traveling 563 miles, overcame an early, 10-0 deficit to defeat favored Colfax, 21-10, in D5-AA.
The victory revived memories of the Hilltoppers’ illustrious past.
While the Cavers had not done much in football the last 50 or so years, they still had their followers.
A Go-Fund-Me page with a goal of $14,000 to help defray the Cavers’ expenses for the trip was met so quickly that many graduates couldn’t respond. Many in the school’s vast number of alumni had stepped up in support of the Park Boulevard mainstay.
Lincoln dropped a 21-7 decision to Menlo-Atherton in D3-AA and Orange Glen was defeated in D6-A by San Francisco Lincoln, 24-13.
VALLEY CENTER RUNNER TOPS
Mateo Sinohui of Valley Center led the section with 31 touchdowns and 18 two-point conversions for 222 points, according to the unofficial statistics annually provided by Max Preps.
Rancho Buena Vista’s Dorian Richardson had 34 touchdowns and 204 points and Orange Glen’s Cael Patterson, who returns in ’19, had 200, followed by Torrey Pines Mac Bingham with 158.
Go to the Football menu, search Top Performances, and then scroll to Annual Individual Performers for a list of the top 15.
San Diego Section squads are 10-16 since in state championship games were reintroduced in 2006:
Seasons of 9-2 and 8-4, respectively, continued to elevate Ron Hamamoto and Valley Center’s Rob Gilster in the upper strata of all-time, San Diego Section football coaches. Cathedral’s Sean Doyle is on the cusp of 200 victories.
Hamamoto, who completed his 32nd season at Cathedral (nee University), Rancho Bernardo, Lincoln, and Monte Vista since 1985, completed the year with 227 victories. The graduate of Long Beach Poly still is fifth in number of wins but is stalking Morse’s John Shacklett, who won 229 in 32 seasons at Morse.
Gilster, an all-section lineman in the 1980s at Escondido, has won 224 games since 1989 at Orange Glen and Valley Center and moved past Gil Warren into sixth place.
Despite a wrenching, 21-14 overtime loss to Folsom in the state Division I-AA championship, Doyle’s 12-2 season vaulted him from 13th to a tie for 10th with Vista’s Dick Haines, each with 194 wins.
Damon Baldwin has compiled a record of 98-61-1 since becoming Ramona’s head coach in 2005 and could become the 42nd with 100 victories next year, with Olympian’s Paul Van Nosdtrand (97) and Grossmont’s Tom Karlo (95) in pursuit,
The eight active members of the Century Club: Hamamoto, Gilster, Doyle, Matt Oliver (166), Chris Hauser (159), Mike Hastings (145), Rick Jackson (131), and John McFadden (130).
CARROLL LEADS
John Carroll, 248-75-6 in 26 seasons at Oceanside, still has the highest winning percentage, .763, followed Birt Slater (.753), Rick Jackson (.751), John McFadden (.747), and George Ohnessorgen (.745).
All of Jack Mashin’s 125 victories came when Grossmont was a member of the Southern Section, from which San Diego schools broke in 1960. Herb Meyer, Bennie Edens, Chick Embrey, Gene Edwards, and Birt Slater also won games when their schools were in the Southern Section.
Ed Burke (215) won at least 40 more games as head coach at King City in the Central Coast Section. Dick Haines (194) won an untold number in Dover, Ohio.
Chula Vista’s Chet DeVore and San Diego’s Duane Maley are the County’s all-time leaders in won-loss percentage based on a minimum of 50 games. DeVore was 44-7-1 (.856) and Maley 97-19-3 (.828).
The all-time winner remains Herb Meyer, who won’t be challenged for many years, if ever. With 339 victories at Oceanside and El Camino, Meyer is 91 ahead of runner-up John Carroll (248).
Search the “Football” menu and scroll down to “Coach 100 Win Club” for a complete list.
2018 Week 17: Cavers’ First Time in State Playoff Since ’22
It’s been 96 years, but who’s counting when you’re having fun?
