1963 Track: Sensational Finishes by Cavers’ Relay Team, Madison’s Hose

Martin Pedigo, a former University of Oregon broad jumper, became the San Diego High coach and inherited a potential powerhouse.

The Cavers, representative of one of the state’s great programs—184-30-2 in dual meets since 1929—were 14-7  under longtime assistant Henry Wiegand and hadn’t beaten Lincoln, their latest rival, since 1959.

Wiegand deserved another year. Coincidentally, Pedigo, the seventh to occupy the position since Glenn Broderick took over in 1927, was married to a former Cavers cheerleader and student leader that Pedigo met at Oregon.

STATE GETS LARGER

The state meet, in its 45th year,  became a two-day event and was more popular than ever. A crowd of 14,000 watched the final day at Edwards Field on the University of California campus in Berkeley..

Read down until you reach the Eastern League trials and finals in B and C field events.  An interesting name emerges.

Plus, take in a season of terrific performances, particularly by the San Diego High 880-yard  relay squad of Walter Blackledge, Gordon Baker, Raymond Dixon, and Charles Sanford, and the explosive arrival of junior Bob Hose in the 880-yard run for first-year Madison.

2/27/63

San Diego opened with a 63-41, dual-meet win at Granite Hills, winning nine of 12 events.

Lloyd Walker (120 high hurdles, :15, and high jump, 6 feet 2 inches) and Charles Sanford (100-yard dash, :10, and 180 low hurdles, :20.1) won two events each and teamed on a winning 880-yard relay team, 1:33.1.

3/1/63

Hilltop looked like a solid contender in the Metropolitan League, having won a nonleague dual with La Jolla, 64-40, as Darrell Dunafon clocked 1:58.9 in the 880.  John Miller set a La Jolla shot put record of 54-8 ½.

Gordon Baker, Charles Sanford, Walter Blackledge, and Raymond Dixon (from left) came close to national record with 1:26.3 run in the 880-yard relay at Berkeley.

3/2/63

Compton Centennial made its almost annual trip South for a quadrangular meet with San Diego (45), Grossmont (35), and Lincoln (22).

Coach Bill Gill’s Apaches had 46 points, but San Diego won the big races. Charles Sanford took the 100 in :09.8, Gordon Baker the 440 in :50.4, and Robert Wash and Raymond Dixon joined Baker and Sanford in a :1:29.2 880 relay win.

Grossmont’s John Rendina won the 880 in 1:58.7 and Paul Manning the pole vault at 13-6 5/8.

—Gary Hafner tripled in Helix’ 79-25 win over Monte Vista, winning the 440 in :51.6, broad jump at 22 feet, and setting a school record at 6-2 ¾ in the high jump.

From left: Crawford’s Bill Sanders (2nd), San Diego’s Charles Sanford (1st) and Gordon Baker (third), and Crawford’s’ Bruce (Chick) Hafer, slightly obscured. (4th). Sanford’s winning 100 time in dual at Crawford was :09.8.

3/9/63

Crawford won a dual with Grossmont League power El Cajon Valley, 53-51, by winning the relay in 1:32.8.

Steve Weston doubled for the Braves in the high hurdles (:14.9) and low hurdles (20.7).  Bill Sanders (:10.2, :22.7) doubled for Crawford and was on the relay team and Rick Herrmann turned in a :50.8 in the 440.

—Tom Agsten doubled at Clairemont with a :09.7 100 and :50 flat 440 and Eddy Hanks high jumped 6-2 ½ in Hoover’s 75 ½-28 ½ victory.

—Versatile Bob Hose won the 440 in :52.9 and 120 high hurdles in :16.4 and was second in the broad jump but St. Augustine, behind Henry Daniels’ :09.8 and :23.1 sprint victories won, 65-38.

3/15/63

Tom Agsten of Hoover set a County record of :49.0 in the 440 and raced to :09.9 100 victory as Hoover beat Point Loma, 64-40.

Coronado’s Scott Knox held the 440 record of :49.2, set in the 1961 San Diego Section meet and San Diego’s Norman Stocks ran :49.3 in the Southern Section meet in 1946.

3/26/63

Martin Koenekamp set a Helix record of 1:56.3 in the 880 as the Highlanders defeated El Capitan, 79-25. Two months later, in the Section meet, Koenekamp’s teammate, Don (Flash) Gordon also clocked 1:56.3.

Grossmont’s Paul Manning won San Diego Section pole vault in Balboa Stadium and was third at 14-feet, 4 inches, in state final.

3/30/63

Hoover coach Raleigh Holt might have been accused of stacking his entry list and  going for the rare shutout.

The Cardinals scored a 103-1 dual meet victory over Morse.  A Hoover Class C pole vaulter, Hirata, was elevated to the varsity and won his event and set a C record of 12-2.

Morse’s only point was a third place in the 100-yard dash.

—San Diego took a huge step towards its first Eastern League dual-meet title since 1959, 64-40 over Lincoln, which had won the last three.

Lloyd Walker high jumped 6-3 ½ and won the 120 highs in :14.7 and the Cavers swept the Hornets in the sprints, 18-0, as Charles Sanford won the 100 in :09.9 and Raymond Dixon the 220 in :22.2 in a track that had been slowed by recent rain.

3/31/63

San Diego, Lincoln, and Granite Hills each won team championships in the National City Junior Chamber of Commerce Relays at Sweetwater.

The eighth annual event, delayed a week by rain, saw six records broken.

Large Schools Division winner San Diego outscored Grossmont, 45-42, followed by Hoover, 25, Crawford, 22, El Capitan, 21, Helix, 19, and Point Loma and Mount Miguel, 17 each.

Lincoln had 44 points, El Cajon Valley 36, Chula Vista 33, Hilltop 32, Escondido 25, Kearny 15, Clairemont, and St. Augustine 12 among medium schools.

Granite Hills outdistanced the small schools’ field with 50 ½ points, followed by Coronado, 35, La Jolla, 31 ½, Sweetwater, 30 1/3, Mar Vista, 24, Monte Vista, 19, and Mission Bay, 13 2/3.

Grossmont’s Phil Napierski high jumped 6-4 and El Cajon Valley’s Steve Weston ran :14.8 in the 120-yard high hurdles. Three records were set in relays events, which later were not recognized after the Sweetwater track was discovered to be approximately 3 yards short of a 440-yard oval.

Helix’ record 10:36.1 in the distance medley, 440, 880, 1320, and mile.  Those distances required 10 trips around the oval, thus about 30 yards short of the official distance.

Bogus records also were set in the 880 and Mile relays and mile run.

Phil Naperski of Grossmont had a best of 6-5 in the high jump and cleared 6-4 on this effort for a record in National City J.C. Relays.

4/3/63

Madison’s Bob Hose, who had run hurdles and broad jumped, won his 880-yard specialty in 2:00.7.  Hose, competing for Clairemont as a sophomore in 1962, had finished fourth in the San Diego Section finals with a best time of 1:58.8.

Hose also took thirds in the high hurdles and broad jump but Point Loma won the Western League dual, 84-20.

4/6/63

Tom Agsten won the 100 in :09.8 and the 220 on the Hoover curve in :21.6 but Crawford won the Eastern League dual, 61-43.

The Colts’ Rick Herrmann won the 400 in :49.8 and the Colts set a school record with a 1:29.6 880 relay win.

–Russ Eckhardt set a Granite Hills record of :09.8 in the 100 and La Jolla’s John Miller improved his school record to 54-11 ¼.

—James Kennedy of Lincoln upped his San Diego Section lead in the broad jump to 23 feet, 9 inches.

—Gary Hafner set school records of :49.7 in the 440 and 22-9 ½ in the broad jump and won the 220 in  Helix’ pivotal Grossmont League triumph against visiting Grossmont, 53-51.

—Dave Funderburk, a sophomore at Vista, ran 4:27.7 in the mile, a class record.

Eastern League sprinters Tom Agsten of Hoover, Charles Sanford of San Diego, and Crawford’s Bill Sanders appear to dead heat in 100-yard dash at San Diego Section trials. Sanders won in :09.8, with Sanford second, and Agsten third.

4/6/63

Bob Hose broke two minutes for the first time with his 1:59.9 in Madison’s 80-23 loss at Kearny.

4/14/63

Seven meet records were set at the San Diego Relays in Balboa Stadium, most notable the three-man high jump in which San Diego jumpers cleared a cumulative height of 18-8 ½.

The 6-5 ¼ by Tom Maloy, 6-3 ½ by Lloyd Walker and 6-0 by Willie Steel was a foot higher than the record.

Paul Manning led a Grossmont team to 38 feet with a 13-6 pole vault (matched by Escondido’s Bob Good). James Kennedy led 3 Lincoln broad jumpers to a combined 66-3 ½.

Four Helix milers averaged 4:58.7 and they set a 4-mile record of 18:34.8.

Lloyd Walker of San Diego posted a record, :14.5 in the high hurdles and San Diego ran: 42.5 and 1:28.0 in the 440 and 880 baton races.

The anticipated 100-yard dash was marked by a disqualification after two false starts by St. Augustine’s Henry Daniels, who earlier won a heat in :09.9.  Crawford’s Bill Sanders got the best of San Diego’s Charles Sanford in the final in :09.8.

Martin Koenekamp went the distance for Helix.

5/1/63

A gusty breeze pushed St. Augustine’s Henry Daniels to a :09.5 100 and :21.4 220.  Granite Hills won a 220 duel at Helix from the Highlanders’ Gary Hafner.  Eckhardt ran :21.1, Hafner :21.3.

