1940: Firestorm Over Oceanside Transfers

Voices were raised, fists shook, and fingers pointed in a  conference room  at  the downtown YMCA on Oct. 24 in  a dustup over eligibility involving players who notoriously became  known as the “Adopted Football Stars.”

Metropolitan League principals and coaches held a special meeting to consider the status of two “sensational Oceanside athletes,” Jimmy Bender and Bill Brazell.

All league schools except Coronado had representatives at the meeting, chaired by league president Earl Andreen of La Jolla and including vice president Clarence Swenson of Point Loma, CIF representative Martin Perry of Escondido, and secretary Darcie Anderson of Sweetwater.

After much discussion and bluster, the league bosses did nothing, instead launching a high, arcing punt into the lap of CIF Southern Section commissioner Seth Van Patten.

Brazell, described as a “rangy end”, joined the Pirates on Oct. 1 from Kilgore, Texas, and is said to have been taken under guardianship of one C.J. Heltibridle of Oceanside.

Bender, a triple threat back, arrived in Oceanside on Oct. 9, two days before a league game with Escondido.

Bender transferred from Sutton, Nebraska, a community of maybe 1,000 persons in the southeastern corner of the state.  He apparently played in several games for the local high school before being “adopted” by a “cousin,” who lived in Oceanside.

On Oct. 11 “Benter”, as his name was first  reported, punted, drop-kicked an extra point, ran the ball, and threw a pair of touchdown passes to Brazell in Oceanside’s 13-0 victory over Escondido.

Jimmy Bender’s punt was blocked by Sweetwater defender but recovered by Oceanside, after which Bender punted again in game that was protested by Sweetwater before kickoff.

EYEBROWS RAISED

Bender’s  debut didn’t go unnoticed by league officials, who, after hearing complaints from coaches, began asking questions.

The players  apparently were okay scholastically but would have to address the question of how they got to Oceanside.  CIF rules stated that a “boy is ineligible unless there is a legal change of address by the parents or legal guardian.”

While the Metropolitan League waited to hear from Van Patten, the Pirates’ coach, Dick Rutherford, an entrepreneurial sort who also owned a farm in Vista and had experience as a wrestling referee, including professional matches at the San Diego Coliseum, defended his use of the players the following week against Sweetwater.

After a 27-18 loss, in which Bender ran 88 yards for one touchdown and passed for another, Rutherford more or less ignored questions about Brazell and said, not convincingly, that he was “playing Bender in good faith because we believe he is eligible.”

Sweetwater coach Cletis (Biff) Gardner had officially protested Oceanside’s playing of Bender and Brazell before the kickoff.

UNION WRITER FIRED UP

A   lengthy   game   account   under   no  byline  in   San   Diego’s morning newspaper the following day began thusly:

“With a furious display of gridiron power Sweetwater High’s rampaging Red Devils, keyed to a torrid fighting pitch, exploded the Jimmy Bender inflation at Oceanside High by roaring to a 27-18 victory over the Pirates in a hectic game on the Red Devil field.”

A week later, Bender figured in all three touchdowns, scoring two and passing to Brazell for another, in a 19-0 victory over Point Loma on a muddy field.

WAS BENDER “STASHED”?

The superintendent in Sutton, Nebraska, weighed in, expressing “bitterness” over the incident and “deploring” the fact that California schools could help themselves to young, midwestern athletes.

It also was reported that “newspapermen” in Sutton claimed that a Pacific Coast Conference university figured in a deal in which all expenses for Bender’s trip to Oceanside had been paid by an unknown party.

Coast Conference “czar” Edwin Atherton, a college fraternity brother of J. Edgar Hoover and former FBI agent and private investigator, was said to be looking into the charges.

Van Patten ruled against the transfers on Nov. 7, citing the suspicious nature in which the guardianships took place.

Coronado was unbeaten and won league championship for first time since 1932 as Dexter Lanois, Harry Galpin, Fritz Sandermann, and Stew (Junior) Worden (from left) fired the Islanders’ offense.

