1946 Track: Balboa Stadium Site of Southern Section Championships

San Diego High, led by quartermiler Norman Stocks, sprinter-broad jumper Jimmy Barrera, hurdler Harry West, shot putter Joe Acevedo, and half-miler Harry Taylor, among others on a deep and talented squad, was in full force, posting an 8-0 record in dual meets, winner of 16 in a row, and 20-2 since Bill Patten became coach in 1944,  their only losses, 54-50 to Grossmont, and 55-48 to Hoover, in Patten’s first season.

The CIF Southern Section meet, held in Balboa Stadium for the first time,  could have been a reference point for when the San Diego Section won the right to host the 1967 and 1975 state meets.

The Stadium configuration, which did not provide a straight distance for races of 220 yards, eventually proved to be an Olympic-style  model.  Starting in 1967, all 220-yard events were on a curve, according to track historian Russ Reabold.

The season of 1946  also was the last in which the 220-yard hurdle race was contested.  The CIF reduced the distance to 180 yards in 1947. The CIF had reduced the 120-yard high hurdles clearance from 42 inches to 39 inches in 1939.

Harry West, decades later an outstanding coach at La Jolla and San Diego City College and a member of California’s 1949-51 Rose Bowl teams, cleared hurdles for San Diego High.

3/1/46

San Diego won a 65-38 decision against La Jolla, with Norm Stocks setting the pace by winning the 440 in :51.6 and taking the baton to the finish line of a 1:32 victory in the 880-yard relay.  Bobby Smith pole vaulted 11 feet, 6 inches, for the Hilltoppers and George Pinnell had a 48-9 shot put for La Jolla.

3/8/46

A Hoover team of John Mhoon, Chuck Whitmarsh, Rudd Hanna, and Kempton Blair ran the relay in 1:35.5 and its winning five points allowed the Cardinals to deadlock Grossmont, 52-52, in a controversial Victory League dual at Hoover.

Chuck Evins of Grossmont won the 220-yard low hurdles but was disqualified when Evins drifted into another lane on what an Evening Tribune reporter described as poorly marked boundaries.

Grossmont’s Duane (Bud) Close staggered and fell across the finish line in the 440-yard run.  Officials ruled that Close had breasted the tape first in :53.6, although had he not fallen Hoover’s Kempton Blair would have won.

—Norman Stocks won the 100 in :10 and 440 in :50.3, and broad jumped 21 feet, 10 inches, as San Diego whipped Point Loma, 74-30. Stocks teamed with Harry West, Cosimo Cutri, and Jimmy Barrera in a 1:31.9 Hilltoppers relay victory.

Bobby Smith of San Diego pole vaulted 12 feet and Harry Taylor of the Hilltoppers logged a 2:04.3 880.  Point Loma’s Bob Smith ran a 4:44 mile.

3/15/46

Writer Norrie West of the Evening Tribune noted that Point Loma’s 53-51 dual meet victory over Hoover was result of the Pointers’ 1:36.2 triumph in the 880-yard relay final event, traversed on the peninsula team’s 330-yard oval.

But West credited the Point Loma victory to John Chasey, who scissored 5 feet, 9 inches, on his third and final try in the late-finishing high jump.  The second-place and three points by Chasey narrowed a Hoover lead to 51-48 heading into the relay.

–San Diego’s Harry West covered the 220-yard hurdles in :25.5 and teammate Fred Deewall ran the 220 in :22.8, and the Hilltoppers won all 12 events in the 89 ½-14 ½ rout at Sweetwater.

–Bud Held’s 12-2 ½ pole vault was instrumental in Grossmont’s 89 ½-14 ½ win over Kearny.

3/19/46

A “gooey track and half-hour downpour” didn’t make the Balboa Stadium layout unusable, while other Victory League duals were postponed in what had become a wet spring.

San Diego loafed to a 93 ½-10 ½ win over Coronado. Jimmy Barrera broad jumped 21-8 into a messy pit.  Norman Stocks jogged to a :54.8 win in the 440, and anchored a 1:41.6 victory in the relay.  Stocks and his three associates ran the race without removing their sweat suits.

Grossmont’s Franklin (Bud) Held was a state contender in the pole vault and then became a world recordholder in the javelin throw.

3/20/46

Grossmont won all 12 events and the meet, 85-19, at Sweetwater despite losing its top sprinter, Dick Johnston, who pulled a muscle in the 100-yard dash.

3/22/46

More than 100 athletes from Victory League schools Grossmont, Coronado, Point Loma, San Diego, Hoover, and Coronado converged on Huntington Beach High with 34 other schools for the 25th Southern Counties’ Invitational.

Grossmont took large school honors with 21 1/5 points to San Diego’s 20 1/5. Redondo Beach Redondo Union was third with 16 and Hoover fourth with 14.

Ish Herrera of Grossmont won the high jump at 6-1 and Chuck Evins was clocked in :25.4 by coach Jack Mashin for third place in the 220 hurdles.  Bud Held tied with four others for first in the pole vault at 12 feet. Harry West of San Diego was second to Bob Bacon of Redondo Beach Redondo Union in the lows.

Norman Stocks of San Diego and Bud Close of Hoover each won one of the two 440-yard dashes, Stocks finishing in :51.4 and Close in :53.1.  Stocks anchored the Hilltoppers’ 1:32 win in the relay.

Hoover’s Earl Caldwell was second in :15.5 to the :15.2 in the 120-yard high hurdles by Redondo’s Bob Bacon.  Rolland Nelson won the mile in 4:42, followed by teammate Paul Juette.

Wally Hawke of Coronado pole vaulted 11-4 for first in the small schools competition.

3/26/46

Graydon Calder of San Diego high jumped almost a foot over his head when he cleared 6 feet, 3 inches, in the Class B meet with visiting La Jolla.

The 5-foot, 5-inch Calder bettered the CIF Southern Section B meet record of 6-1 ¾ by a Santa Ana jumper in 1938.

San Diego won the varsity portion of the Balboa Stadium event, 83-21.  La Jolla’s Art Barnard edged Norman Stocks in a :10.3 100, but Stocks came back to run the 220 in :22.4 and Harry Taylor posted the season’s best 880 time, 2:02.4.

—Hoover won its first dual meet, 64-40, although visiting Sweetwater’s Bob Tomlinson cleared 11-5 in the pole vault and 5-8 ½ in the high jump, and Cy Young beat favored Bobby Rodriguez in the 880 in 2:05.8.

3/30/46

Grossmont’s Bud Held cleared 12 feet, 4 7/8 inches in the pole vault and teammate Ish Herrera cleared 6-1 3/4 in the high jump at the San Diego State Aztec Relays.

Point Loma’s Maurice Lawhead, winning 880 race from Hoover’s Bobby Rodriguez in 2:08.2,  earned a fifth-place medal in the state meet 880-yard run.

