White hot
Don Cantrell
Mike White, a one-time “walk’on” assistant football coach for Mike
Giddings and Newport Harbor High in 1989, and a resident of Balboa
Island, was sittingh on top of the world Sunday as the St. Louis Rams
flattened the San Francisco 49ers, 42-20, in St. Louis.
White, the former Oakland Raiders head coach who moved on to assist
his old friend, Dick Vermeil, grid chief of the Rams, appears to be
drawing bright rainbows after some dim years in the past.
The Rams, who have also been down in recent years, have come to life
this season and are now leading the West Division of the National
Football Conference with a 4-0 record, the only unblemished record in the
NFL at this point.
With a string of 17 straight victories over the Rams in nearly a
decade, the 49ers were favored by experts to continue on with the record.
But they failed.
White, a close friend of Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Famer Ed Mayer,
noted some of the changes that have helped the Rams this season. It
includes a superb quarterback named Kurt Warner, whose experience comes
from Arena and European football.
Another blessed gift to the team comes from a sterling runner named
Marshall Faulk and a new offensive coordinator, who has been delivering
“good ideas,” according to Mayer.
Mayer said Vermeil and White are old friends with close ties dating
back to San Jose State days.
Vermeil has pro football championship experience as he once directed
the Philadelphia Eagles to a pro title. He bowed out from pro grid
coaching for a number of years after that exhausting season.
White, whose title now is “Assistant to the Coach,” recently told
Mayer he was pleased to learn of Jeff Brinkley and the ‘1999 Newport
Harbor team’s performances.
White was a valued help to Brinkley and the Tars back in 1989 as an
assistant coach. He was between pro jobs and offered to help coach the
ends for the ’89 season.
Pro baseball was not cheered in the Southland until the Brooklyn
Dodgers took the name of Los Angeles and moved west to a huge ravine in
the city. The Dodgers fans grew by leaps and bounds and baseball history
would expand from the 50’s to the present.
Agencies like the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce became highly
enthused and started launching “wet buses” to the new Dodger Stadium in
Los Angeles. The fans loved it.
It also drew a major increase in phone traffic to local newspapers
like the Globe-Herald and Pilot around the noon hour when the Dodgers
were playing at home. Locals cared little for the scores until the
Dodgers became “the home team.” And they responded.
It created one problem at the old Globe-Herald during the lunch hour
since only one desk editor was in the office to answer the phone. The
sports desk expected him to cover the sports. He responded in a friendly
way, but had no idea what was coming until the first trial run of lunch
horns were blowing.
The phone calls were essentially the same. “Hey, what is the Dodger
score? Again and again went the hilariouis scene. Firstly, the desk
editor had no use for sports, knew the scores of nothing and could only
struggle to devise a perfect way out.
He was soon grabbing any phone that rang and would be snapping,
“Dodgers, 5-4, top of the fifth.” “Dodgers, 5-4, top of the fifth.”
“Dodgers, 5-4, top of the fifth.”
That was never the score, but he had heard that response once and
figured it would work.
It worked until the sports editor finally uncovered his routine, and
called the main editor to complain.
Bob Woodhouse, a one-time noteworthy gridder at Harbor High, Orange
Coast and Long Beach State, and a few of his Newport buddies from the
late 40’s, once drew a bargain from owners of the Huntington Beach
Speedway.
They had been climging the fence often, never paying for tickets.
The owners finally pulled them aside and offered to let them in free
if they would stop climbing the fence. They agreed, but wanted to know
why. The owners explained that other kids were catching on to the fence
crashing and they needed to discourage the smaller fellows.
On the brighter side of life for Woodhouse, an award-winning prep grid
coach in past years, is due for Hall of Fame honors in San Diego high
school circles in November. One school he formerly coached was San Marcos
High in northern San Diego County.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.