YOU’RE OUT

Messrs. Heltibridle and Bender’s sponsor, Harry Schwarz, had acted with the swiftness of a Nevada divorce.

Heltibridle became Brazell’s guardian on the day the youngster came from Texas and Schwarz filed papers in the San Diego County Courthouse to become Bender’s guardian on the day Bender played against Escondido.

Oceanside forfeited the Escondido and Point Loma victories and the players were done with two games remaining. Bender and Brazell were reported to be “continuing their studies” at Oceanside High.

HOMELESS 

St. Augustine played all seven games on the road, as there was no campus facility and  it was easier to schedule games if the Saints agreed to be the visiting team. They also continued as an  independent with no league affiliation.

The Saints’ league status would  be changed, slightly, in this decade.  They would be part of a league of small County schools during World War II but their games did not count in the standings.

St. Augustine would join the Southland Catholic League in 1945, but that circuit was made up of schools in and around Los Angeles, which would create travel and financial problems for the small North Park school.

He didn’t know it at the time, but student leader and football player Harry Monahan would play a role the Saints’ finally gaining entry into a league of San Diego schools almost 20 years later.

Monahan attended Notre Dame University and became a sportswriter for the South Bend Tribune.  He met Jack Murphy, sports editor of The San Diego Union, at a USC-Notre Dame game in 1953.

Monahan, who maintained his San Diego ties, eventually landed a position on Murphy’s staff.  In the succeeding years Monahan worked with Murphy and St. Augustine principal John Aherne, among others, to get the Saints into the San Diego City Prep League.  It happened in 1957.

There was no football field, or basketball arena, and no league for St. Augustine in 1940.

WAR CLOUDS

The Pearl Harbor attack was 14 months away, but future conflict was not far from anyone’s thoughts.

San Diego High’s starting center, Walter Anderson, left school after he was ordered to his national guard unit.  Vista fullback Ralph Dominguez  and his brother Rudy were called from school to report for Coast Guard patrol duty.

San Diego coach Joe Beerkle used a metaphor when asked about his team, declaring the Hillers’ 1940  outlook was  “poorer than the prospect of peace in Europe.”

CAVERS, VIKINGS SEE DOUBLE

Hoover halfback Jim Morgan was the star of the second annual City Schools’ football carnival, running 30 yards for a touchdown against La Jolla and 27 yards for a score against San Diego.

The 4 city schools each played two quarters.  The Hoover-Point Loma combine defeated San Diego-La Jolla 26-0.

Hoover topped La Jolla 7-0 and hammered the Cavers, 13-0.  Point Loma’s Jim (Speedy) Finsters ran 88 yards in the Pointers’ 6-0 shutout of La Jolla.

A crowd of about 3,500 attended the carnival, which also included performances by various school bands, drum majors, and flag twirlers.  The first carnival in 1939 was presented at the end of the season.

Chuck Deane (left) and all-CIF choice Dick Attig were bulwarks of Hoover line.

McEUEN LOCKS OUT FANS

Escondido coach Charlie McEuen’s  contorted explanation for not allowing Cougars supporters to watch preseason practice: “Fans often get the wrong idea when they see a player in a practice session.  These fans sometimes spread false information about a player that gets back to the boy.”

STADIUM IMPROVED

A new, two-level press box in Balboa Stadium was ready in time for football.  It replaced “the old, wobbling, dangerous structure” and was built with funds supplied by the San Diego County Council and convention committee of the American Legion.

Lights had been installed in time for the season-ending carnival in 1939, but the first regular game after dark in Balboa Stadium took place this season when San Diego defeated Compton, 20-8.

BIG GAME ACROSS BAY

It wasn’t San Diego-Hoover or San Diego-Long Beach Poly.  The game of the year was on quaint Coronado Island, usually accessed by a ferry ride from the foot of Market Street and Pacific Highway.