4/5/46

San Diego won the battle of Victory League heavyweights, defeating Grossmont, 61-43, as Norman Stocks and Jimmy Barrera scored two victories each.

Stocks ran :10.4 in the 100-yard dash and :50.2 in the 440.  Barrera broad jumped 21-4 ½ and ran :23.3 in the 220.

Grossmont’s Franklin (Bud) Held pole vaulted 12-1 3/8 and Chuck Evins set a school record of :15.9 in the 120-yard high hurdles.

–George Pinnell hurled the shot 49 feet, 6 inches, but Hoover beat La Jolla, 68-36.

4/10/46

John Janney posted a win-aided :10.0 in the 100 and Maurice Lawford logged a 2:06.5 880, but Grossmont swept the late-finishing high jump and eked out a 52 ½-51 ½ victory over host Point Loma.

4/11/46

Joe Vargas and Brown Military held sway in the CIF Group 12 League finals at San Dieguito. Vargas was reported to have run :10 in the 100 and :22.5 in the 220, and was third in the shot put for a total of 21 ½ points. Brown scored 76 ½, followed by San Dieguito, 65 ½, Vista, 53, Escondido, 45 ½, Oceanside, 28, and Fallbrook, 7 ½.

4/12/46

Norman Stocks’ :10.2 100 and :50.8 440 and Jimmy Barrera’s :22.7 220 and 21-7 ½ broad jump were augmented by Joe Acevedo’s 49-6 ½ shot put and 2:06.5 880 by Harry Taylor in San Diego’s 73-31 win over Hoover.

Half-miler Taylor also joined Stocks, Barrera and John Holloway in a 1:31.3 880 relay victory

Norman Stocks, winning a Southern Counties Invitational 440-yard race at Huntington Beach, was the Southern Section and State meet champion, setting a County and  San Diego High school record of :49.3.

Hoover’s only victories came from Earl Caldwell’s :16.2 in the 120 high hurdles and Paul Juette’s 4:46.2 in the mile.

4/17/46

A ferry trip across the bay to Coronado was just part of a leisurely afternoon for coach Raleigh Holt’s Hoover Cardinals.  They beat Coronado, 76-28, winning 10 of 12 events (11, but disqualified in the relay) and Earl Caldwell was a double winner in short hurdles races, :09.5 in the 70-yard highs and :14.3 in the 120-yard lows.

Hoover also swept to victory in classes B and C but the Islanders’ Jike Wong made things interesting for the home team, winning the Cee 50 in :5.9 and broad jump at 20 feet, 3 inches.

4/27/46

Jimmy Barrera broad jumped 22-2 1/2 to set a Victory League record and Norman Stocks tied a 220 record by running :22.3 on the Balboa Stadium curve. Harry Taylor logged a 2:03.5 880.

San Diego wrapped a 5-0 dual-meet league season with the  81-23 win over Kearny.

–Bob Tomlinson ran :25.7 in the 220-yard low hurdles and pole vaulted 12 feet, but Point Loma defeated Sweetwater, 71-33.

–George Pinnell put the shot 50 feet, 2 inches for La Jolla and Chuck Evins broad jumped 21-4 in Grossmont’s 76-28 win.

4/30/46

Buster Bennett, the No. 3 runner on La Jolla’s 880-yard relay team, stumbled and fell during his 220-yard leg, opening the door for a Point Loma win in 1:34 and a 53-51 Pointers’ Victory League dual meet finale victory.

Joe Acevedo made sure San Diego High represented in the shot put with best of 49-6 1/2.

5/5/46

Norman Stocks set a meet record of :50.0 in the 440 and won the 100-yard dash in :10 as San Diego took the Victory League meet championship with 46 ½ points. Grossmont followed with 27, Hoover, 23, La Jolla, 15 ½, Coronado, 5, and Sweetwater, 4.  Kearny was blanked.

Seven meet records were broken.

Harry West of San Diego ran :25.3 in the 220-yard low hurdles.  George Pinnell of La Jolla hurled the shot 51 feet, 9 inches. Maurice Lawhead of Point Loma covered 880 yards in 2:02.7. Ish Herrera of Point Loma high jumped 6 feet ½ inch,  and a San Diego quartet of Jimmy Barrera, Harry West, John Holloway, and Norman Stocks set a record of 1:30.8 in the 880 relay.

Larry Boerner of Grossmont ran the mile in 4:39.2, beating the favored Rolland Nelson of Hoover, second in 4:40.7, ahead of teammate Paul Juette.

5/11/46

Norman Stocks continued his pursuit of Irvine (Cotton) Warburton’s 440-yard dash school record (:49.6) with a :49.9 clocking before about 200 competitors from 23 schools in the Victory, CIF Group 12, and Imperial Valley who attempted to extend their seasons in a Southern Section Divisional meet at San Diego State College.

Stocks, battling blustery weather on the one-turn race, was caught in :49.7 on one official’s stopwatch and :49.8 and :50 on others.

San Diego led all scorers with 43 ½ points and had additional first places in the 100 (Stocks, :10.2), 880 (Harry Taylor, 2:03.5), broad jump (Jimmy Herrera, 21-7 ¾), and 880 relay (1:31.4).

Grossmont’s Bud Held, a future world record holder in the javelin throw (268 feet, 2 inches in 1955), and a 1952 Olympian, was first in the pole vault at 12 feet, ½ inch. La Jolla’s Art Barnard was timed in :25.0 in the 220 hurdles.

Winners automatically advanced to the CIF championships the next week but second and third place finishers had to await an announcement from CIF boss Seth Van Patten after marks were compared to those in two other divisional meets.

5/14/46

San Diego High hurdler Harry West and shot putter Joe Acevedo did not meet the qualifying standard as CIF boss Seth Van Patten announced a total of 29 Victory League entries in classes A, B, and C along with those from divisional meets at Oxnard and Inglewood for Saturday’s Southern Section championship in Balboa Stadium.

5/16/46

Meet director John Brose promised a well-run, informative event for those attending the 28th CIF championships, held for the first time in San Diego’s Balboa Stadium.

Sixty-two schools had 220 athletes who qualified.

Athletes not in direct competition will be staged in the Southwest corner of the stadium, assuring fans of a clear view of the 440-yard oval, said Brose. American flags will indicate national records in field events and red flags will indicate CIF records.  A stadium public address will follow runners in longer races and large signs will mark the height pole vaulters and high jumpers will attempt.

Earl Caldwell of Hoover was one of Southern California’s best 120-yard high hurdlers.

5/18/46

San Diego scored 11 points, with Norman Stocks winning the 440 in a County record :49.3; anchoring the Hilltoppers to a second place in the 880-yard relay, and Jimmy Barrera finishing fourth in the broad jump in the Southern Section championships.