Madison’s Bob Hose logged a :50.5 440 and won the high hurdles in :16.1 and Mission Bay’s Bob Getzen broke the school mile record for the second time, 4:28.2.

Bill Trujillo set a Kearny record with a 4:27.8 mile and La Jolla found a challenger for John Miller in the shot put.  Holland Seymore reached 52-5 5/8.

Escondido’s Ed Mathews ran a 1:57.7 880 at Sweetwater.

5/4/63

Henry Daniels beat Charles Sanford in a :09.9 100 and Gordon Baker ran the Balboa Stadium curve in :21.6 as San Diego beat the Saints, 68-36.

—Crawford’s Bill Sanders got into the act at Morse with a windy :09.6 100 and Sanders’ Crawford teammate Rick Herrmann took the 440 in :49.7 in the Colts’ 85-19 breeze.

—Madison’s Bob Hose clocked 1:59.1 in the 880, but saw his school mile record of 4:45 bettered by teammate Loeber, who ran 4:38.7 in an 83-21 loss to big brother Clairemont.

5/8/63

Trials in the Eastern, Western, and Metropolitan leagues saw several season bests and included records in lower classes.

San Diego’s Walter Blackledge won a windy heat in the 220 at Morse in :20.8, and Gordon Baker won the following heat in :21.1.

A wind gauge was on hand and the usual breeze actually was measured at less than the allowable 4.447 miles per hour when the Cavers’ Lloyd Walker set a record in the high hurdles, :14.4.

It seemed of no great importance when a Class C high jump record was made at 5 feet, 10 inches.

Who won the event made the jump noteworthy. The winner was Morse sophomore Arnie Robinson, who would go on to win the 1980 Olympics long jump gold medal.

Robinson also won the San Diego Section title in the C high jump at 5-10, but would finish fourth in the broad jump, won by Point Loma’s Earle Lott, who set a record of 21-10 5/8.

5/11/63

EASTERN LEAGUE FINALS, @BALBOA STADIUM

The season was replete with outstanding performances in almost every event, so Charles Sanford’s :09.7 100 was almost almost routine.

Sanford also set a record in the 180-yard low hurdles (:19.4) and anchored the relay team to a 1:27.7 clocking, the fourth fastest in County history.

San Diego won six events and scored 73 points.  Lincoln was runner-up with 41, followed by Hoover 35 ½, Crawford 32 ½, St. Augustine 10, and Morse 1.

League championship records also were set by Tom Agsten of Hoover, :48.7 440; Robert Wash of San Diego, 52-7 ¾ shot put; and Hoover’s Eddy Hanks, 6-6 high jump.

WESTERN LEAGUE, @CLAIREMONT

Bob Hose of Madison was picking up steam, winning the 880 in a season best 1:57.7.

Holland Seymore, number two to John Miller for much of the season, set a La Jolla record of 56-4 in the shot put.

Point Loma won five events, charged by Charles Streeter’s :19.6 in the low hurdles, and won the team championship with 62 points.  Clairemont had 40 1/2, Mission Bay 37 3/4, La Jolla 19, Madison 12, and Kearny 8 ¾.

METROPOLITAN LEAGUE, @ESCONDIDO

Holland Seymore set Western League meet record with shot put of 56 feet, 4 inches.

Mar Vista’s George Butler won the 440-yard race in :50, nosing out Sweetwater’s Gary Gardner’s, who ran :50.4. Bob Dunn of Hilltop put the shot 54-7 ½.

Jim Pritchard of Escondido won a pole vault duel with teammate Bob Good and Hilltop’s Bob Thoe at 13-6 and the host Cougars outscored Hilltop, 44-40, for the team title.

Chula Vista, rolling with Bill Masseys’ double of :10.2 and :22.6 in the sprints and Massey’s anchor leg for the winning, 1:32.2 relay squad, scored 39 points.  Mar Vista had 26 and Sweetwater 22.

GROSSMONT, @EL CAJON VALLEY

Homeboys Russ Eckhardt and Steve Westin of El Cajon Valley raced to :09.9 and :21.5 victories in the sprints and :15 and :20.2 in the high and low hurdles, respectively, for four of the eight records set on their layout.

Donn Renwick of Grossmont ran :49.3 in the 440, Helix’ Don (Flash) Gordon 1:57.0 in the 880, El Capitan’s Leon Herzog reached 58 feet, 2 inches, in the shotput, and Renwick’s teammate, Phil Napierski, clearing 6-4 in the high jump, also claimed a record.

5/19/63

SAN DIEGO SECTION  TRIALS,@BALBOA STADIUM

Seventeen records in Classes A, B, and C were set as the Trials moved to Balboa Stadium, where there was less intrusion from the breezes at Kearny, site of the 1961 and ’62 trials and finals.

Seven Class A records, beginning with the :14.4 Oceanside’s Mike Swaim logged in the high hurdles, first event of the day, set the pace. Swaim handed San Diego’s Lloyd Walker his first defeat.

Bill Sanders of Crawford ran a :09.8 100, Tom Agsten of Hoover a :48.5 440, Darrel Dunafon of Hilltop a 4:23.3 mile, Charles Sanford of San Diego, a :19.3 in the low hurdles, and James Kennedy of Lincoln, a 23-9 ½ broad jump.

The day concluded with San Diego tying a County record with a 1:27.2 880 relay.

Bob Hose was strongly positioned as he completed first lap in the state 880 trial, second to Whittier Lowell’s Dennis Carr in 880. Hose’s second-place qualifying time time was 1:52.8.

5/23/63

San Diego Section weight specialists conducted finals in the discus, an event the Southern Section put on hiatus from 1933-48 and contested by area athletes infrequently and usually in unofficial competition until the San Diego Section was formed and made the discus an official but non-scoring event in 1961.

The discus’ high school weight is 3.9 pounds.  In earlier years athletes used an Olympic-sized platter of 4.64 pounds.

A non-scoring competition was held at San Diego State for purposes of choosing a state meet qualifier.

An athlete from the city’s Western League, Point Loma’s John Bishop, won at 145 feet, 11 inches, followed by Grossmont’s Richard Grise at 145-3 1/2.

Grossmont League schools, with much larger athletic venues would, for several years, make the discus an official event in dual meets.  City schools did not have discus competition.

Oceanside’s Mike Swaim set meet record of :14.4 in section trials and defeated San Diego’s Lloyd Walker (left) and Lincoln’s James Kennedy.

5/25/63

Twelve records were broken in Varsity, B, and C, and San Diego ran away with the varsity team titled with 42 points to Lincoln’s 25, Grossmont’s 20, and Crawford’s 15.

San Diego’s Charles Sanford set a record in the 100-yard dash, :09.6, and was involved in tying two others, :19.3 low hurdles, and 1:27.2 relay.

The Cavers won two additional events 120-yard highs (Lloyd Walker, :14.5), and 220 (Gordon Baker, :21.7).

Madison’s Bob Hose continued to lower his best time in the 880, beating a class field in 1:54.9.  Lincoln’s Raymond Darrough followed in 1:56.2 and Helix’ Don Gordon was next in 1:56.3.

Eddy Hanks of Hoover and Tom Maloy of San Diego tied at 6-5 in the high jump but Hanks won with fewer misses.

Lincoln’s James Kennedy, who won the state meet at 24-5 ¾ in 1962, reached 24 feet, 1/2 inch for a meet record, and got the Section’s only spot in the state meet after Kennedy held off Point Loma’s Lyle Schaefer, who jumped over a towel placed in the pit and made 23-11 ¾. Kennedy became the third Lincoln broad jumper to hit 24 feet.  Luther Hayes did 24-1/8 in 1956 and Kenny Tucker, 24-3/4 in 1959.

5/31/63

45TH STATE TRIALS,@BERKELEY

Eleven individual winners from the San Diego Section, including members of the San Diego High 880-yard relay team arrived at Edwards Field on the University of California campus in Berkeley for the 45th state meet and qualified in 10 of 13 events.

Bob Hose of Madison ran the third fastest 880 in County history. His time of 1:52.8, behind only the 1:52.7 by Mission Bay’s Jim Cerveny on this same track and same meet in 1957 and Hoover’s John Garrison, who ran 1:52.7 at the 1962 state meet.

Hose trailed Whittier Lowell favorite Dennis Carr, whose 1:52 in the same heat with Hose, was one-tenth of a second off the national record set by Bonita’s Ray Van Asten in 1960.

San Diego was in tough in the relay heats.  The Cavers ran 1:27.1 but were second to Los Angeles Manual Arts’ 1:26.7 and just in front of L.A. Jefferson (1:27.4) and L.A. High (1:27.5).

Hilltop’s Darrel Dunafon’s qualifying 4:19.6 mile was the second fastest in County history to Jack Hudson’s 4:16.7 in the 1959 state meet.

The only nonqualifiers were San Diego’s Lloyd Walker (high hurdles) and Gordon Baker (220) and Point Loma’s John Bishop (discus).

Mount Miguel’s Gerry Mavrinac led Grossmont’s Richard Monahan with approximately 300 yards to finish line in Grossmont League 880 finals. Mavrinac won in 1:57.5, but Helix’ Don Gordon (left) finished strong to edge Monahan for second.

6/1/63

STATE FINALS

San Diego High executed an almost perfect race, winning the 880-yard relay in 1:26.3, 4/10 seconds off the national record by L.A. Jefferson in 1956.

Not far behind in all-time performances was the 880 run by Madison’s Bob Hose.