The undefeated Hemet Bulldogs, coached by former San Diego star Kendall (Bobo) Arnett, took on Hal Niedermeyer’s Coronado Islanders.

The Bulldogs, 4-0, were outscoring opponents 122-6, and led the Riverside League West Division. The Islanders, who had outscored their first four opponents, 110-12, were sparked by quarterback Harry Galpin and fullback Stew (Junior) Worden.

Arnett’s visitors took the game to Niedermeyer’s team, outgaining their green and white-clad hosts, but came up short, 14-0.  Coronado never looked back, winning the Metropolitan League championship and posting an 8-0-1 record for the only unbeaten season in school history.

Hoover’s George Brown (65) tries to tackle Long Beach Poly’s Ed McNulty at goalline, but Jackrabbit quarterback scored in Poly’s 14-10 victory.

MUSTANGS RUN FREE, TOO

San Dieguito kept pace with Coronado among so-called small schools. The Encinitas entry, which opened in 1936, ruled the Southern Prep League.

John Eubank’s Mustangs, led by Leo Swaim, Max Hernandez, and Red Schmidt, clinched the league title with a 13-0 victory over Vista in Week 7 and defeated St. Augustine 14-0 the next week to finish with an 8-0 record, their only undefeated season before dropping football and being renamed San Dieguito Academy in 1996.

FIVE MAKE ALL-SOUTHERN TEAMS

Tackles Tom Balestreri of San Diego  and Dick Attig of Hoover were on the all-Southern California first team.  La Jolla tackle Tom Bossert made the second team, and center Chuck Clark of Escondido and Coronado halfback Stew (Junior) Worden were on the third team.

SEASON TO FORGET

San Diego High sustained its second losing season in the last three and only the third since 1914.

Coach Joe Beerkle temporarily lost starting fullback Joe Mathews and other players because of academic ineligibility, benched fullback Jack O’Connor for “insubordination,”  and saw his best playmaker go down in  the third game.

Mike Luizzi directed an offense that gained 362 yards and 20 first downs and completed 13 of 19 passes for two touchdowns in a 20-13, opening-game victory over the Pasadena Junior College Reserves.

Joe Matthews, Mike Luizzi, Bob Estavillo, and Jim Hodge (from left) lined up in San Diego High backfield.

Luizzi, a converted end,  passed for two touchdowns the following week in a 20-8 victory over Compton, but disaster would hit the Cavers and Luizzi the following week.

Beerkle’s squad of  36 players  boarded a bus at 9:30 on Saturday morning for a six-hour, 220-mile jaunt through dozens of towns and over the winding,  precipitous  “grapevine”,  a steep strip of U.S. 99 that led to the San Joaquin Valley and often caused  overheated radiators, burned out brake pads, or vapor lock.

The Bakersfield Drillers, coached by the legendary Dwight (Goldie) Griffith, had not lost since 1938, a run of 17 games, and they struck the  Cavers with a power running game that featured misdirection plays and against-the-grain cut backs.   San Diego was on its heels all evening.

The 35-13 loss was bad enough but the Cavers also lost Luizzi for the rest of the season with a fractured left arm on the last play of the game.

With Luizzi out, the Cavers enjoyed running the ball in a 37-18 rout of Glendale, led by first-year coach Ambrose (Amby) Schindler, star of the 1933 and 1934 Hilltoppers teams. Joe Mathews scored 4 touchdowns for San Diego.

Newspaper masthead serves as backdrop for San Diego High coaches Werner Peterson, head coach Joe Beerkle, and John Brose (from left) as Hilltoppers awaited their first-ever night game against Compton in  Balboa Stadium.

RAINY DAYS AND FRIDAYS

Hoover and San Diego called off games because of fields drenched by recent rain.

The Cavers’ game with Los Angeles Cathedral would not be rescheduled.  Hoover’s Coast League contest with Long Beach Poly was played a month later, the Jackrabbits improving to 7-0 before 3,500 at Hoover and clinching the Coast League title, 14-10.