Stocks did not place in the 100-yard dash but made up eight yards on Redondo Beach Redondo Union’s anchorman to finish second to the Sea Hawks’ 1:29.1.

–Maurice Lawhead of Point Loma was fifth in the 880, won by Clarence Witt of Redlands in 1:58.7.

–Paul Juette of Hoover was fifth in the mile won by Chuck Kohl of Compton in 4:30.7. Victory champion Larry Boerner apparently did not enter after an article in The San Diego Union had cast doubt on his participation because of the flu.

–Earl Caldwell of Hoover was fifth in the 120-yard high hurdles.  Grossmont’s Bud Held tied for fourth in the pole vault.  La Jolla’s George Pinnell was fourth in the shot put.

Redondo won the team championship with 24 ½ points.  Los Angeles Cathedral was second with 12 1/5.

L.A. Mt. Carmel’s John Helwig set a meet record of 59 feet in the shot put.

5/25/46

Norman Stocks was a double winner with another :49.3 in the 440 and by anchoring San Diego to a 1:29.2 victory in the 880 relay in the final event of the afternoon-evening, 30th state track meet at Compton College.

The Hilltoppers were fourth in team scoring with 10 points.  Redondo Beach Redondo Union won with 21, followed by Alameda, 12, and L.A. Cathedral, 11.

George Pinnell of La Jolla was third in the shot put to John Helwig’s national record 59-5 7/8. Hoover’s Paul Juette was fourth in a record-setting mile of 4:24 by Bob McMillan of L.A. Cathedral. Bud Held of Grossmont tied for fourth in the pole vault, won at 12-6.




1966 Track I: Arnie Robinson and a Glimpse of the Future

Arnie Robinson was coming to the end of four brilliant seasons at Morse.

Robinson high jumped 6-7, long jumped 24 feet, and won the 120-yard high hurdles in :14.8 in his last competition (see below) at the school on Skyline Drive in Encanto that Robinson watched open in September, 1962.

The nephew of 1940s San Diego High stars Ermer and Ivan Robinson went on to Mesa College, San Diego State, and, later, to international acclaim.

Arnie won the Olympic gold medal in the long jump at the 1976 Olympics after earning a bronze in 1972.

Robinson, who eventually returned to teach and coach the Mesa track team, had career bests of 6-10 in the high jump, 27-4 ¼ in the long jump, and 51 feet in the triple jump.

Robinson (left) had high jump company with Paul Lee and Harold Greenwood.

2/28/66

Madison’s Dennis Smith cut almost 10 seconds off his 1965 school record when he ran 10:04.7 in the two-mile, but Granite Hills, defending San Diego Section team champion, won the season-opening meet at Madison, 82-31.

3/2/66

San Diego defeated Point Loma, 67-46, as Doyle Steele doubled in the high jump (5-10) and long jump (22-7) and Orvin Romo logged 1:58.7 in the 880.

Steele could have gone much higher, said coach Martin Pedigo, but the event was halted after the takeoff area became slippery and unsafe because of rain.

3/4/66

Doyle Steel tied Bob Logan’s 1938 school high jump record of 6 feet, 5 ½ inches.  Steele also won the long jump at 23-1 and the triple jump at 43-3, but San Diego dropped a 72-59 decision to Grossmont.

—Crawford routed Kearny, 90 ½-17 ½, and future decathlete Don Bajema set a school record of 6-1 ½ in the high jump and won the long jump at 21-9.

Johnny Mack Ellis edged Crawford’s Danny Patton in a :09.7 100.

3/11/66

Lincoln’s Johnny Mack Ellis demonstrated strength and speed when he pole vaulted 11-6 and won the sprints in :09.8 and :21.5 and anchored a 1:30 relay victory in Lincoln’s 85-28 win at Kearny.

Ted Scales ran :14.3 in the 120 highs and David Edwards took the 180 lows in :19.3.

Marks were complemented by the breezes that blow off the Kearny Mesa.

—Arnie Robinson long jumped 23-10 ½ in Morse’s triangular meet with Chula Vista and Mission Bay, which the Tigers won with 79 points to the Spartans’ 44 and the Bucs’ 17.

Chula Vista’s Tim Danielson, idled by the flu last week, won the 440 (:50.7) and mile (4:24.2).

3/17/66

Lincoln’s dual-meet power, enhanced by the arrival of Johnny Mack Ellis from Tyler, Texas, rolled on usually respectable Crawford, 84-29.

Ellis took advantage of the Crawford track, elevated, on a mesa and in line with westerly breezes, beat the Colts’ Danny Patton (:09.9) with a :09.7 100, took the 220 on the curve in :22.1, anchored a 1:30.1 relay victory, and pole vaulted 12 feet for a four-win, golden spike afternoon.

—El Cajon Valley’s Armando Valencia took the state lead with a 1:54.9 880 and broke Jack Hudson’s 1958 school record of 1:55.9 in the Braves’ 71-60 loss to Granite Hills and Hilltop’s Terry Rogers, who would win the 880 in the state meet in June, ran 1:55.5 as the Lancers defeated Escondido, 71-60.

Basil Machado hurdled (:14.7 in 120 highs) and shot putter Don Patterson competed for Mount Miguel coach Dick Tomlinson.

3/23/66

Morse would not compete three days later in the National City Junior Chamber of Commerce Relays at Sweetwater, but the Tigers showed they would have been contenders for the team championship by defeating Helix and San Diego in a triangular meet that featured events of the relays.

The Tigers scored 79 points to Helix’ 45, and San Diego’s 32.

Tigers high jumpers Larry Greenwood (6-7 1/2), Paul Lee  (6-2), and Arnie Robinson (6-0) cleared an aggregate, average height of 6-3 ½.

3/26/66

Tim Danielson took the national lead with a time of 4:11.2 in the mile in the 12th annual National City JC Relays, with Terry Rogers of Hilltop, the leader until final 110 yards, second in 4:12.2.

Problem.

The track was yards short of the typical 440-yard oval, but no matter to Danielson.  He had several times better later in the season on other tracks.

3/30/66

St. Augustine’s Tom Eklund tossed his hat into the 880-yard ring with a 1:54.8, topping by 1/10 second that which El Cajon Valley’s Armando Valencia negotiated earlier.

Eklund’s mark did little to help the Saints, 85-18 losers to San Diego.

“I’m using starting blocks, so it will get me out there quicker,” said Eklund of his :54 first quarter. “Then it will let the second quarter take care of itself.”

Eklund was third in 1:55.2 in the San Diego Section championships in 1965 and his best this season before today was 1:56.4.

4/1/66

Tim Danielson took a shot at the 880 and ran 1:53.2, fourth fastest in area history, and Chula Vista won at Escondido, 87-26.

–The wind blew and the marks flew at Morse, where the Tigers’ Donald Anders beat Crawford’s Danny Patton in a :09.8 100 and Patton beat Anders, :21.3 to :21.4, in the straight 220.