The Cavers surprised the field and their half-mile, two-lap odyssey represented a perfect exchange of batons after taking the lead from the outset.

Running in lane 1, not the best starting position, Walter Blackledge got out quickly and forged a lead with a :22 flat leg.

Gordon Baker maintained with a :21.4 second lap and handed the stick and a three-yard lead and the pole position to Raymond Dixon.

With the posse in hot pursuit Dixon held the lead with a :21.6 leg.

Charles Sanford, who had been unplaced in the 100 and low hurdles finals, finished with a :21.3 and with room to spare ahead of Manual Arts, second in 1:26.8.

Bob Hose, who came into the meet with a best time of 1:54.9, completed two hard days and a stunning, personal  improvement of three seconds.

Lowell’s Dennis Carr set a national record of 1:50.9 and Hose bettered the previous record of 1:51.9 with a 1:51.7 finish.

Grossmont’s Paul Manning, third at 14 feet, 4 inches, in the pole vault, and defending broad jump champion James Kennedy, fourth at 23-9 ¾, were the other scorers from the San Diego Section.




1962 Track: Lincoln Gets Bad Review in State Movie

Track and field, long a Southern California stronghold in San Diego, celebrated some powerful performances.

Lincoln lost only a late-season, nonleague dual meet at Helix, 57-47, won its third straight Eastern League dual meet championship and the San Diego Section title for the second year in a row, and contended for the state team championship.

The Hornets’ Vernus Ragsdale and James Kennedy, and Hoover’s John Garrison put up numbers that ranked high in California and in the nation.

San Diego coach Henry Wiegand knew by the results of their races how to identify the twins, Eddie (center), 440-yard standout, and Elmer (right) star in the hurdles.

3/9/62

Lincoln’s Vernus Ragsdale won the 100-yard dash in :09.8 and 220 in :22.2, and anchored a come-from-behind 880-yard relay victory in 1:32.2 in cold, blustery weather, but host Grossmont (47) outpointed the Hornets (42) and Compton Centennial (40) in the season-opening triangular meet.

3/14/62

Ray Alexander doubled in the 100 and 220 in :09.9 and :21.9 and Gavin Riley logged a 1:58.8 880 in Point Loma’s 68 2/3-35 1/3 dual meet win over Mount Miguel.

3/15/62

Lincoln beat Hoover, 58 ½-36 ½ in an Eastern League dual at Hoover that had moments of comic drama.

Hoover’s John Koethe “won” the 220-yard dash, shocking unbeaten Vernus Ragsdale,  and Rags’ teammates and followers, his “posse” in 21st century nomenclature.

Koethe covered the distance over the tight curve and traditionally slow Cardinals track in a stunning :21.1.  Ragsdale, 10 yards behind, was in disbelief at the finish line, as were all in the stands.

Brad Baer became the eighth Grossmont shotputter since 1950 to reach at least 58 feet with best of 59-2 3/8.

DREADED ADMINISTRATIVE GLITCH

What happened?

The maintenance and grounds personnel at Hoover had erred when lining the track and putting down the runners’ lime lane markings. The crew created a lane that required Koethe to cover only approximately 205 yards.

Even Koethe was nonplussed as he was congratulated by a swarm of red-clad teammates. A good quarter miler (:50.4), the Princeton-bound junior had not run better than :23.6 in the 220.

The lane error was discovered and, after a few minutes of raised voices and arm waving by Lincoln coach Bobby Smith and  Cardinals boss Raleigh Holt, the race was declared no contest and the event’s nine points were erased.

3/24/62

Vernus Ragsdale bolted to a :09.5 100-yard dash in the National City Junior Chamber of Commerce Relays at Sweetwater.

Ragsdale’s  was the second fastest, to Roscoe Cook’s wind-aided :09.4 in 1957, ever run by a San Diego-area prep.

There was no wind gauge on site, so Ragsdale’s feat, whether it was above or under the allowable 4.447 miles per hour, took on questionable status.

I was the writer covering the event for the Evening Tribune, which carried a headline over my weekly, follow-up With the Preps column, “Let the Wind Blow, National City JC’s Will Never Know.”

Vernus Ragsdale cooled his hot spikes with fan after :09.5 100-yard dash.

Reaction to the story and the headline, which I did not write, resulted in my receiving an unfriendly telephone call from Sweetwater athletic director Tom Parker.

“Mr. Smith, you no longer are welcome at Sweetwater,” was the gist of Parker’s comments.

Almost 50 years later, at a luncheon of retired track coaches, the late Rich Gehring, a hard-working and principled coach for three decades, unsmilingly repeated to me the no-wind-gauge headline.

Wind gauges were used mostly at more major events, such as the CIF championships.

The relays were staffed by Gehring and volunteer junior chamber of commerce personnel.

I should have taken a more temperate approach and at least given Gehring or the Jaycees an opportunity to respond.

3/30/62

Lincoln beat San Diego, 58 ½-45 ½, in the pivotal Eastern League dual before a roaring crowd at Lincoln (including many watching from behind a fence hundreds of yards away on Imperial Avenue) as Vernus Ragsdale won the 100 in :09.8 and 220 in :22.1 and then made a rare appearance in the broad jump, finishing third at 22 feet, behind teammate Walter Scott’s 23 ¾.

Twins Elmer and Eddie Logans kept San Diego close, Eddie winning the 440 in :50.3 and Elmer the 120-yard high hurdles in :15.4 and 180-yard lows in :19.8.

FAST SAINTSMAN

The Crawford track, perched on a high plateau and offering favorable breezes from the West, was the site of many good 100-yard dash times, the latest a :09.7 by St. Augustine’s Henry (Bunny) Daniels.

Hoover’s John Garrison was one of the country’s top half milers.

4/10/62

Bruce Long pole vaulted 13 feet, 5 inches, and raised his Point Loma school record in a 77-26 win over Mission Bay.

Bryce Santry had set a Pointers record of 12-9 in the 1935 Metropolitan League finals.  Santry competed with a bamboo pole and became a vocal critic of the modern, more flexible fiberglass implement (“It’s like a pogo stick,” complained Santry) used by Long and others.

Santry went so far as to bring a pressure gauge to one Long’s meets, comparing the minimal flex of a bamboo pole with Long’s implement.

Long and Point Loma coach Ed Thomas, who approved  Santry’s appearance after Santry had contacted me at the newspaper, regarded the demonstration with subdued amusement.

St. Augustine coach Dallas Evans (left) compared times with 440-yard ace James Moore, who had best of :49.5. Evans ran the distance in :48.7 in college at San Diego State.

4/12/62

Monte Vista’s Lynn Chenowth took the section lead with a 13-foot, 6 ½-inch pole vault and was second in the 180-yard low hurdles and high jump but La Jolla shook off a wind-biting cold at Scripps Field and won the dual meet, 68-36.

4/13/62

Helix won its fifth consecutive Grossmont League dual, 77-25, over El Capitan and miler Ted Hack lowered his section-leading mile mark to 4:24.7.

John Garrison of Hoover ran the season’s fastest 880, 1:56, and Tom Agsten was a double winner at :10.1 and :22.1 in the 100 and 220, offsetting a double by Crawford’s Bill Rainey, who won the 440 in :52.6 and pole vault at 12-6.

Hoover won the last-event, 880-yard relay in 1:30.3 and the meet, 56-48.

5/6/62

A consensus of coaches and some observers declared there was no over-the-limit wind in Vernus Ragsdale’s :09.6 100 in the Eastern League trials at Crawford, although a surprising 09.8 by San Diego’s Raymond Dixon in Class B was declared wind-aided.

San Diego’s Elmer Logans won Eastern League 180-yard low hurdles in :19.9 after winning 120-yard highs in :14.7.

5/11/62

Top mark of the Eastern’s evening finals was the league-record 1:54.4 880 by Hoover’s John Garrison. Only  Mission Bay’s Jim Cerveny (1:52.7) in 1957 had run faster.

Other league records were the :49.9 440 by St. Augustine’s James Moore and :21.7 220 by Lincoln’s Vernus Ragsdale, who also won the 100 in :09.7 and teamed with Ron Peavy, Robert Miller, and Larry Greenwood to set an 880-yard relay record of 1:28.2.

Escondido’s Jim Pritchard continued the ascension of pole vaulters, clearing 13-3 to set a Metropolitan League record in finals at Mar Vista.

Helix, undefeated in dual meet competition, came up short as Grossmont won the Grossmont League finals with 64 points to the Highlanders’ 43.

Steve Adams was a double winner in the Grossmont finals at El Cajon Valley, winning the 100 in :09.9 and 220 in :21.5.

Grossmont’s Gene Engle, Ron Calorie, and Wayne Kitt (from left) led El Capitan’s Bob Albaugh and Otis Hurley in 120-yard high hurdles and Grossmont led all the way, 85-19, in league dual meet.

5/18/62

Trees had been planted behind the south end of the track but had not matured to help shield the wind when the CIF finals were awarded to Kearny in 1961 and the result of races run away from the trees was predictable.

Only one flat race, Dave Blunt’s :21.0 220, was not wind aided.

Kearny was host again for the CIF finals and trials.

The wind was blowing 7-10 miles an hour and gusting higher on the first of the two-day trials.

Steve Adams took advantage with a :09.4 100 followed by the :09.5 of Point Loma’s Ray Alexander.

5/19/62

Eastern, Western, and Metropolitan League athletes gathered the following day and Lincoln’s Vernus Ragsdale, with wind, raced to a :09.6 100 and :20.7 220.