“We didn’t have water wings handy and I couldn’t risk the chance of someone drowning,” explained La Jolla coach Marvin Clark, who postponed the Vikings’ game with Escondido.  Most other County schools got their games in.

NO REST FOR CARDINALS

Hoover played the 1939 Southern California football champion and runner-up on successive weeks.

Cardinals coach Pete Walker took a traveling squad of 28 players to the  Santa Fe Railway Depot for a 7:45 a.m.  trip to Santa Barbara, where the Cardinals dropped a 15-12 decision the next afternoon to the playoffs’ second-place finisher of the year before.

The next week, at home, Hoover whipped 1939 champion Alhambra, 19-0, as Hub Foote raced 58 yards for one touchdown and Charlie Blackburn 83 yards for another.

Santa Barbara won the Southern California championship, defeating Whittier, 26-0.

SIGNS OF THE TIME

San Diego police chief Cliff Peterson was appointed by the Peace Officers’ Association of California to take part in a proposal to eliminate speed limits on state highways during daylight hours, with a limit of 40 miles an hour in night driving.

Chula Vista purchased land to build a $175,000 airport. Fred Rohr, who provided fuel tanks constructed in San Diego for Charles Lindbergh’s “Spirit of St. Louis” on its trans-Atlantic flight in 1927, founded Rohr Aircraft Company in Chula Vista in August.

The 10-round, boxing main event at the Coliseum featured Los Angeles’s “Blimp” Williams against the San Diego favorite, light-heavyweight Sailor Jack Coggins, who deflated the Blimp in the third round.

The largest sporting-event crowd in San Diego history took place on Labor Day, when 26,500 were on hand for the Del Mar Handicap at Del Mar Racetrack

Football was decades away but Julian High was a cornerstone of life in the mountains east of San Diego.
Football was decades away but Julian High was vital to the community in the mountains east of San Diego.

TRUE GRID

UT-San Diego columnist Nick Canepa, a 1964 San Diego High graduate, was nephew of the late San Diego High star Mike Luizzi…Sweetwater’s Marcus Alonzo, a Metropolitan League sprint champ in the spring, closed his football career  with 5 touchdowns in a 33-14 win over Escondido…Alonzo ran away with the league scoring title with 54 points…5,000 persons were on hand at Hoover as Sweetwater outgained Hoover 229-84 on the ground, 52-29 through the air, and recovered 8 Hoover fumbles but got out only with a 0-0 tie after the Cardinals’ Jim Morgan was wide on a 33-yard field goal attempt with a minute to play…Hoover end George Brown went on to become an all-America at the Naval Academy and played at San Diego  State after World War II…Brown was team doctor for Don Coryell’s Aztecs in the 1960s and his son George was one of the leading shot putters in the nation at Granite Hills High and was a fullback on Coryell’s 11-0, 1969 team…15,000 persons in Balboa Stadium witnessed Hoover, trailing, 12-7, entering the final quarter, “get off the floor”,  in Union writer’s Christy Gregg’s words, to beat the Hillers 21-12…weirdness included game officials turning on the lights when darkness descended, then turning them off after a meeting with coaches Beerkle and Walker at midfield… San Diego outgained the Cardinals, 216-109… Hoover’s Herbert (Hub) Foote starred at San Diego State after World War II and went on to a long coaching career in the area… Mike Foote, the coach’s son, was a standout at Mount Miguel High and Oregon State and played three seasons in the NFL with the Los Angeles Rams and Washington Redskins… what’s in a name?: Fallbrook’s fullback was Leroy (Speed) Lash… a Sweetwater lineman was “Waffles” Escalante… San Diego  originally announced a midseason,  nonleague game with  the Riverside Sherman Institute but the game never was played… sluggish and blundering, the Hillers dropped their final game to Inglewood, 13-12, before 2,500 “refrigerated” fans in the stadium…a short-term  member of the CIF Southern Section  was the Instituto Tecnio Indusrial, also known as Tijuana Tech in the Baja California city….