–Rick Rubin set a Helix record of 4:20.6, but Armando Valencia won the mile in 4:16.1, although Valencia and his El Cajon Valley teammates were on the short end of the 91-40 score.

Granite Hills’ George Brown was a second-generation star in the shot put.

4/6/66

–Ira Raibon set an Oceanside record of 6-2 3/4 in the high jump.  Terry Rogers broke Hilltop’s two-mile mark with a 9:41.8 and Brent Rowlett ran 9:50.8 for an Oceanside record. Fred Logel lowered the Morse mile to 4:38.6 and teammate John Roberts hurled the shot 51-2 ½ for another school record.

4/9/66

Hilltop won the Dean C.E. Peterson trophy for the outstanding performance and Lincoln hurdler Ted Scales for the outstanding individual performance in the seventh San Diego (formerly Easter) Relays in Balboa Stadium.

The Lancers’ distance medley team of Bruce Pradels (440), Bernie Calderon (880), Jimmy Gelsomini (1,320), and miler Terry Rogers, who anchored in 4:16.1, completed the distance in a County-record 10:23.4.

Scales came from behind on the last hurdle to nip teammate David Edwards in the 120-yard high hurdles in :14.1, best ever in the area, and Monte Vista’s 4-man, 4-mile relay team of  Dave Matheny, Rod Stephens, Mark Clark, and Don Olsen clocked 18:06.08, another all-time best.

4/15/66

Arnie Robinson won the 120-yard high hurdles in :14.8, high jumped 6 feet, 7 inches, and long jumped 24 feet in Morse’s 71-42 win over Hoover, the same school that had beaten the first-year Tigers, 103-1, in 1963.

Of one of the most impressive three-event performances in area dual-meet history, Robinson said, “It was my last meet at home and I wanted to do good.”

“Arnie had the spirit today,” remarked teammate Harold Greenwood after Robinson reached 24 feet on his first try.  Robinson and Greenwood tied in the high jump but Arnie had fewer misses.

Another Robinson teammate, Donald Anders, won the 100 in :09.9 and 220 in a school-record :21.5.

–Johnny Mack Ellis ran :09.8 and :22.2 in the 100 and 220 and pole vaulted 12-6 as Lincoln erased any drama in the usually heated rivalry with San Diego, 74 ½-38 ½.

The Hornets even topped the Cavemen with essentially a backup relay team of Louis King, James Gunn, Albert Quinn, and Leroy Davis, which ran 1:30.

–Terry Rogers of Hilltop turned in a 1:54.4 880 and barely minutes later tried to double in the 440, finishing last.   Sweetwater won the 880 relay in 1:33.4 and the meet, 59-54.

–Oceanside’s Ira Raibon high jumped 6-2 and long jumped 23-2 and Bill Reilly put the shot 55 feet in Oceanside’s 74-52 win over Orange Glen.


The middle distance races were dominated by Hilltop’s Terry Rogers (left) and Chula Vista’s Tim Danielson,

4/22/66

George Brown was almost 10 feet better than his father.

The senior Brown, an El Cajon doctor and former all-America football player at Navy, set a Hoover High record of 51 feet, 11 inches, in the shot put in 1941.

The younger George III, a muscular 220 pounds, heaved the 12-pound ball 60-10 ½, seventh best in County history, and defending champion Granite Hills stayed alive in the Grossmont dual-meet race with Grossmont and Helix.

The Eagles, who lost to Grossmont, 67-64, last week, defeated favored Helix, 70 ½-60 ½.  With the meet in the balance, Granite Hills’ Donald Evans anchored a 1:30.2 victory in the 880 relay after topping the Highlanders’ Ralph Lavage in :09.9 and :22.2 in the sprints.

Granite’s Bruce Rickett’s (:49.5) edged Helix’ Ron Koenig (:49.8) in the fastest 440 in the area this season.

–Armando Valencia’s 9:15.7 two-mile was the fastest this year in California and left Valencia and his coach Joe Brooks wondering.

“If Danielson and Rogers run the mile and 880, we might go in the two-mile,” said Brooks. “It would really give our area a real shot at three first places in the state meet.”

–Point Loma ended Mission Bay’s two-year rule in the Western League, 75-38, and will meet Kearny for the title next week.

Grossmont (5-0) must get past Helix (4-1) for an outright Grossmont title next week.

Lincoln, 91-14 over St. Augustine, goes for the Eastern crown against Morse, 61-52 over San Diego, next week.

Chula Vista, 81-32 over Hilltop, and Sweetwater, 95-17 over Escondido, will settle matters in the Metropolitan League.

Lewis King (near) and Ted Scales (left) battled in 180-yard low hurdles in meet with Morse, Scales winning in :20.1.

4/29/66

Grossmont nipped Helix, 67-64;  Lincoln rolled Morse, 80-33; Chula Vista edged Sweetwater, 59-54, and Point Loma routed Kearny, 74 ½-38 ½, to either claim league titles outright or face only virtual formalities in the final week of dual meets next week.

–Grossmont secured its win over Helix with a 1:30.8 victory in the relay.  Crawford did the same in a 58-54 thriller with San Diego as Danny Patton anchored a 1:29.8 win after taking the 220 in :21.8 on the Balboa Stadium curve.  The Colts’ Jim (Big Game) Hunter ran :14.8 in the 120-yard highs.

–Terry Rogers threw down on the state’s 880-yard run aspirants with his 1:53.2, which tied Tim Danielson’s area season best.

–Rick Geer set a Monte Vista record with a 162-8 discus throw and doubled with a 50-11 shot put.  Granite Hills’ George Brown heaved the shot 59-4 and teammate Mike Bimer set a school record with a discus throw of 160 feet.

–Tom Danielson jogged a :50.4 440, teammate Johnston ran a 1:59.7 880, Jim Baldwin hurled the shot 54-6 1/4, and Don French covered the 120 high hurdles in :14.7, all of which helped Chula Vista to a 61-51 win over Sweetwater,  which embraced a school-record 22-11 1/4 long jump by Jim Rice, minimally longer than Burte Jackson’s 22-10 1/2 in 1965.

See additional narrative, 1966 Track II, for more information.

 

 

 

 




1966 Track II: The Big 3, Tim, Doyle, and Terry

Tim Danielson, Terry Rogers, and Doyle Steel were state champions and would have been favored in their events if there were a prep national championship meet.

Chula Vista’s Danielson, the second to better four minutes in the mile, was undefeated  on the prep level the last two years  and he competed nationally and internationally well into the summer.

Following a two-mile victory on June 18 in Sacramento’s Golden West Invitational, Danielson also ran the mile  in the National AAU meet in New York, running nonwinning 4:07.4 in the trials on June 25 and 4:03.3 in the finals on June 26.

Danielson’s last significant event was the Police Games in Toronto, Canada, where he ran 4:03.9, in late July.