Perhaps most impressive achievement of the day was a 6-foot, 3 1/8-inch high jump by 5-foot, 8-inch Class C sophomore Eddy Hanks of Hoover, who would go on to set varsity records.

Ken Bartlett of Escondido was unexpected winner in wind-aided :15 in 120-yard high hurdles at San Diego Section championship. Second was Lincoln’s James Kennedy, next to Bartlett.  Kearny’s Bob Richardson (right) was fourth.

5/26/62

Vernus Ragsdale turned in more exciting but unrealistic times of :09.4 and :20.3 as the wind continued in the finals.

Cold and overcast weather prevailed as Lincoln won the team race with 39 points to Grossmont’s 32 (Foothillers also won Classes B and C) and San Diego’s 19.

Lincoln also served notice that it could be a contender for the team title in the following week’s state meet when it tied the County record with a 1:27.2 recording in the 880  relay and James Kennedy went 23-7 ¼ in the broad jump.

Grossmont’s Ed Speed beat his teammate and season-leading shot putter Brad Baer with a 58-11 ½ effort.  Baer had a gone 59-2 ¼.

Speed reached 61-6 ¼ the previous year but had been inconsistent through this spring.

6/1/62

Lincoln’s James Kennedy was state champion in broad jump.

Lincoln unofficially tied Los Angeles Jefferson for the team championship, each with 14 points at Modesto Junior College.

The Hornets roared into contention when James Kennedy beat a loaded field with a stunning, 24-foot, 5 ¾-inch broad jump early in the competition.

Lincoln had caught a break when films from the afternoon trials showed that Vernus Ragsdale had tied for a qualifying fourth in :09.7 in his heat of the 100.

It did not hurt that Ragsdale’s coach, Bobby Smith, had been an international pole vaulter from San Diego High and San Diego State in the late ‘forties and early ‘fifties and was a friend of Cornelius (Dutch) Warmerdam, the former world recordholder in the event and the state meet director.

Ragsdale was given the ninth lane, which was next to a barrier and screen separating spectators from the track. He unofficially finished third in :09.6 in the final, and was second to L.A. Fremont’s Richard Stebbins’ :20.9 in the 220 in :21.1. Ragsdale had blazed the straightaway in the trials in a 7.4 m.p.h. wind-aided :20.4.

EXCHANGE PROBLEM

Lincoln ran 1:27.1 in the 880 relay trials but slipped to fourth in 1:27.8 in the evening because of a poor exchange between Ragsdale and Larry Greenwood.

Hoover’s John Garrison and Monte Vista’s Lynn Chenowth were the only other San Diego Section point winners

Garrison tied Jim Cerveny’s County record with  a 1:52.7 and was second in the 880, won by Chico’s Doug Parker in 1:52.2. Chenowth tied for fourth in the pole vault at 13-6.

Helix’ Ted Hack was fifth in one of two mile races but eighth overall in 4:24.4 as junior Dennis Carr of La Habra Lowell set a national record of 4:08.7.  Carr’s best had been 4:18.8.

San Diego’s Elmer Logans ran a wind-aided :19.0 in the 180-yard low hurdles trials and was a non-scoring sixth with a no-wind :19.1 in the finals.

6/4/62

A review of film from the finals showed that Vernus Ragsdale was fifth, not third, in the 100, dropping the Hornets to 12 points and giving L.A. Jefferson the title.

“That’s news to me,” said Lincoln coach Bobby Smith when notified by The San Diego Union‘s Chuck Sawyer, who had read a wire-service announcement.

“I just took our trophy downtown to get it engraved,” said the disappointed Smith.

 

 

 

 




1960: San Diego’s Final Act in Southern Section: Baseball, Track and Field.

A couple newcomers led the shouting in a last hurrah for San Diego.

Area schools were preparing to leave the Southern Section after 47 years and embark on their own, 31 institutions forming the San Diego Section in the next school year.

Clairemont and El Capitan, numbers 30 and 31, ignored usually unsuccessful results for start-up programs.

Clairemont’s Chieftains, in their second year and without a senior class, with students and transfers from Kearny’s and Mission Bay’s enrollment districts, won the Western League track championship and bulldozed through four games in the baseball AA playoffs to another title.

El Capitan’s Vaqueros in Lakeside, sharing with another new school, Granite Hills, students from El Cajon Valley, won the Grossmont League baseball championship, finishing ahead of redoubtable Helix.

CAVERS MISS

San Diego High gained the Southern Section AAA finals in baseball, in which it had been dominant from the beginning of the CIF, but lost in its bid for a record 17th championship when Whittier scored an 11-1 victory at Wrigley Field in Los Angeles.

Track http://1952-by-any-name-cavemen-cavers-hillers-broke-all-records/and field competition was as steady as usual, although the area was blanked in the state meet in Palo Alto.

Some 1960 highlights, baseball in regular typeface, track in italics:

Winning pitcher Jerry Haight got a ride from his Clairemont teammates after pitching Chieftains to Southern Section AA championship.

2/20/60

Righthander John Lippert opened the season by pitching a no-hitter in Helix’ 1-0 victory over visiting Point Loma.

Ray Koenig’s seventh-inning home run provided the victory over the Pointers’ Ronnie Holmes, who allowed only two hits.

2/24/60

Fred Shuey hit a bases-loaded triple and Myron Morper drove in the winning run with a single in the bottom of the seventh inning as San Diego topped Point Loma, 5-4.

3/3/60

Lefthander Ronnie Holmes pitched a no-hitter and Point Loma gave the lefthander more offense than he needed in an 11-0 win over Coronado.

St. Augustine’s Dennis Shields pitched four innings of a 7-1 win over La Jolla and helped himself with three hits, two home runs and four runs batted in.

3/5/60

Darryl Nelson won three events, 120-yard high hurdles (:15.8), high jump (6-1 ½), and broad jump (20-11 ½) and would become a double or triple winner almost every week but Kearny dropped a 72-32 dual meet decision to Lincoln.

Dick Armstrong allowed three hits and drove in four runs as Hoover defeated visiting Alhambra Mark Keppel, 9-2.

Harold Peterson and Steve Simon hit home runs and San Diego erupted for six runs in the sixth inning to defeat guest San Gabriel, 14-9.

3/7/60

Dick Waisman of Mount Miguel and Dave Rebello of University pitched no-hitters and 10 losing teams in the County scored a total of 11 runs.

Waisman punched out Clairemont, 7-0.  Mountain Empire scored a run on a walk, two stolen bases, and an error but was beaten, 9-1.

Coach Bill White smiled in approval and pitcher George Sherrod cooled the baseball after pitching Helix to Lions championship.

3/14/60

Crawford’s Norm Marr tripled in a run in the sixth inning and drove in the winning run with a single in a 10-inning, 2-1 victory over Point Loma.

3/18/60

Point Loma’s Ron Steele was second in :49.5 in one of two, 440-yard dash heats in the 37th Southern Counties’ Invitational at Huntington Beach. 

Steele’s time in the one-turn race, behind the :49.1 of Long Beach Poly’s Willie Martin, tied for the second fastest ever by an area runner.  San Diego’s Norman Stocks ran :49.3 in 1946 and Coronado’s John Fawcett :49.5 in 1937.
L
incoln’s Lafayette (Mackie) McIntosh was second in 1:58.3 in a large schools 880-yard run.  Point Loma’s Robert Nelson was third in the broad jump at 22-8 ¾.

Kearny’s Darryl Nelson tied for first in the small schools’ high jump at 6 feet, 3 ¼ inches and was second in the broad jump, won by Oceanside’s Rich Lazaro at 21-10 3/4.

3/25/60

A three-way tie in the pole vault was enough for Lincoln to score an upset, 53 2/3-50 1/3 victory over San Diego in the decisive Eastern League dual meet.

Lincoln trailed, 47 1/3-42 2/3, going into the final running event, the 880-yard relay.  Ed Goodman held off the Cavers’ Benny Lewis on the anchor lap for a 1:31.3 victory, but the pole vault had not been completed.

Jim Cransey and Adam Cato of Lincoln and San Diego’s Otis Doxey finally tied for first, each with the same number of misses, and the Hornets claimed 6 of the event’s nine points

Dave Morehead, who would pitch a no-hitter for the Boston Red Sox in 1965, was chased in a five-run San Diego first inning.

The Cavers went on to score two runs in the top of the seventh inning and defeat Hoover, 10-9, in a big Eastern League contest.

Don Clarke cleared pole vault bar at 13 feet, 2 /12 inches, in National City Junior Chamber of Commerce relays.

3/28/60

Gary (Slats) Maloy allowed five hits and went the distance in Crawford’s 7-6 victory over San Diego, which committed seven errors and fell into a first-place tie with Crawford, each at 3-1 in the East.

The loss was San Diego’s first in 10 games.

El Capitan improved to 9-0 by scoring a run in the bottom of the seventh inning to edge El Cajon Valley, 12-11.

The first-year Vaqueros were led by Danny Kern, who tripled and came home on an error for the winning run.  Kern added a single and double in four times at bat.

NO-HITTER BY CADETS

Jack Vincent and Ed Standon combined to no-hit San Miguel School in Army-Navy’s 14-0 win.

A 55-49 dual meet loss to Helix was San Diego’s third of the season, the most since the 1943 squad posted a 2-3 dual-meet record.

Helix’ Larry Aiken won both hurdles events and tied the 1957 school record of :20.0 by Gale Barsotti in the 180 lows.