2020:  San Diego Squad Part of No. 3 All-Time College Team

As the year ended last week USA Today listed its best 150 teams in the 150-year history of collegiate football.

Standing third behind the 1943 and 1945 Army squads, was the University of California “Wonder Team” of 1920.

No less than seven players from the national champion, 12-0 San Diego High Hilltoppers of 1916 played for that California team and coach Clarence (Nibs) Price was an assistant on the staff of head coach Andy Smith.

The 1920 Golden Bears were 9-0, outscored their opponents, 520-14, and defeated Ohio State, 28-0, in the Rose Bowl game.

Halfback Byron (Pesky) Sprott was the Bears’ leading rusher in the New Year’s Day contest in Pasadena, rushing for 95 yards in 20 carries and scoring two touchdowns.

To learn more about Sprott and his 1916 teammates who went on to play for California,  google partletonsports.com or San Diego Sports History and search 1916: “The Legendary Hilltoppers”.




2019 Week 17: A Wrap On Football Season

The San Diego Union-Tribune’s last poll, including San Diego Section playoffs:

First-place votes in parenthesis. NR–Not ranked. *Includes forfeit win.

RANK TEAM RECORD POINTS PREVIOUS
1. Helix (31) 11-1 310 1
2 Carlsbad 10-2 269 2
3. Oceanside 11-3 212 NR
4. Cathedral 8-3 207 3
5. St. Augustine 8-3 168 4
6. Lincoln 10-3* 144 7
7. El Camino 8-6 119 NR
8. The Bishop’s 12-1 64 9
9. Steele Canyon 9-2 58 5
10. Mission Hills 9-3 54 6

Others receiving votes: La Jolla (9-4, 22 points), Madison (7-5, 22), Scripps Ranch (10-0, 10), Santana (1`1-2, 1), Torrey Pines (6-6, 1).

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.

HOW OTHERS IN CALIFORNIA SAW SAN DIEGO’S TOP 10 AT SEASON CONCLUSION:

Team Record Cal.Preps.Com Max Preps Cal-Hi Sports
Helix 11-2 56.9 12 15
Carlsbad 10-2 53.4 19 23
Oceanside 11-4* 46.3 37 34
Cathedral 8-3 53.0 20 24
St. Augustine 8-3 46.9 28 30
Lincoln 10-3* 42.9 47 50
El Camino 9-7 38.3 70 NR
The Bishop’s 12-1 32.6 100 NR
Steele Canyon 9-2 36.6 75 NR
Mission Hills 9-3 44.9 37 Honorable Mention

Unranked state Division IV- A finalist La Jolla finished with 10-5 record, and respective ratings of 24.9, 158, and 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.

HISTORY OF STATE BOWL PLAYOFF SERIES

Sections: *North Coast. **Sac-Joaquin. ***San Francisco.. ##Central Coast. +Central. +++Oakland.

YEAR DIVISION TEAM OPPONENT SCORE
2007 II Oceanside *Novato 28-14
2008 III Cathedral **Stockton St. Mary’s 37-34
2009 V Francis Parker **Modesto Christian 40-44
2010 IV Madison **Escalon 14-30
2011 II Helix **Loomis Del Oro 35-24
2012 IV Madison *Marin Catholic 38-35
V Santa Fe Christian **Modesto Central Catholic 7-66
2014 I Oceanside **Folsom 7-68
III El Capitan *Moraga Campolindo 28-35
2015 III-A Rancho Bernardo ##Atherton Sacred Heart 35-14
IV-AA Bonita Vista +Hanford 21-33
V-AA Mater Dei +Reedley Immanuel 55-21
VI-AA Coronado ++East Nicolaus 6-16
2016 I-AA Cathedral **Stockton St. Mary’s 38-31
II-AA Madison ##San Jose Village Christian 21-17
III-A The Bishop’s **Oakdale 0-47
V-A La Jolla Country Day +++Oakland McClymonds 17-20
VI-A Horizon +Strathmore 22-62
2017 I-AA Helix **Folsom 42-49
III-A Steele Canyon ##Half Moon Bay 44-42
IV-AA El Centro Southwest ##Milpitas 41-45
VI-A Calexico Vincent Memorial ***S.F. Galileo 20-38
2018 I-AA Cathedral **Folsom 14-21>
III-AA Lincoln ##Menlo-Atherton## 7-21
V-AA San Diego **Colfax 21-10
VI-A Orange Glen ***S.F. Lincoln 13-24
2019 III-AA El Camino *Santa Rosa Cardinal Newman 14-31
IV-A La Jolla **Escalon 21-52