Steel, who set a national record in the long jump, and Rogers, the national No. 1 runner in the 880, made for a tremendous San Diego Section season.

Rick Riley, Spokane, Washington, prep star who ran 4:04 .7 in the “Balboa Mile” portion of the San Diego Invitational, congratulated Tim Danielson (right) who broke four minutes in race.

5/6/66

Tim Danielson ran the two-mile in 9:04.7, fastest ever in the county and No. 6 in the country this season, as Chula Vista wrapped the Metropolitan League dual meet championship, 87-26, over visiting Mar Vista.

Grossmont claimed the Grossmont League dual-meet title with a 90-41 win over El Cajon Valley, whose Armando Valencia posted a 4:12.9 mile.

Danielson will drop the two-mile for the mile and Valencia will leave the mile for the two-mile in league meets.

Granite Hills’ George Brown put the shot 60 feet, 5 ½ inches;

Chula Vista’s Don French ran :14.4 in the 120-yard high hurdles;

Sweetwater’s Bill Yahnke logged a :09.9 100 and :21.5 220 on the notoriously breezy Castle Park straightaway.

EASTERN LEAGUE TRIALS, @BALBOA STADIUM

Otis Martin shaved more than 25 seconds off his two-mile time with a 9:16.1 and Lincoln teammate David Edwards cleared the 120-yard high hurdles in :14.3.

Edwards equaled the league record set by Jimmy Fox in 1964 and Martin smashed his 9:41.3 in the 1965 meet.

The Hornets led with 23 qualifiers, followed by San Diego (18), Hoover (16), Morse (15), Crawford (13), and St. Augustine (8).

Class B field event finals saw Hoover’s Lance Ruff set a record of 50-9 ½ in the shotput, more than 6 feet further than the 44-5 ¾ by Jerry Darr of St. Augustine in 1963.

Mike Johnson of Lincoln pole vaulted 12-6, a foot higher than the 11-6 in 1963, ’64, and ’65 by representatives of three different schools.

Doug Jones of Lincoln high jumped 6-2 ¾, tying  Arnie Robinson’s 1964 Class B record.

Bob Logan (top) and San Diego Section commissioner Don Clarkson pose with perpetual trophy won by San Diego High when Logan and teammates took 1938 state championship (search 1938: Hilltoppers Win Championships But lose to Hoover”).  Lincoln harbored hope for 1966 title but came up short.

WESTERN, @CLAIREMONT

Point Loma’s Bob Chavez set a 220 record of :21.7, erasing the :21.8 by Clairemont’s John Procsal in 1963.

The 4:26.3 mile by Barry Richardson of Kearny was better than the 4:27.5 by La Jolla’s Jeff Dragila in 1965.

Frank Heitman of Clairemont ran 1:58.9 in the 880, gutsy and notable because Heitman’s dislocated shoulder was harnessed after an injury sustained playing volleyball.

5/9/66

GROSSMONT, @GROSSMONT COLLEGE

Dan Ungricht of Monte Vista tied the 880 record of 1:56.6 by El Capitan’s Tad Hendrickson in 1964.

That Ungricht was wearing shoes did not fit the category of breaking news.

Footwear was not new to the Spring Valley community, where Ungricht lived, but was seldom the choice of the Monarchs’ runner or his distance-running teammates.

“In cross country we always go barefooted,” said Ungricht.  “Your feet feel lighter.”

Ungricht said he usually dumped his shoes for the longer races.

The prospect of going barefoot didn’t appeal in shorter events.

Granite Hills’ Donald Evans, appropriately shod, tied a record he shared with two others when he ran :09.9 in the 100.

Morse’s Harold Greenwood was third brother to stand out on local sports scene.

METROPOLITAN, @MAR VISTA

The :14.6 in the 120 high hurdles by Chula Vista’s Don French broke the record of :14.7 by El Cajon Valley’s Dave Landis in 1960.

5/15/64

FINALS

METROPOLITAN

Tim Danielson, in a rare attempt at the 440, was first in :50.2 and added a 4:13.3 mile as Chula Vista ran away with the team championship with 63 points to runner-up Sweetwater’s 29.

The evening’s top mark was the U.S.-leading 1:51.8 by Hilltop’s Terry Rogers in the 880.

“No one told me my time at the 660 mark,” Rogers told Bill Weurding of the Evening Tribune, “so I was running mentally, according to the way I felt.  I didn’t believe it was that fast.  I still can’t believe it.”

GROSSMONT

Granite Hills outscored Helix, 66-58, fired by a triple win from sprinter Donald Evans, who won the 100 in :10, 220 in :23.2, and anchored a 1:30.3 victory in the 880 relay.

Evans’ teammate, George Brown, set a record with a 60-7 1/2 shot put.

Mount Miguel’s Pat Ela doubled with a 13-foot, 7-inch pole vault and a record 23-3 long jump.

Dan Ungricht of Monte Vista ran the 880 in 1:56.5, knocking 1/10 off the record he tied in the trials.

Rick Olander, the leading pole vaulter at 14-7, was byed into the CIF trials because of an injury.

Clairemont’s Frank Heitman, despite pain and shoulder harness, won Western League heat in 1:58.9.

AVOCADO

Vista’s Rick Fox set the pace with a 4:20.8 mile but Oceanside won the team championship with 49 points to the arch-rival Panthers’ 18.

PALOMAR

Mike Turnipseed, a Class B entry for Carlsbad, won the 100 in :09.8 and 220 in :21.7.

EASTERN

Several jumpers of beyond 23 feet would be cut to three for the San Diego Section trials.

Lewis King of Lincoln won at 24 feet, 2 ¾ inches.  Henry Woods of San Diego was second at 23-4 ¾ and Morse’s Arnie Robinson, who had a best of 24 feet, was third at 23-3.

Missing was San Diego’s Doyle Steel, who earlier had gone 23-9 ¾ but was sidelined with an ankle injury.

It was revealed that Eastern League coaches had voted prior to the meet to bye Steel into the CIF trials.  Robinson, who would win the 1976 Olympics gold medal, was out.

CIF commissioner Don Clarkson dismissed complaints, saying they were “league matters”.

SAN DIEGO SECTION TRIALS

5/22/66

About 450 competitors descended upon Balboa Stadium, where at the end of the day four records had been set, one tied, and the number of survivors for the finals was winnowed down to approximately 265 in 33 varsity, Class B and C events.

Chula Vista’s Tim Danielson continued undefeated and unchallenged, setting a section mile record of 4:08.2, closing in on his best of 4:08 in the 1965 state meet and better than Danielson’s 4:08.7 in the ‘65 San Diego Section trials.

Bob Chavez led five Point Loma and Mission Bay sprinters across the finish line with  :10.1 victory in 100. Chavez also won the 220 and was Pointers’ anchor in relay.