4/2/60

San Diego outscored Grossmont, 50-44, with El Cajon Valley third at 38 points to win the large-school division of the sixth annual South Bay relays at Sweetwater.

Lincoln’s 53 points were enough to win the medium schools over Helix (51 1/3) and Point Loma (31 2/3). 

Mission Bay (61), Mar Vista (51), and Kearny (36) were the leading small schools.

Grossmont’s Don Clarke cleared 13-2 ½ in the pole vault, bettering by almost nine inches the record of 12-5 /12 by Escondido’s Bing Howe in 1959.

A San Diego team of Charles Dimry, Thomas Phillips, Emile Wright, and William Dentham raced the 440-yard relay in :42.7.

The Cavers’ time in the infrequently run event was the fastest in County history but was erased, along with other marks, after a survey of the Sweetwater track years later showed the oval was less than 440 yards.

4/8/60

Bill Jones cleared 6-3 ½ in the high jump to break Joe Page’s school record of 6-3, set in 1947, and Grossmont won the big meet in the foothills, 57 ½-46 ½ over Helix.

Don Hamlin :10.3, :22.2 in the 100 and 220-yard dashes, and Dennis Cradit, :51.6, 21-4 ½ in the 440 and broad jump, were double winners for the Foothillers.

Hamlin, Steve Adams, Dick Pray, and Cradit combined to run 1:32.1 to win the 880-yard relay. 

Grossmont improved to 6-0 and Helix slipped to 5-1.

Long Beach Poly’s Harvey Crow stole second base as Hoover’s Mile Murray awaited throw. Poly won playoff, 3-1.

4/11/60

Don Dart of Grossmont pitched a no-hitter in setting down Lincoln, 3-0, on the first day of the 10th annual Lions’ Tournament at Navy Field.

Hoover topped Escondido, 1-0, in eight innings and was the only city school of six to win an Unlimited Division game.

Kearny won its Limited Division opener, 8-3 over Coronado.

4/12/60

Tournament teams played doubleheaders on the second day of the three-day event.

Defending Unlimited Division champion San Diego shut out by El Cajon Valley, 2-0, on opening day, was bounced from the consolation bracket by St. Augustine, 3-2.

4/13/60

Sophomore George Sherrod cuffed Hoover on two hits and Helix won the Lions’ Unlimited Division title, 5-0.

El Centro Central beat Kearny, 7-2, for the Limited championship, while St. Augustine, 2-1 in eight innings over Escondido, and San Dieguito, 7-4 over Coronado, won the respective division consolation titles.

4/15/60

Competitors from San Diego to Yuma, Arizona, converged on Balboa Stadium for the first annual Easter Relays.

Mike Graves of El Cajon Valley cleared 13 feet, 6 ¼ inches in the pole vault for the day’s outstanding mark. 

Graves’ performance allowed the Braves to tie Grossmont at the three-man cumulative height of 37 feet and earn the schools the Dean C.E. Peterson perpetual trophy in honor of the late San Diego State coach.

Easter Relays 120-yard high hurdlers (from left): Willie Williams, Brawley; Tom Sperl, Mar Vista (obscured); Larry Aiken, Helix; Lou White, San Diego; winner David Landis, El Cajon Valley; Darryl Nelson, Kearny; Chuck Aldrich, Coronado, and Bob Fauchew, Mount Miguel. Landis’ time was :15.1, off his season best of :14.6.

4/20/60

Bill Froehling hurled a no-hitter as Army-Navy shut down visiting Mountain Empire, 9-0.

4/22/60

San Diego outlasted visiting Hoover, 13-12.  The Cardinals’ Dave Morehead pitched in the first inning, was removed and went to first base and then returned to pitch in the fourth inning.

4/26/60

Jim Thompson’s two-run home run was important in San Diego’s 8-7 win over Crawford, and moved the Cavers closer to the Eastern League title, its 7-1 record three games better than runner-up Hoover (4-4).

4/29/60

Favored Point Loma was shocked by first-year Clairemont, which won the 880-yard relay, the meet’s deciding event, and claimed the Western League dual meet championship, 53-51.
Lanky Jim Godfrey got up for second in the 100-yard dash, won the 220-yard dash in a County-leading :21.7, and anchored the Chiefs to a 1:31.2 victory in the battle of baton exchanges.

Clairemont’s surprising win was especially satisfying for coach Bob Kirchhoff, who had been out of the loop since being let go at Hoover after a stunning football loss to San Diego in 1954.

A City Schools administrator and parent of a Clairemont thinclad had asked the reluctant Kirchhoff to take the coaching reins as a personal favor.

Helix (9-3) walloped El Capitan (10-0), 14-6, in a Metropolitan League battle as Randy Schwartz and Ray Koenig hit home runs.

Ray Alexander of Point Loma (left) won 100-yard dash in :10, edging Clairemont’s Jim Godfrey. Others are Point Loma’s Cecil Scott (second from left) and Robert Nelson (right). Clairemont’s Tom Rutkoske was third in Chieftains’ upset victory.

5/6/60

League finals were held at Camp Pendleton (Southern), El Cajon Valley (Metropolitan), La Jolla (Western), and Balboa Stadium (Eastern).

San Diego, despite losing leading 220-440-and-relay anchorman Benny Lewis to scholastic woes, dominated with 79 1/3 points to runner-up Lincoln’s 51. A Cavers foursome of Thomas Phillips, Emile Wright, Eddie Frost, and Bill Dentham timed 1:29.5 in the 880 relay.

Darryl Nelson set a Western League meet record of 6-3 ½ in the high jump but Clairemont won the team title with 54 5/6 points to Mission Bay’s 43 1/3.

Point Loma’s Ray Alexander ran faster than any city-wide Class C sprint ever with winning times of :10 in the 100 and :18.3 in the 180.

Grossmont, 8-0 in the dual meet season, with wins over Compton Centennial, Helix, and San Diego, outscored Helix, 41-38 for the varsity championship.

El Capitan improved to 12-2 in the Metro League with a 12-3 win over Escondido that included John  Udall’s eighth home run of the year and Al Hinkle’s 5-for-5, three doubles, a triple and single.

Point Loma clinched a tie for first for the Western League crown behind Jerry Jeli’s two-hit pitching and 6-0 win over La Jolla.

5/14/60

Athletes from the Eastern, Western, Metropolitan, Avocado, and Southern leagues met those from the Orange County Sunset, Freeway, and Orange leagues in a Southern California divisional meet in Balboa Stadium.

El Cajon Valley’s Mike Graves, the Southern California pole vault leader at 13-8 ½, dropped down to Class B and cleared the same height, breaking the record of 13-6 ¼ by a Glendale vaulter in 1957.

San Diego led with 7 varsity qualifiers.  Fullerton and Tustin had five each.

Clairemont’s Ron Power avoided tag of Vista third baseman Fred Reynoso. Chieftains won first-round playoff, 6-0.

5/17/60

Clairemont, runner-up to Point Loma in the Western loop, topped Vista, 6-0, in a first-round, Southern Section AA playoff as Ron Power tripled and hit a two-run homer.

5/20/60

Dave Morehead shut out El Capitan, 9-0, in a surprising Southern Section AAA playoff result.  The Cardinals, in and out all season, rolled with Morehead’s three-hit pitching and stunned the first-year Vaqueros, who were 14-2 in the Metropolitan League.

San Diego outlasted Helix, 10-8, as Steve Simon was 3 for 4 and pitcher Larry Murillo 2 for 3.

Clairemont advanced with an 18-5 win over Torrance Bishop Montgomery in Class AA.

Riverside Ramona ousted the Southern League’s Ramona, 11-8, in Class A.

5/21/60

San Diego qualified five entries in the semifinal divisional meet at Chaffey high in Ontario, led by its relay team, which clocked a season-best 1:28.9.

Kearny’s Darryl Nelson led all high jumpers at 6-4 and San Diego’s Thomas Phillips won a 100-yard dah heat in :10 and was second in his 220 heat.

5/24/60

Clairemont earned a trip to the Southern Section AA finals with a 6-3 victory over Santa Ana Mater Dei at Anaheim.

Bill Black’s three-run homer in the fourth inning broke a 2-2 tie in the Chieftains victory.

San Diego advanced to the AAA quarterfinals with a 6-1 win at Compton as lefthander Larry Murillo and last-inning reliefer Frank Lopez set down the Tarbabes on 3 hits.

About 30 professional scouts descended on San Diego State to watch future major league pitchers Dave Morehead of Hoover and Tommy Sisk of Long Beach Poly.

Sisk and the Jackrabbits turned back the Cardinals, 3-1, on Brian McCall’s two-run home run in the fifth inning.

5/27/60

Clairemont, coached by Ernie Beck,  struck with five runs in the first inning as Mike Smith and Jay Critchley hit back-to-back home runs and lefthander Jerry Haight limited Rosemead Bosco Tech to four hits for six innings in a 9-2 win and surprising Southern Section championship.

San Diego High advanced again behind the two-hit pitching of Larry Murillo and surprised the favored and host Fullerton Indians, 11-2, in the semifinals round.

Murillo allowed two hits and first baseman Jim Thompson drove in four runs with a single, double, and triple.

San Diego’s Thomas Phillips reached finish line in :10.1, edging Grossmont’s Don Hamlin in Southern Section Divisional meet 100-yard dash heat in Balboa Stadium.

5/28/60

Thomas Phillips of San Diego ran the 100 in :09.9 for third and Darryl Nelson of Kearny was third with a 6-4 1/2 high jump in the Southern Section finals at Long Beach Veterans’ Stadium.