 

 




2019 Week 16: El Camino and La Jolla Carry On

El Camino and La Jolla were highly unlikely candidates to get this far, but they’re in the big games this week, San Diego’s last standing, and hitting the road in search of state championships.

The Wildcats travel 50 miles beyond the San Franciso Golden Gate bridge to Santa Rosa, 517 miles North of their campus, taking on the 13-1 Cardinal Newman Cardinals.  La Jolla visits the 13-1 Escalon Cougars, 448 miles north and inland.

Laboring with a 3-6 record, El Camino caught fire after a 10-0, Avocado League loss to Mission Hills and has won its last six, averaging 40 points a game, beginning with a 28-24 victory in a dynamic crosstown battle with Oceanside.

The Wildcats scored a mild surprise in their domination of Temecula Valley, 34-18 last week. La Jolla, 3-5 after a 32-7 loss to Lincoln, also has won six in a row and knocked out Huntington Beach Marina, 34-18.

La Jolla is an old hand at playoff competition, before  the San Diego Section.

The Vikings tied Calexico. 6-6, in a 1938 contest that was supposed to be replayed but was not following a dispute over the number of first downs, which supposedly favored the Vikings.

La Jolla lost to eventual Southern Section champion Pomona, 27-21, in 1951, and defeated El Monte, 7-6, but lost in the semifinals to South Pasadena, 13-6, in 1952.

El Camino dropped a 13-10 decision to Los Angeles Crenshaw in 2017.

SAN DIEGO CHAMPS BOW

Other San Diego Section teams were not as fortunate last week, Helix losing to Chatsworth Sierra Canyon, 38-20, Oceanside to Corona del Mar, 14-7, Serra to El Monte, 30-18, and Francis Parker to Gardena, 27-13.

El Camino and La Jolla represent the San Diego section’s lowest number of participants since the state CIF began the “two divisions within one division” model in 2015.

There have been as many as five qualifiers from San Diego (2016) and there were four last season.

San Diego squads are 6-11 in AA and A competition and 11-15 overall since the state “bowl” series of playoffs began in 2006.

DIVISION TEAM RECORD OPPONENT RECORD
III-AA El Camino 9-6 @Santa Rosa Cardinal Newman, North Coast 13-1
IV-A La Jolla 10-4 @Escalon, Sac-Joaquin 13-1

HOW OTHERS IN CALIFORNIA RATE THE MATCHUPS

TEAMS CAL PREPS.COM MAX PREPS CAL-HI SPORTS
III-AA El Camino 38.6 70 Bubble
Cardinal Newman 39.7 65 41
IV-A La Jolla 28.1 134 NR
Escalon 29.2 128 NR
SEASON CONCLUDED      
Helix (11-2) 58.3 11 13
Carlsbad (10-2) 54.9 16 22
Cathedral (8-3) 54.4 18 23
St. Augustine (8-3) 48.3 29 28
Oceanside (11-4) 47.8 30 35
Mission Hills (9-3) 46.3 33 Bubble
Lincoln (10-3) 44.6 44 Bubble

Cal Preps.com and Max Preps are services which rely on computer algorithms.  Cal-Hi Sports relies on the judgement of publisher Mark Tennis and his correspondents.