Tall Point Loma junior Bob Chavez, bothered off and on since last season by a muscle pull, barged into the sprint conversation with a record :21.5 on the stadium’s curved 220, topping Byron Olander’s :21.6 in 1964.

Chavez, 10 yards behind on the anchor exchange, also caught and passed Granite Hills’ Donald Evans and brought the Pointers home in a Lincoln-and-San Diego-like 1:28.5 in the 880 relay.

SIBLINGS

Morse’s Harold Greenwood, younger brother of Hoover’s Norris and Lincoln’s Larry, tied the 1964 high jump mark of 6-8 by Hoover’s Eddy Hanks.

Carlsbad’s Mike Turnipseed ran the B 100 in :09.9, knocking down the :10 flat Turnipseed had run a year before.

Lincoln’s Doug Jones high jumped 6 feet, 5 inches, to improve on the B record of 6-2 3/4 by Arnie Robinson in 1964 and Jones the previous week.

Johnny Mack Ellis and Ted Scales of Lincoln were individual double winners.

Ellis ran :09.7 and :21.8 in the 100 and 220.  Scales tied with teammate David Edwards in :15.1 in the 120 high hurdles and won a 180 lows heat in :20.1.

Terry Rogers of Hilltop won one 880 heat in 1:52.3 and Tom Eklund of St. Augustine took the other in 1:53.3.

Lincoln led all varsity qualifiers with 17, Oceanside had 11 (to Lincoln’s 10) in the Bees, and Grossmont led the way with 9 (to Lincoln’s 8) in the Cees.

Leroy Davis won 440 in :49.3 in Eastern League finals and was contributor to Lincoln’s record-tying 1:27.2 880 relay.

SAN DIEGO SECTION FINALS, @BALBOA STADIUM

5/29/66

Tim Danielson and Terry Rogers were forced to give up the limelight to the glare that was coming from the long jump pit.

Lincoln’s Lewis King drew a roar from the crowd of about 4,000 when he soared 24-5 1/4 early in the competition.

Doyle Steel, an injured nonparticipant in the Eastern League meet two weeks before and then quietly byed into the trials, suddenly became airborne and landed at a national-record 25 feet, 5 ½ inches, 1/4 inch beyond what a jumper from Pacific Grove, California, did in 1964.

Steel, whose jump could have been declared a foul, because he walked back through the pit before exiting, had gone a foot and a half further than his previous best of 23-11 ½.

Lincoln, paced  by Johnny Mack Ellis’ 0:9.8 100, :21.4 220, and anchor of the winning 880 relay team that tied the record of 1:27.2,  scored 65 points to 15 each by runners-up Chula Vista and Granite Hills.

RECORDS

TWO-MILE RUN

New: 9:10.8, Armando Valencia, El Cajon Valley.  Old: 9:17.8, Otis Martin, Lincoln, 1965.

120-YARD HIGH HURDLES

New: :14.2, David Edwards, Lincoln.  Old:  :14.4, Mike Swaim, Oceanside, 1963; Harold Burt, Morse, 1965.

HIGH JUMP

New:  6-8 ¼, Harold Greenwood, Morse.  Old:  6-8, Eddy Hanks, Hoover, 1964.

LONG JUMP

New:  25-5 ¼, Doyle Steel, San Diego.  Old: 24-5 1/4, Lewis King, Lincoln, 1966.

220

New:  :21.4, Johnny Mack Ellis, Lincoln.  Old: :21.5, Bob Chavez, Point Loma, 1966.

MILE

New: 4:06.2, Tim Danielson, Chula Vista.  Old:  4:08.2, Danielson, 1966.

880 RELAY

Tie:  1:27.2,  Lincoln (Lewis King, Leroy Davis, David Edwards, Johnny Mack Ellis).  Lincoln, 1962; San Diego, 1963.

STATE TRIALS, @BERKELEY

6/5/66

Lincoln had eight athletes in eight events and a total of 11 entries.

The Hornets were given a chance to win the team championship, although Los Angeles Dorsey and Pasadena Muir were favored, having come through the larger, more competitive L.A. City and Southern sections.

San Diego Section entries met with success in the Friday afternoon portion of the meet at 22,000-seat Edwards Stadium on the University of California campus.

Terry Rogers, Tim Danielson and Doyle Steele won their preliminary tests, as did Lincoln’s Johnny Mack Ellis, first in one of the 100-yard dashes.

Terry Rogers warmed to winning state 880 with trials victory in Berkeley, beating Los Angeles Wilson’s Arthur Martinez in 1:52.7.

Lincoln pole vaulter Mike Johnson was among qualifiers at 13-3 ½ in the pole vault.

The top three finishers in each of three heats and usually 11 or 12 in field events moved on to the finals. Parenthesis indicate place in respective heats, with San Diego Section qualifiers in italics.

NAME, SCHOOL EVENT TIME LEADER
Ellis, Lincoln 100 :09.9 (1) :09.8, Hill, Stockton Edison; Masters, El Cerrito; Underwood, L.A. Dorsey.
Belle, Lincoln :10.0 (4)  
Chavez, Point Loma 220 :20.9w (3) Underwood, L.A. Dorsey. :20.5.
Ellis   :21.2 (2)  
Ricketts, Granite Hills 440 :50.5 (9) :47.5, Collett, Gardena.
Quinn, Lincoln :50.3 (6)  
Rogers, Hilltop 880 1:52.7 (1)  
Eklund, St. Augustine   1:53.6 (3T)  
Danielson, Chula Vista Mile 4:18.7 (1) Mattingly, L.A. Loyola, 4:15.9
Fox, Vista 4:21.1 (4)  
Edwards, Lincoln 120HH :14.2 (2) Parish, L.A. Dorsey, :13.9.
Scales, Lincoln :14.5 (4)  
King, Lincoln 180LH :20.2 (7) Farmer, La Puente, :18.6.
Edwards :19.0 (4)  
Robinson, Morse High Jump 6-4 (12T) 11 at 6-6.
Greenwood, Morse 6-4 (12T)  
Steel, San Diego Long Jump 24-3 ¾ (1)  
King   22-11 ½ (11)  
Brown, Granite Hills Shot Put 58-6 ½ (9) 64-¼, Hubbell, Long Beach Poly
Rielly, Oceanside 49-8 (24)  
Johnson, Lincoln Pole Vault 13-3 ½ (1T)  
Griffiths, Mar Vista 13-0 (17T)  
Gold, Grossmont Discus 156-8 /1/2 (14) 183-4 /12, Peters, Piedmont
Geer, Monte Vista Fouled 4 throws  
Point Loma 880 Relay 1:29.1 (3) 1:27.3, Garden Grove Bolsa Grande
Lincoln 1:28.7 (3) 1:27.5, L.,A. Manual Arts

6/6/66

Terry Rogers got nutrition treat from cafeteria manager while Hilltop coach Kenny Anderson (left) served Terry a Lancers special.