Phillips and Nelson each qualified for the state meet at Stanford Stadium in Palo Alto. 

El Capitan’s Les Cites was fourth in the shot put at 58-2 ¼.

More impressive were some lower division competitors.

Vernie King of San Diego set a Class B broad jump record of 23-10 ¾ and won the 120-yard low hurdles in :12.8. El Cajon Valley’s Mike Graves cleared 14 feet in the pole vault, bettering his record of 13-8 ½, set two weeks before.

Lincoln’s Class B 660-yard relay team of James (Preacher) Johnson, Walter Scott, Ed Goodman and Vernus Ragsdale, won in 1:07.9, off their best of 1:06.3 but also qualifying the group to run in an exhibition 660 at Palo Alto.

Ray DeBolt represented a third new County high school, Granite Hills, located about a mile east of El Cajon Valley, and won the B 660-yard run in 1:23.6.

6/4/60

Lincoln’s B 660-yard speedsters bettered the national high school record of 1:05.9, running 1:05.7 but Los Angeles Freemont won the exhibition race in 1:04.9.

Thomas Phillips of San Diego and Darryl Nelson of Kearny did not place in the 100 or high jump. 

Larry Murillo’s bid for a fourth straight playoff pitching victory and San Diego High’s attempt to win its 17th championship since 1917 came up short.

Whittier took a 5-0 lead after two innings and cruised to an 11-1 triumph at Los Angeles’ Wrigley Field.

The Cavers, under first-year coach Jerry Dahms, posted an overall record of 23-4 and came much further than expected to this, the last competition of San Diego County teams in the Southern Section.

 




1951 Baseball & Track: Two Sports, Almost Two Champions

Grossmont was the  champion in baseball.  San Diego High was the champion in track and field…for three days.

San Diego lost a title after a review of film from the 440-yard race in the Southern Section finals revealed that Hal Espy had finished fifth and not fourth, taking away a point from the Cavemen and awarding the team championship to Glendale Hoover, Glendale, and Compton.

The winners tied with 15 points each, edging the stunned Cavers, who had 14 ½.

BASEBALL CHAMPIONSHIP

Grossmont, picked below San Diego and La Jolla in early-season City Prep League forecasts and a non-factor in previous races in the Coast League, rode the strong arms of its pitching staff, headed by left-hander Ray Preston, to win the Southern Section title.

Splitting the sports with regular and italics typefaces:

San Diego High was Southern Section power, led by head coach Bill Patten (left in front row) and assistant William (Red) Burrows.

3/5/51

Clyde Wetter, his eye on Hal Norris’ 1950 school record of 58-2 1/2, took the Southern California lead in the 12-pound shot when he reached 56 feet, 4 ¾ inches, in a 66-38, dual meet win over visiting Sweetwater.

3/8/51

San Diego and La Jolla tied for first in the City Prep League Relays in Balboa Stadium, each with 51 ½ points, followed by Grossmont with 45.

All marks were combined. Distances were cumulative.  Teams could enter three in each event and their performances were combined.

An individual record was set when San Diego’s Hal Espy ran the 100-yard dash in :10.0.

3/9/51

San Diego Lions Club announced it was sponsoring a three-day, first annual baseball tournament of sixteen teams, including outside teams Anaheim, Brawley, El Monte, and Norwalk Excelsior.

San Diego and La Jolla were seeded No. 1 and No. 2, followed by Excelsior and El Monte.

Metropolitan League boss Joe Rindone, principal at Chula Vista, announced a double-round robin baseball schedule, highlighted by the annual carnival April 27 at Lane Field. 

John Green was named coach at Sweetwater, replacing Bruce Clarke, called to active duty by the Marine Corps in response to the war in Korea.

Other new Metro coaches included Bob Ganger at Mar Vista and John MacDonald at Oceanside.  Bill Duncan returned at Escondido and Chet DeVore at Chula Vista.  Coronado did not field a team.

3/11/51

Coronado was awaiting the results of its “telegraphic” track meet with Balboa High of the Panama Canal Zone.

3/14/51

Clyde Wetter took the national lead in the shot put at 58 feet, 3/8 inches, as Grossmont outscored Kearny, 73-31.

Wetter took his place among outstanding Grossmont shot putters.

“A shot putter relies on the wrist snap for great power and distance,” the 5-foot, 8-inch, 180-pound Wetter told Gene Earl of The San Diego Union, “but strong fingers are just as important, to keep the ball from slipping while being released.”

Wetter revealed that part of his exercise regimen is standing several feet from a wall and falling against it with all fingers extended and kept straight to prevent flex.

–San Diego won an early City League dual-meet showdown against La Jolla, 61 2/3-42 1/3.

The Vikings’ Joe Epps and San Diego’s Hal Espy were double winners in the 120-yard high hurdles and 180 low hurdles and 100 and 440-yard races, respectively.

Espy also anchored the Cavers to a 1:32.4 victory in the 880-yard relay and Frank Johnson won the broad jump at 22-6.

–Lincoln Lucero set a Point Loma record of :20.3 in the 180 lows, but Hoover won, 53 1/3-50 2/3.

3/16/51

San Diego and La Jolla made the Lions seeding committee look good by reaching the championship game, the Cavers 22-1 over Oceanside and 6-3 over El Monte. 

La Jolla advanced, 5-4 over Escondido and 3-2 over Grossmont.

Doug Hubacek’s 3-run homer in the last of the seventh inning ousted El Monte and Tom Tomaiko scored on Bill Whitson’s single in the 10th inning to top Grossmont.

3/17/51

San Diego outscored Long Beach Poly, 32 4/15 to 29, to win the large-school team championship for the third consecutive year in the 30th Southern Counties’ Invitational at Huntington Beach.

Newport Harbor won the small schools division with 30 points, followed by Covina (24) and Kearny (21 3/5).

Several running events in the crowded field included two heats.

–Walter (Red) Taylor won his heat in the 100 in :10.2, followed by Hal Espy, who also anchored the San Diego 880-yard relay squad to victory in one of three races.

–Clyde Wetter broke Hal Norris’ meet record (56-3/4) with a 57-9 ¾ effort, almost 7 feet further than Ontario Chaffey’s Don Vick, who would set a national record in 1953.

–John Rushing of Kearny won the 180 lows in :19.7 and La Jolla’s Joe Epps took a heat in the 440 in :52.

–Don Hydrick of Chula won a division of the pole vault at 12-3.

La Jolla’s Bill Whitson was tournament most-valuable player as the Vikings defeated San Diego, 5-3, for the Lions title at Lane Field.

Whitson struck out 10, walked one, allowed five hits, and profited from three double plays.

Kearny won the consolation bracket, 19-0, over St. Augustine in the morning championship at San Diego High.

Grossmont pitching was in good hands with (from left) Noel Mickelson, Fred Wilburn, and Ray Preston.

3/18/51

Because of a San Diego City League ruling that no school could compete or practice during the Easter week, there would be no teams in the upcoming, Pomona 20-30 Club tournament, which San Diego High had won 7 times in the event’s 16-season- history. 

Escondido would be the County’s lone representative.

3/28/51

Oceanside won seven of 12 events and Bob Penrod took the 100 in :10.1 and set a school record of :22 seconds in the 220, but Chula Vista claimed the Metropolitan League dual, 55-49.

3/30/51

John Rushing of Kearny ignored blustery weather and won three events and anchored the relay team to victory in the meet’s final event as the Komets edged Point Loma, 54-49.

The 1:35.4 victory in the two-lap exchange of batons broke a 49-49 tie.  Rushing also won the 100 in :10.4, 180 lows in :20.6, and broad Jump at 21-2 ½.

Bill Whitson struck out 16 and didn’t allow a hit and La Jolla won its CPL opener, 11-0, over Point Loma.

Pointers base runners were by a walk and two errors.

–Charlie Powell hit a 400-foot home run and Eddie Boyle doubled in two runs in the sixth inning as San Diego topped Kearny, 5-4. 

San Diego sophomore Bob Borovicka came on in the sixth and struck out 10 of the 15 batters he faced, allowed three hits and two walks, and tagged out a Kearny runner at the plate for the final out of the game.

Hoover’s Ed Rodgers was the third City Prep League shot putter in 1951 to surpass 50 feet, reaching 51-3 1/2 in dual meet with Point Loma.

4/3/51

Kearny beat La Jolla, 5-4, but the Vikings’ Bill Whitson, in a three-inning relief appearance, faced the minimum 9 batters and struck out 5. 

–Grossmont outscored San Diego, 7-2, in what was inaccurately described as an upset.

Grossmont coach John Hancock’s signature pitcher, Ray Preston, set down the Hillers on seven hits and drove in a run with a third-inning single.

–San Diego’s junior varsity defeated Grossmont’s JV, 22-0.

4/12/51

Grossmont (4-0) was pulling away in the CPL baseball race, routing challenger Kearny (2-2), 14-4. 

Ray Preston, the Foothillers’ pitching ace, moved over to first base and collected four hits, including two home runs, a double and single.

4/14/51

Grossmont walloped La Jolla, 11-0, as Ray Preston struck out 18 and allowed two singles to Vikings shortstop Art Luppino.

The Foothillers finished the first half of the CPL race with a 5-0 record. San Diego was 4-1 and Lions tournament champion La Jolla was 1-4.