PAST RESULTS

San Diego Section teams against other CIF sections in state championship games:

(+Central. ++Northern.  +++Oakland.  *North Coast.  **Sac-Joaquin. ***San Francisco. ##Central Coast. >Overtime).

YEAR DIVISION TEAM OPPONENT SCORE
2007 II Oceanside *Novato 28-14
2008 III Cathedral **Stockton St. Mary’s 37-34
2009 V Francis Parker **Modesto Christian 40-44
2010 IV Madison **Escalon 14-30
2011 II Helix **Loomis Del Oro 35-24
2012 IV Madison *Marin Catholic 38-35
V Santa Fe Christian **Modesto Central Catholic 7-66
2014 I Oceanside **Folsom 7-68
III El Capitan *Moraga Campolindo 28-35
2015 III-A Rancho Bernardo ##Atherton Sacred Heart 35-14
IV-AA Bonita Vista +Hanford 21-33
V-AA Mater Dei +Reedley Immanuel+ 55-21
VI-AA Coronado ++East Nicolaus 6-16
2016 I-AA Cathedral **Stockton St. Mary’s 38-31
II-AA Madison ##San Jose Village Christian 21-17
III-A The Bishop’s **Oakdale 0-47
V-A La Jolla Country Day +++Oakland McClymonds 17-20
VI-A Horizon +Strathmore 22-62
2017 I-AA Helix **Folsom 42-49
III-A Steele Canyon ##Half Moon Bay 44-42
IV-AA El Centro Southwest ##Milpitas 41-45
VI-A Calexico Vincent Memorial ***S.F. Galileo 20-38
2018 I-AA Cathedral **Folsom 14-21>
III-AA Lincoln ##Menlo-Atherton 7-21
V-AA San Diego **Colfax 21-10
VI-A Orange Glen ***S.F. Lincoln 13-24
2019 III-AA El Camino *Santa Rosa Cardinal Newman
IV-A La Jolla **Escalon

 




2019: Doyle joins 9 Others With at Least 200 Victories

Cathedral coach Sean Doyle, average nine wins a season for the next 15 years and catch Herb Meyer.

To those who think Doyle, should he decide to challenge Meyer’s record of 339 victories, is likely to fall short, consider that the veteran of 24 seasons, all at the same school, has averaged 9.3 wins the last 15 years.

Doyle (202-98, .678) became the 10th coach to win his 200th this season. He needs to stay in the game and have similar success at least until 2034 and win another 140 to pull even with the legendary Meyer, who led Oceanside for 17 years and El Camino for 28, and retired in 2003 with a record of 339-148-15, .690.

Sidestepping age, Doyle’s commitment and health would seem to be the most important factors.  He’s been at it several seasons less than the two active coaches ahead of him, Monte Vista’s Ron Hamamoto, who has 234 victories in 34 seasons, and Valley Center’s Rob Gilster, who has 230 in 31.

Two other coaches also passed significant milestones this season.

Grossmont’s Tom Karlo became the 42nd coach to win his 100th game and Ramona’s Damon Baldwin became the 43rd. The Bishop’s Joel Allen came close, with his 98th .

Doyle passed Vista’s Dick Haines to move into the top 10.  Hamamoto and Gilster leapfrogged John Shacklett to move into fourth and fifth, respectively.

Go to the Football menu on the home page and scroll to Coach 100 Club for a complete list of its members and where they’ll stand at beginning of the 2020 campaign.




2019 Week 15: We’re Down to 6 Survivors

The season continues for the six San Diego Section division champions.

Pairings for the Southern California regional playoffs with teams with AA classification playing on Friday, Dec .6, while teams with A designation will play on Saturday, Dec.7.