FINALS

Tim Danielson, Doyle Steel, and Terry Rogers helped produce a San Diego Section record three gold medals, but Lincoln finished far down the pack with 3 points, two for Johnny Mack Ellis’ fourth place in the 100 and one for Otis Martin’s fifth in the two-mile run.

Rogers began the day holding off a late charge by Karl Henry of Rialto Eisenhower to win the 880 in 1:51.5, same time as the runner-up.

Steel had to rally on his last jump, reaching 25 feet, 3 1/4, to finally beat back the challenge of L.A. Loyola’s Henry Harris, who was leading in the final flight of jumpers at 24 -7 ¼.

Danielson was taking on superstar status.  He won the mile by at least 35 yards in a state meet record of 4:07.    Second place finisher Wally Mattingly of L.A. Loyola clocked 4:13.4.

San Diego Section scorers in italics.

NAME SCHOOL EVENT TIME WINNER
Johnny Mack Ellis Lincoln 100 :09.7 (4) :09.6, Underwood, L.A. Dorsey
Ellis 220 :22.0 (6)  
Bob Chavez Point Loma :22.1 (6)  
Terry Rogers, Hilltop 880 1:51.5 (1)  
Tom Eklund St. Augustine 1:57.4 (10)  
Tim Danielson Chula Vista Mile 4:07 (1)  
Otis Martin Lincoln Two-Mile 9:10.1 (5) 9:01.6, Gamez, Berkeley
Armando Valencia El Cajon Valley Did not finish
David Edwards Lincoln 120HH :14.7 (8) :13.9, Parish, L.A. Dorsey
Doyle Steel San Diego Long Jump 25-3 ¼ (1)  
Lewis King Lincoln 23-2 (6)  
George Brown Granite Hills Shot Put 58-7 ¼ (8) 66-11, Hubbell, Long Beach Poly
Mike Johnson Lincoln Pole Vault 13-0 (14T) 15-3/4, Meyers, Sacramento Foothill
Point Loma 880 Relay 1:33.4 (7) 1:26.4, Pasadena Muir
Lincoln Did not finish.  

6/11/66

Calm Danielson was unflappable in big meets.

Danielson, Rogers, and Steel each competed in the San Diego Invitational, which included former Olympians and an international field.

Danielson continued to rock, finishing fourth in the mile in 3:59.4 and becoming the second high school runner after Jim Ryun in 1964 to break four minutes.

Terry Rogers was last in a six-man 880 field but his 1:50.4 was No. 6 all-time in the U.S.

Doyle Steel jumped 24-5 ½, behind Ralph Boston’s winning 25-3 and Gayle Hopkins 24-11, but Steele impressed track and field expert Dick Bank of Los Angeles.

“He looks like the guy who could take (world record holder) Boston’s place,” said Bank.

“This is the thing that impresses me,” Bank said of Steel, “the conditions weren’t good but he was jumping right with those guys.”

6/18/66

Danielson set a record of 8:55.4 in the two-mile at the Golden West Invitational for athletes from California and the U.S. in Sacramento.

Steele won the long jump at 25-5 and Rogers was the winner in the 880 at 1:51.8.crol

See additional narrative, 1966 Track I, by searching “Recent Posts”.

 

 




2022 Boys Track (5): Final San Diego Section and State Leaders

Thirty-three boys, counting one for relays, posted 43 marks that made the state Top 25 in the standard 16 events, as noted by Athletic.net.  Numbers in parenthesis represent placement.

EVENT NAME MARK STATE
100 Tucker, Lincoln :10.51w, (17T), :10.54 (21T) :10.14, Pleasant, Gardena Serra
Priest, Maranatha :10.56 (23T)
200 Brock, Cathedral :21.40 (20) :20.40, Pleasant
Tucker, Lincoln :21.47w (22), :21.74
400 Parker, Helix :46.82 (3) :46.75, Goode, Santa Clarita West Ranch
Brotschi, Otay Ranch :48.12 (12T)
800 Harder, San Marcos 1:51.90 (9) 1:48.84, C. Sahlman, Newbury Park
Thomas, Torrey Pines 1:52.34 (10)
Gilmore, Sage Creek 1:52.93 (16)
Taylor, San Marcos 1:53.87 (20)
1600 Taylor 4:11.87 (17) 3:59.32, Young, Newbury Park
3200 Gilmore 8:53.23 (7)
Bowlds, Patrick Henry 9:00.32 (20)
Pala, Francis Parker 9:01.43 (24)
110 Hurdles Thomas, Mission Hills :14.83 :13.35, Marshall, Stockton St. Mary’s
300 Hurdles Atilano, Cathedral :38.78, (16T) :36.73, Marshall
Nelson, Patrick Henry :38.93 (19)
Thomas :39.42 (25)
4×100 Relay Mission Hills :41.70 (15) :40.63, Fresno Central
Helix :41.75 (17)
4×400 Relay Helix 3:15.79 (5) 3:13.87, L.A. Cathedral
San Marcos 3:19.97 (12)
High Jump Gillis, Steele Canyon 6-9 (1T) 6-9, Johnson, San Bernardino Cajon
Cheeks, Mission Bay 6-8 (3T)
Cardoza, Eastlake 6-8 (3T)
Meisterlin, Fallbrook 6-7 (10)
Long Jump Tucker, Lincoln 23-11 (5) 24-9 ½, Stevenson, Temecula Great Oak
Matovu, Helix 23-3 1/2w (16), 23-2 1/2
Cheeks 23-2 ½ (17T)
Saunders, Cathedral 23-2 ½ (17T)
Triple Jump Detling, Poway 47-9 (4) 48-6, Stevenson
Buu, Eastlake 47-6 (6)
Shotomide, St. Augustine 46-10 ¼ (11)
Cheeks 46-3 (17)
Gillis 45-10 (22)
Cardoza 45-9 (24)
Shot Put Miller, El Camino 59-11 ¾ (7) 66-10, Moran, Murietta Mesa
Lopez, El Centro Southwest 59-11 (8)
Martinez, Vista 58-3 ¼ (10)
Holmes, Del Norte 56-5 (14)
Pole Vault Rydbeck, Rancho Bernardo 14-11 (23T) 16-9, O’Brien, Eastvale Roosevelt
Emerson, Sage Creek 14-11 (23T)
Richards, Poway 14-11 (23T)
Discus Lopez 175-4 (15) 207-4, Moran



2022 Girls Track (5): Final San Diego Section and State Leaders

Forty-five girls, counting one for relays, posted 54 marks that made the state Top 25 in the standard 16 events, as noted by Athletic.net.  Numbers in parenthesis represent placement.