San Diego High coach Charles James has reason to be enjoying the moment. The once tradition-rich Cavers (12-2) have become relevant after a slump that spanned generations.
How far the Hilltoppers have come back will continue to be measured when James’ club travels about 560 miles to the former gold country northeast of Sacramento and takes on the Colfax Falcons of the Sac-Joaquin Section in the state Division 6-AA championship game Saturday evening.
The Cavers will be making their first appearance in a state playoff since they dropped a 17-6 decision to Bakersfield in City Stadium (renamed Balboa in 1939) in 1922. State championship contests were discontinued after the 1926 season and reinstated in 2006.
James, who was 7-5 and 4-7 at University City in 2013-14, assumed leadership of the San Diego program in 2015 and took his lumps, 2-8 and 1-9 in his first two seasons before his team hit stride and climbed to 12-1 in 2017.
–San Diego is one of four San Diego Section teams to have reached the final. All four are considered underdogs by the ratings groups.
Colfax, with a 13-0 record, is ranked 80th in the state by Max Preps. San Diego is ranked 124th. Cal Preps.com assigns Colfax a 36.8 rating and San Diego 30.1.
–Orange Glen, which won its first league championship since 1995 and first section title since 1967, takes a 10-4 record to City College of San Francisco, where the Patriots will play San Francisco Lincoln, 12-0, and a 52-18 winner over Galileo, which beat Calexico Vincent Memorial, 38-20, for the 2017 state championship in D-6A.
S.F. Lincoln has a 12.5 Cal-Preps.com rating and Orange Glen 5.2. Max Preps rated Lincoln 289th in the state and Orange Glen 376th.
–San Diego Lincoln (11-4) will meet Central Coast Section big shot Menlo-Atherton (12-2) at Redwood City Sequoia High. The Bears have a 43.5 Cal Preps.com rating to Lincoln’s 42.7 and rate 49th by Max Preps to Lincoln’s 51st. Menlo-Atherton is 41st in Cal-Hi Sports’ top 50, while Lincoln is on the bubble.
–Cathedral, eighth this week in Cal-Hi Sports, will be the third consecutive San Diego Section squad trying to slow down Folsom, Cal-Hi Sports’ No. 5 team. The Falcons received a 78.1 compliment from Cal-Preps.com, while Cathedral came in at 65.0. Max Preps rates Folsom fourth and Cathedral ninth.
BULLDOGS TAKE NO PRISONERS
Folsom wore out Fresno Central in the Northern California final, 84-46, despite giving up 763 yards. The Bulldogs lost their season opener, 14-0, to Concord De La Salle and then ran the table with 13 straight wins, six times passing 60 points and knocking out rival Loomis Del Oro, 40-0.
“We played them in 2014,” Folsom coach Kris Richardson said of Cathedral to Cal-Hi-Sports’ Mark Tennis. After Folsom’s 55-10 victory, Cathedral coach Sean Doyle declared the suburban Sacramento team near the prison by the same name was the best he had ever seen. “We’re pretty good this year, too,” Richardson noted to Mark Tennis.
Folsom also roughed up 14-0 Oceanside, 68-7, in 2014, after which ailing Pirates’ coach John Carroll retired.
Folsom defeated Helix, 49-42, in the 2017 D-1AA championship. It was the only occasion that the Folsom coach was not able to pour it on.
Cathedral has been here before, defeating Stockton St. Mary’s, 37-34, in 2008, and again in 2016, 38-35.
QUICK KICKS
San Diego teams are 5-9 in state championships since the six-division model was adopted in 2014…they were 0-2 in ’14, 2-2 in ’15, 2-2 in ’16, and 1-3 in ’17…San Francisco Lincoln has one of the most diverse groups of notable alumni, including golf champions Johnny Miller and Ken Venturi, Super Bowl champion coach Mike Holmgren, and Alzono Powell, recently the San Diego Padres’ assistant hitting coach….