Division Team Record Opponent Record
I-AA Helix 11-1 Chatsworth Sierra Canyon 12-1
I-A Oceanside 11-3 Corona del Mar @Newport Harbor 14-0
III-AA El Camino 8-6 Temecula Valley 12-2
IV-A La Jolla 9-4 Huntington Beach Marina @Westminster 12-2
V-AA Serra 11-2 @El Monte 13-0
VII-AA Francis Parker 8-5 Gardena 9-4

HOW OTHERS IN CALIFORNIA RATE THE MATCHUPS

TEAMS CAL PREPS.COM RATING MAX PREPS CAL-HI SPORTS
I-AA Helix 61.8 10 5
Chatsworth Sierra Canyon 62.1 9 10
I-A Oceanside 46.9 30 39
Corona del Mar 72.4 3 9
III-AA El Camino 38.6 70 NR
Temecula Valley 39.7 65 NR
IV-A La Jolla 25.4 169 NR
Huntington Beach Marina 29.2 128 NR
V-AA Serra 25.6 164 NR
El Monte 27.4 147 NR
VII-AA Francis Parker -0.2 459 NR
Gardena -1.3 477 NR

ADDITIONAL RATINGS

TEAMS, RECORD CAL PREPS.COM MAX PREPS CAL-HI SPORTS
Helix (11-1) 61.8 10 5
Carlsbad (10-2) 55.5 16 21
Cathedral (8-3) 55.2 17 22
St. Augustine (8-3) 49.5 28 25
Oceanside (11-3) 46.9 30 39
Lincoln (10-3) 43.8 45 On Bubble
Mission Hills (9-3) 46.1 33 On Bubble

Cal Preps.com and Max Preps are services which rely on computer algorithms.  Cal-Hi Sports relies on the judgement of publisher Mark Tennis and his correspondents.

HOMER

Talk about rank provincialism.  I plead guilty.

I picked a very pedestrian three of the five winners (El Camino, Serra, and Francis Parker) last week in the San Diego Section championships.

I made the most common mistake of amateur prognosticators.  I followed my heart.

I was sure No. 1 seed Scripps Ranch would beat No. 3 La Jolla in Division III but the fact my youngest daughter was in the Falcons’ second graduating glass and had married Scripps Ranch’s first quarterback made me dare not think about picking the Vikings.

I was not so sure but selected No. 2 Lincoln anyway to top oncoming No. 9 Oceanside in Division I, mainly because I had graduated from the Hive and got my start in sports writing as a staff member of The Buzz, Lincoln’s school newspaper.

La Jolla reversed an earlier, 17-7 loss to Scripps Ranch and won, 17-10.  Oceanside, for the first time since John Carroll retired after the 2014 season, looked like the legendary North County power it once was, driving Lincoln into submission in the second half and winning, 28-10.

OTHER TOP SEEDS GO DOWN

No. 7 seed El Camino, which won a championship in 1976 in its first season, coached by the all-time winningest Herb Meyer, won one of the wildest playoffs in state history, 75-59, over No. 1 The Bishop’s in D-II.

Knights quarterback Tyler Buchner accounted for all but one of The Bishop’s 59 points and rushed for 350 yards and five touchdowns and passed for 286 yards and three touchdowns.

El Camino, which trailed by 25 points at the half, actually would make some second half stops on defense that slowed The Bishop’s.

The difference was defense,” intoned wide receiver Alexander Fetko, with a straight face, to John Maffei of The San Diego Union-Tribune.

El Camino bettered the 71 points by Monte Vista in the 2017 championship but fell short of the playoff record set in 2018, when La Jolla Country Day defeated Santana, 76-55.

SERRA, PARKER COME THROUGH

My two other correct choices were D-IV No. 2 Serra, which shocked No. 1 Santana, 37-7, and No. 4 Francis Parker, rewarded in D-V when the Lancers’ Cito Miller kicked a 27-yard field goal as the clock dipped under 20 seconds in a 24-21 victory over 2 seed Castle Park.