EVENT NAME/SCHOOL MARK STATE
100 Shaheed, Madison :11.66 (4) :11.45, Redmond, Carson
McCormick, Scripps Ranch :11.71w (3), :11.76 (11)
Hatton, Sage Creek :11.91w (21T), :12.18
200 Bean, Poway :24.25 (8) :23.82, :23.65w, Currie, Santa Clarita Golden Valley
Shaheed :24.45 (15)
400 Bean :55.09 (8) :53.19, Cenci, Clovis North
Cramer, The Bishop’s :56.21(18)
Smith, La Jolla :56.33 (22)
Herbst, Carlsbad :56.39 (25)
800 Buswell, Poway 2:09.54 (7) 2:05.66, Engelhardt, Ventura
Cramer, The Bishop’s 2:11.24 (13)
Riggins, Del Norte 2:11.60 (18)
Farmer, Rancho Bernardo 2:11.94 (19)
Arciaga, Westview 2:11.98 (21)
1600 Riggins 4:46.97 (8)
Rogers, Poway 4:48.75 (11) 4:33.29, Engelhardt
3200 Rogers 10:17.91 (9) 9:50.9, Engelhardt
Lopizzo, La Costa Canyon 10:25.46 (15)
100 Hurdles McCormick :13.46w (1), :13.61
James, San Diego :13.67 (2)
Coleman, Cathedral :14.05 (7) :14.00, Harris, Stockton Lincoln; Davis, Upland
Bowen-Fontenot, San Diego :14.95 (25)
300 Hurdles Coleman :42.19 (1) :42.37, Ruelas, Arroyo Grande
K. Janik, Torrey Pines :42.38 (3)
James :42.71 (5)
McCormick :43.31 (8)
D. Janik, Torrey Pines :43.38 (10)
Medley, Del Norte :44.37 (15)
 4×100 Cathedral :48.16 (25) :45.82, Santa Clarita Golden Valley
4×400 Relay Poway 3:49.93 6) 3:43.87, Long Beach Wilson
Del Norte 3:53.12 (10)
Carlsbad 3:54.87 (12)
Torrey Pines 3:54.94 (13)
High Jump Tarczy, Scripps Ranch 5-7 (9T) 5-10, Elie, Rocklin Whitney
Moore-Bastide, Eastlake 5-7 (9T)
Roberts, Westview 5-5 (19)
Long Jump Hatton Sage Creek 19-1 1/4w (13), 18-8 1/4 20-8 1/2w, 19-11 ¾, Vanek, Clovis
Triple Jump Pingley, El Camino 38-4 ¾ (17) 41-3, Hope, Riverside King
Miles, Point Loma 38-2 ¼ (20)
Pole Vault Evans, Scripps Ranch 14-0 (T1) 14-0, Muhammad, Dublin
Leigh, Del Norte 13-7 (4)
Thomson, Poway 13-3 (5)
Wagner, Fallbrook 13-0 (9T)
Hansen, San Dieguito 12-9 (11T)
Quiroz, Rancho Bernardo
Downing, La Costa Canyon
O’Connor, Rancho Bernardo 12-3 (18)
Hilliard, Poway 12-2 (19T)
de Jong, Maranatha 12-0 (23T)
Shot Put Clarke, Cathedral 47-5 (1) 45-4 ½. Gordon, Sherman Oaks Notre Dame
Discus Clarke 147-9 (4) Fields, Caruthers, 162-7
Seaboldt, Mt. Carmel 133-8 (13)
Loy, Del Norte 131-6 (20)
Mulic, Eastlake 129-3 (23)  



2022 Boys Track (4): No Gold Medals, But Helix and Parker Solid

Adren Parker drove Helix to a fifth place finish in the 4×400 relay as the Highlanders ran 3:15.79,  11th all-time in San Diego.  An added plus was Helix’s breaking the school record of 3:16.23, set in 2003.

Parker, a junior, also put 2023 rivals on notice with a fourth-place, :47.68 performance in the 400 meters that followed his Section all-time best of :46.82 in Friday’s state meet trials.

Parker ranked third in the 400 in the state and he bettered 48 seconds six times.

Helix finished 12th in team scoring with 10 points, followed by Steele Canyon, 6 1/3, San Marcos, 6, El Centro Southwest, 5, Francis Parker, 4, Vista, 3, El Camino and Otay Ranch, 2 each, and Mission Hills, 1.

Fresno Central’s 41 points won the team title, the first for a Central Section squad since Bakersfield in 1992.  The last San Diego Section team to win was El Camino in 1978.

102nd STATE TRACK CHAMPIONSHIPS
@CLOVIS BUCHANAN HIGH VETERANS’ STADIUM
SAN DIEGO SECTION FINISHERS IN ITALICS

100—Pleasant (Gardena Serra), :10.30.

200—Pleasant (Gardena Serra), :20.56.

400—Walker (Fresno Central), :47.49.  4—Parker (Helix), :47.68. 7. Brotschi (Otay Ranch), :48.57.

800—Delvecchio (Ojai Thacher), 1:50.82. 10. Harder (San Marcos), 1:57.18.  Thomas (Torrey Pines), DQ, lane violation.

1600—Caudillo (Clovis), 4:10.72. 4—Taylor (San Marcos), 4:12.32.

3200—Ayers (Davis), 8:56.93.  5—Pala (Francis Parker), 9:01.57. 11–Bowlds (Patrick Henry), 9:05.50.  23—Gilmore (Sage Creek), 9:28.06.

110 Hurdles—Graves-Blank (Upland), :13.75w.

300 Hurdles—Crawford (Upland), :37.11.

4×100 Relay—Fresno Central, :41.36.  8—Mission Hills, :42.15.

4×1600 Relay—L.A. Cathedral, 3:13.87.  5—Helix, 3:15.79.  8—San Marcos, 3:19.97. 

High Jump—Johnson (San Bernardino Cajon), 6-7. 2T–Gillis (Steele Canyon), 6-5, 5T–Cardoza (Eastlake), 6-5. 

Long Jump—Plumb (Corona del Mar), 24-5 3/4w.  8—Matovu (Helix), 22-6 3/4w.  12—Cheeks (Mission Bay), 21-7 1/2w.

Triple Jump—O’Bannon (Bellflower St. John Bosco), 47-6 ¾. 9—Cardoza (Eastlake), 43-9 ½w.  10—Cheeks (Mission Bay), 43-9 ¼.  11—Buu (Eastlake), 43-8 3/4w.

Shot Put—Moran (Murrieta Mesa), 64-3 ¼.  4—Lopez (El Centro Southwest), 58-5 ½.  6—Martinez (Vista), 58-3 1/2. 7—Miller (El Camino), 57-10 ½.

Discus—See (San Juan Capistrano JSerra), 203-10.  12—Lopez (El Centro Southwest), 149-4).

Pole Vault—O’Brien (Eastvale Roosevelt), 16-5.  12—Richards (Poway). 14-7.