–La Jolla’s Joe Epps and Bill Lawrence posted CPL season highs in the Vikings’ 67-37 win over Point Loma.  Epps cleared the 120 high hurdles in :15.0 and Lawrence traversed the mile in 4:46.6.

–John Parker led the way with a 22-6 broad jump and San Diego teammates Alex Hudson and Frank Johnson also spanned at least 22 feet in an 87-16 win over Kearny.

–Kearny high jumper Danny Bain became the first in the City League to clear 6 feet.

City Prep League 180-yard low hurdlers (from left) Bob McWilliams, Hoover; Jim Cole, San Diego; Gaylord Watson, Grossmont; Lincoln Lucero, Point Loma; Joe Ypma, La Jolla, and John Van Hooser, Hoover, turn for home in Balboa Stadium trials. Lucero won finals later in week in :20.9.

4/20/51

Sweetwater claimed the Metropolitan League dual meet championship, 66 ½-37 ½, at Chula Vista.

The Red Devils won 9 of 11 events and John Palhegyi tied a school record of :22.2 in the 220 on the Chula Vista straightaway.

–No score was reported, only that San Diego topped Point Loma for a 5-0 dual meet record.

–Coach Bill Patten’s Cavers had won 22 consecutive dual meets, dating to a 57-47 loss to Grossmont in the opening dual of the 1948 season.

4/20/51

Art Webber of La Jolla no-hit Point Loma, 6-2, overcoming seven bases on balls and four Vikings errors.

4/24/51

Grossmont closed in on the CPL baseball title, 5-0, at San Diego.  The Foothillers were 7-0, Cavemen 5-2.

4/27/51

San Diego, as expected, cruised to the City Prep League team championship with 73 ½ points, followed by Grossmont (34 3/4) and La Jolla (33 ½) before about 1,000 persons in Balboa Stadium.

–Joe Epps of La Jolla was a double winner in the high hurdles (:15.3) and 440 (:52).

–San Diego finished 1-2-3 in the broad jump, led by Alex Hudson’s 21-10 ½.

–Clyde Wetter won the shot put at 57- ¾, but had some competition from San Diego’s dual-sport star Charlie Powell, second at 55-11 ¾.

–Bernie Nelson, a Class B performer at Hoover, took the area lead in the high jump when he cleared 6-1 13/16.

A crowd of 2,000 attended the Metro League carnival at Lane Field and saw San Dieguito, Oceanside, and Sweetwater emerge as winners.  . 

–Teams played three innings each.  Mar Vista, Escondido, and Chula Vista were losers.

–Sweetwater’s Dick Walker pitched two hitless innings, and struck out five as the Red Devils beat Chula Vista, 1-0 in the final three innings.

–San Dieguito, borrowed from the Southern Prep League, was a 4-0 winner over Mar Vista and Oceanside beat Escondido, 4-3

Charlie Powell slugged in baseball and hurled the shot in track.

4/28/51

Postponed twice, the Metropolitan loop trials at Chula Vista were dominated by Sweetwater with 17 qualifiers, followed by Escondido, 12, and Chula Vista, 9.

–The weather again was cold and blustery but did not hinder Mar Vista hurdler John Poole, who ran :15.3 in the 120 highs.  Dave Binney of Chula Vista recorded a 4:45.6 mile.

4/30/51

San Dieguito ran away with the Southern Prep League title with 103 ½ points, but Bob Knapp of Army-Navy set the only meet record with a 49-foot shot put.

5/1/51

Sweetwater won five events and scored 56 ½ points to win the Metropolitan championship.  Chula Vista was second with 31 ½, followed by Escondido, 29.

Sweetwater’s Jim Seebold won the 440 in :53.4 and was second in the 100.  Teammate Ted Granger was first in the 180 low hurdles (:21) and second to Mar Vista’s John Poole, who won the high hurdles in :15.3.

Oceanside’s Bob Penrod doubled in the sprints with a :10.4 100 and :22.4 220.

No meet records were broken but Sweetwater set a school record with its 1:34.4 victory in the 880 relay and Chula Vista’s Don Hydrick cleared 12-5 1/8 in the pole vault.

5/4/51

Ray Preston pitched a 3-1 victory over La Jolla as Grossmont (8-0) clinched the CPL title..

San Diego dropped a 10-inning, 4-3 decision to Hoover on Dick Pomeroy’s single after the Hillers’ Carl Lutz tied the score in the ninth with a two-run home run.

5/5/51

John Parker broad jumped 23-9½ to take the state lead and break Bob Logan’s 1938 school record of 23-6 3/4 as San Diego High led with 11 qualifiers at the Huntington Beach divisional meet.

Three-hundred athletes competed from San Diego’s three leagues, City, Metro, and Southern Prep, along with qualifiers from the Orange and Sunset circuits.

Hal Espy doubled with wins in the 100 (:10) and 440 (:51.9).  Haldon Grey and Walter Taylor were disqualified for false starts in the 100 and the relay team was bumped for a lane violation. Grey recovered to win his heat in :22 in the 220.

–Oceanside’s Bob Penrod won a 220 heat in:22.1 and John Rushing of Kearny doubled in the Class B hurdles with times of :09.1 in the 70-yard highs and :13.1 in 120 lows.

–Forty-eight of the 108 San Diego County entries from league finals qualified to move on to the divisional semifinals at Ontario Chaffey.

5/8/51

Ray Preston struck out 19 batters and didn’t allow a hit in a 21-0 rout of Point Loma.  The Foothillers were 9-1 in league play, San Diego 7-3.

–This was the 35th and final season the Cavers played home games in Balboa Stadium. They would move to the upper practice field north of the Stadium in 1952.

–Chula Vista shut out Sweetwater, 8-0, as Chuck Phinney pitched a no-hitter.  Escondido claimed the Metro championship with a 5-2 record.

5/12/51

Twenty-two athletes from San Diego’s 3 leagues qualified in semifinals at Chaffey.

San Diego led with six advancers in three events.  Hal Espy won his heat in the 440 in :50.4, off the school record of :49.3 by Norman Stocks in 1946 but unofficially the fifth fastest in area history.

More significant was Clyde Wetter’s losing his first competition of the season, beaten by the Cavers’ Charlie Powell, who had turned in his baseball uniform only four days earlier.

Powell’s winning toss was 56-3 to Wetter’s 56 feet.

5/19/51

San Diego thought it had won the team championship with 15 ½ points.  Glendale Hoover, Glendale, and Compton had 15 each.

The Cavers scored their points early and held on.

John Parker won the  broad jump at 23-3, followed by Compton’s Rollin Garrison, 23-2 ¼, and Parker’s teammates, Frank Johnson, third at 22-1 ¾ and Alex Hudson, tied for fourth at 22-1. When Espy was awarded fourth in the 440 more than half the meet remained.

–Wetter won the shot put with a school-record 58-4 7/8 and Powell was runner-up with 57-9 ¼, topping the school mark of 55-2 ¼ by Bob Van Doren in 1948.

–Others included Joe Epps of La Jolla, fourth in the 120 high hurdles; Bob Penrod of Oceanside 4th in the 220, and Don Hydrick, Chula Vista, tied for fifth in the pole vault vault at 12 feet.

–Kearny’s John Rushing tied the Class B record of :08.9 in the 70 hurdles and won the 120 lows in :13.2.

Grossmont opened the Southern Section playoffs with a 5-2 win at Santa Ana.  Ray Preston stopped the Saints on 3 hits and 14 strikeouts to improve his record to 8-0.  Preston also singled, doubled twice, and hit a home run.

5/23/51

Grossmont won its semifinal playoff versus visiting El Monte, 9-4, as Preston allowed five hits and struck out seven and his battery mate, Bob Rand, and Bill Harris homered.

5/25/51

Escondido, having beaten Wildomar Elsinore and Holtville, was three outs away from the Southern Section minor division crown, leading 6-4, but bowed to Bonita, 7-6, at Fullerton.

5/26/51

Clyde Wetter was second to Leon Patterson of Taft with a best of 57-8 ½ to Patterson’s 59-2 ½ in the state meet in Berkeley.  Charlie Powell was fourth in the shot put at 54-7 ½ and John Parker fifth in the broad jump at 21-4 1/4.

5/26/51

Ray Preston (10-0) struck out 16 and allowed 2 hits as Grossmont won the Southern Section major division, 5-0, over Compton, before about 1,000 persons at Lane Field. 

Preston, finishing his season with a 10-0 record, beat future major leaguer Benny Daniels, who struck out eight and walked eight.

The Foothillers’ Bill Harris, 2 for 3, and sophomore Ernie Merk, 2 for 4, backed Preston.

STRIKES AND SPIKES

San Diego sprinter Hal Espy entered the Air Force after graduation and then enrolled at Idaho State, where he became a national collegiate boxing champion…Point Loma’s coach was Bennie Edens, later one of the County’s all-time winningest football mentors…Metropolitan League principals, at a meeting at Coronado, announced that ticket prices for football and basketball in the 1951-52 school year, would be increased to 80 cents for adults, while students still would pay 30 cents…Jim Hunt was an all-around contributor at Hoover, scoring in the high jump, 880-yard run, and hurdles…his son, Thom, was one of the nation’s top milers a generation later at Patrick Henry…shot putter Clyde Wetter was one of five brothers and two sisters of a La Mesa family whose father was a grocery store butcher…Ray Preston and Bob Rand were all-Southern California first-team selections….




1915-2020: Boys State Track and Field Champions

They didn’t necessarily post the all-time San Diego County best in their event, or even their best, but 62 individuals have won 80 state track championships since the first meet in 1915.

