Johnny Ikeda, Newport Harbor
Don Cantrell
One of the most inspirational players ever to play Newport Harbor
High football in the early days was a youngster who weighed 124-pounds,
soaking wet.
He arrived at a critical hour when the late Coach Wendell Pickens
could only count up 13 players on the 1941 varsity. Out of desperation,
Pickens went to the Bee grid team and called on four of them to turn
varsity. The list inluded George Matoba, Ed Stephens, “Chili” Chaplin and
a 124-pound scatback named Johnny Ikeda.
The addition of the four Bees made the 17-man varsity made the team
one of Harbor’s smallest-ever grid teams, if not the smallest, but it
advanced to achieve a superb season. The won-loss-tie record was 4-2-2,
with the defense shutting out five rivals.
Pickens had nothing but praise for the lightweight Bee teamers, who
became a solid force on the ’41 outfit.
The club also featured big and powerful juniors like future All-CIF
fullback Harold Sheflin and future All-CIF second-team tackle Manuel
Muniz, who would lead the ’42 Tars to the championship and into the small
schools CIF Playoffs against Bonita High.
Two of the first backfield handoff men were Ikeda and the late star
quarterback Vernon Fitzpatrick, who lost his life in World War II as a
parachutist over the Philippines in December of 1944. He and Ikeda were
long-time friends.
A sharp observer among the early gridders, blocking back Joe Muniz,
1943-44 team, said, “Fitzpatrick and Ikeda were about nip-and-tuck for
guts with each other.”
Shock struck the Harbor High students in the spring of ’42 when its
Japanese-American students, like Ikeda and Matoba, and their families,
were ordered off to internment camps in the western United States by
President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
None of the Japanese-Americans were guilty of any illegal acts against
their country, the United States, but the panic of the times prevailed.
In time, Ikeda would find a release so he could join the U.S. Army and
serve his country.
A saddened Coach Pickens made every effort to meet up with Ikeda
before he and his family were taken away and gave him all the wisdom and
direction he could. Ikeda said Pickens’ compassion went deep and held a
solid place for a lifetime.
Prior to varsity football, Ikeda had also been an exceptional athlete
in other middleweight sports, such as basketball and track and field.
The late Ikeda made a last return to visit Harbor High during the 1989
25th grid reunion and was able to meet with old gridmates like Harold
Sheflin and Ed Stephens one last time. After the big war, Ikeda moved to
San Diego and became a noted landscaper.
Humor was still there with Sheflin when he saw Ikeda in ’89. He told a
friend, leaning toward Ikeda, “He used to be small.”
Ikeda said the impression was that he should have stayed small, but he
would make it up next time by wearing elevator shoes.
Johnny Ikeda, forever an icon in Newport Harbor High lore, and a
member of the Daily Pilot’s Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating the oncoming
millennium.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.