Pole Vaulter Bill Miller of San Diego, jumper Dokie Wiliams of El Camino, and weight specialist Darius Savage of Morse stand out as triple winners.

Miller took his titles in 1927, ’28, and ’29. Williams won the triple jump in 1977 and ’78 and the long jump in 1978. Savage won the shot put in 2006 and the discus in 2005 and ’06.

There have been numerous double winners, the most recent being Madison’s Kenon Christon, who won both sprints in 2019.

A father-son combination was Clairemont’s Dale Fleet, who won the two-mile in 1972. Mac of University City won the mile in 2009.

There has been one brother-sister combination. Kristin Fahy of La Costa Canyon won the 3200-meter run in 2019.  Darren Fahy took the 1600 meters in 2012.

Champions:

EVENT YEAR NAME SCHOOL MARK
100 yards 1929 Jimmy Willson San Diego :09.8
1973 Elijah Jefferson Crawford :09.6w
1974 Jefferson :09.8
1977 David Russell Parrick Henry :09.61
100 meters 1992 Riley Washington Southwest :10.30
2019 Kenon Christon Madison :10.30
220 yards 1929 Willson :21.4
1941 Glenn Willis San Diego :21.7
1977 Russell :20.97w
200 meters 2019 Christon :20.69
440 yards 1929 Irvine (Cotton) Warburton San Diego :49.6
1946 Norman Stocks San Diego :49.3
1979 Tony Banks Morse :47.28
880 yards 1957 Jim Cerveny Mission Bay 1:52.7
1964 Bob Hose Madison 1:51.7
1966 Terry Rogers Hilltop 1:51.5
800 meters 1988 Mark Senior Mount Miguel 1:51.37
2008 Charles Jock Mission Bay 1:51.64
2012 Alexander Monsivaiz Army-Navy 1:51.34
One Mile 1965 Tim Danielson Chula Vista 4:08
1966 Danielson 4:07
1600 meters 1989 Francis O’Neil San Pasqual 4:08.67
1991 Daniel DasNeves Helix 4:12.22
1992 DasNeves 4:09.54
1994 Meb Keflezghi San Diego 4:07.67
1999 Marcus Chandler Serra 4:10.44
2000 Evan Fox West Hills 4:09.44
2006 A.J. Acosta El Camino 4:04.95
2009 Mac Fleet University City 4:05.33
2012 Darren Fahy La Costa Canyon 4:08.78
Two Miles 1972 Dale Fleet Clairemont 8:53.8
3200 meters 1994 Keflezghi 8:58.11
2007 Eric Avila Bonita Vista 9:01.77
120-yard high hurdles 42-inch 1938 Johnny Biwener San Diego :15.3
110-meter high hurdles 39-inch NA
300 intermediate hurdles 2001 Jeff Hunter Granite Hills :36.25
4×100-meter relay 1994 El Camino :41.16
2001 Helix :41.17
880-yard relay 1941 Ed Pohl, Don Smalley, Lou Barrera, Glenn Willis San Diego 1:29
1946 Jim Barrera, Harold Miller, John Holloway, Norman Stocks San Diego 1:29.2
  1963 Walter Blackledge, Gordon Baker, Ray Dixon, Charles Sanford San Diego 1:26.3
4×400-meter relay NA  
High Jump 1918 Brick Muller San Diego 5-9 3/4
1953 Bernie Nelson Hoover 6-4
1970 Jerry Culp Oceanside 7-0 1/4
Long Jump 1957 Luther Hayes Lincoln 23-8 1/2
1962 James Kennedy Lincoln 24-5 3/4
1966 Doyle Steel San Diego 25-3 1/4
1978 Dokie Wiliams El Camino 25-1 1/4
1990 Jerome Price University City 25-3 1/4
2003 Darrell Hutsona Helix 25-5 3/4
Triple Jump 1973 Willie Banks Oceanside 49-7 3/4
1974 Banks 50-9
1977 Williams 51-0 1/2
1978 Williams 50-4 1/4
1989 Lenny McGill Orange Glen 51-1 /14
1994 Von Ware Rancho Buena Vista 50-6
Shot Put 1950 Hal Norris Grossmont 56-5 1/2
1968 Pete Shmock San Dieguito 63-11
1986 Brian Boggess El Capitan 61-4
1989 Brent Noon Fallbrook 66-1 1/2
1990 Noon 74-4 3/4
2003 Jared Bray Mission Bay 63-3 1/4
2006 Darius Savage Morse 66-3 1/4
2014 Dotun Ogundeji Madison 65-5 1/2
Discus, 4 lb., 6.4 oz. 1925 Eddie Moeller San Diego 126-6 5/8
1926 Moeller 141
Discus, 3 lb., 9 oz. 1999 Dan Ames El Capitan 199-9
2004 Daniel Schaerer The Bishop’s 206-5
2005 Savage 194-8
2006 Savage 205-6
2013 Brenden Song West Hills 188-8
2015 Charles Lenford Oceanside 195-4
Pole Vault 1922 Harry Smith San Diego 11-11 1/2
1923 Smith 12-3 5/8
1926 Bill Hubbard San Diego 12-4 tie
1927 Bill Miller San Diego 12
1928 Miller 12-9 1/2
1929 Miller 12-6
1956 Bill Logan El Cajon Valley 13-6 tie
1961 Mike Graves El Cajon Valley 14-3
1995 Mike Brown Torrey Pines 16-4



1974-2020:  Girls State Track and Field Champions

It’s the time of year that University City’s Katrina Wright, Poway’s Ashley Callahan, and  members of Scripps Ranch’s 4×100 relay squad should be preparing to defend their San Diego Section championships Saturday and move on to the 102nd state track meet at Clovis next week.

Like the prom and traditional graduation, they sadly won’t have the opportunity, but their achievements in 2019 now are part of our area’s rich history in the sport. They can look back and say, “I was a state champ.”

There have been 28 individual champions and 46 total, beginning with the sprint double by La Jolla’s Janice Wiser in the first girls’ state meet in 1974.

Monique Henderson of Morse won five individual titles, four in the 400 meters and one in the 200 meters.  Henderson and only 11 others in state history have 5 gold medals.

Sweetwater’s Gail Devers and Vista’s Kira Jorgensen each won three championships.

Devers later was a twice Olympic champion in the 100-meter dash and a gold medalist on a 4×100 relay team.  Henderson was on the winning U.S. 4×400 relay squad in 2004.

Jorgensen topped the field in 1600-meter races in 1987, ’88, and ’89.  Devers won the long jump in 1983 and doubled in the 100 meters  and 100-meter 30-inch hurdles in 1984,

The 100 hurdles 33-inch and the 4×400 relay are events in which there has not been a first-place finisher from the San Diego Section.

Champions:

EVENT YEAR NAME SCHOOL MARK
100 yards 1974 Janice Wiser La Jolla :10.8
100 meters 1984 Gail Devers Sweetwater :11.51
220 yards 1974 Janice Wiser La Jolla :24.2
200 meters 2000 Monique Henderson Morse :23.19
400 meters 1998 Henderson :53.41
1999 Henderson :52.87
2000 Henderson :50.74
2001 Henderson :51.34
2019 Katrina Wright University City :53.93
800 meters 1986 Laura Chapel University City 2:08.07
1600 meters 1986 Darcy Arreola Grossmont 4:45.13
1987 Kira Jorgensen Vista 4:45.98
1988 Jorgensen 4:49.54
1989 Jorgensen 4:49.55
1993 Milena Glusac Fallbrook 4:50.83
2009 Sammy Silva Our Lady of Peace 4:47.67
3200 meters 1992 Glusac 10:28.62
1993 Glusac 10:42.68
2003 Claire Rethmeier San Pasqual 10:27.32
2010 Molly Grabill Rancho Bernardo 10:20.25
2019 Kristin Fahy La Costa Canyon 10:11.38
100-meter hurdles 30” 1984 Devers :13.41
100-meter hurdles 33” NA
300-meter hurdles 1991 Erin Blunt San Pasqual :43.02
2014 Hannah Labrie-Smith Cathedral :41.67
4×100 yards relay 1977 Jewell Lovelady, Danita Young, Katie Gaston, Judy Reed Crawford :46.14
4×100 meters relay 2019 Brianna Sproles, Aubree Bell, Jaymie Rustkovich, Aaliyah McCormick Scripps Ranch :46.51
4×400 meters relay NA
High Jump 1978 Sue McNeal Carlsbad 5-10 1/4
1987 Lynn Patrick Serra 5-10
2007 Whitney Sisler La Costa Canyon 5-10
2019 Alysha Hickey Coronado 5-8
Long Jump 1981 Chris Mose El Cajon Valley 18-10 1/4
1983 Devers 19-6
2018 Hickey 19-9 3/4
Triple Jump 1994 Tamieka Porter Orange Glen 38-11
1997 Andria Booker El Camino 40
1998 Booker 40-0 1/4
Shot Put 1974 Kathy Devine Mission Bay 47-4 1/2
1975 Devine 42-3 3/4
Discus 1976 Kathy Middleton Poway 134-5
1986 Tracy Crawford Southwest 156-02
Pole Vault 1998 Tracy O’Hara Rancho Bernardo 12-8
1999 Kathleen Donoghue Rancho Bernardo 12-8 1/4
2008 Emily Mattoon Rancho Bernardo 12-6
2009 Kortney Ross Westview 13-4
2010 Ross 13-6
2019 Ashley Callahan Rancho Bernardo 13-4