High marks for ’54 Tars
One of Newport Harbor High’s toughest teams out of the ‘50s was
the ’54 club coached by Al Irwin.
They were undefeated after the first five clashes at home and
away.
The Tars whomped two rugged outfits in Montebello, 21-7, and Muir
of Pasadena, 14-6. They edged Garden Grove, 21-19, and deadlocked
powerhouse Excelsior, 7-7. They eliminated Huntington Beach, 42-7.
Then came Claire Van Hoorebeke and the highly polished machine he
had been building in Anaheim. It was spotlighting two breakaway
speedsters: Mickey Gouyd and Mickey Flynn, two phantoms from
Fantasyland. Harbor managed to arrive with 20 points, but the
Colonists doubled that with 40.
Tar tackle Jim Newkirk said, “The biggest thing I remember about
playing high school ball in ’53 and ’54 was playing against Flynn and
Gouyd. We had a decent ballclub in ‘54, but could not come close to
Anaheim, mainly because of those two guys. I recall being on the
defensive line and seeing nothing but flashes as either of those guys
flew by. I once got an arm on Flynn, but he almost tore it off as he
went by. I believe that each time he carried the ball it was for 30
yards or more. They beat us 40-20 that year, all points scored by
Flynn or Gouyd on runs exceeding 40 yards.”
Newkirk added, “Fifty-four was the year Charlie Berry did so well.
It was great blocking for him, as he was strong enough to run over
guys you missed on your block. He and David Tamura, small and quick,
made a great backfield combination. Bob Milum also ran well that
year.”
The ’54 Tars also lost to Fullerton, 26-7, and Santa Ana, 26-20,
but they had delivered a fair number of splendid performances.
Newport finished 5-3-1.
Newkirk, who would advance to Orange Coast College and achieve
outstanding defensive play, said, “Another fond remembrance is of the
coaching staff at Newport Harbor. Al Irwin was a marvelous man, as
was Don Burns, John McGowan and Bill Bernau. Gentlemen all. Always
concerned with fair play and mental toughness.”
Guard Glenn Thomas and tackle Dick Mirkovich won first-team spots
on the All-Sunset League defensive team. Fullback Berry, brother to
another prized Tar fullback, Bob Berry, 1947-49, and end Paul
Lorentzen were placed on the league’s second offensive unit. Halfback
Tamura received honorable mention and was also chosen on the
All-Japanese Pacific Coast team.
Lofty words also surfaced for dedicated players like quarterback
Bruce Knipp, backs Tom Niquette, Larry Castro and George Millikan,
ends Neil Metcalf, Bill Lamb and Bob Villagrana, tackles Jim Rumsey
and Jim Taylor, centers Jack Smith and Bill Ring and guards Roger
Early, Dick Nabor, Gary Deem and Dennis Dalebout.
Thomas, who would advance to a 37-year coaching career in Orange
County, said, “Al Irwin was an outstanding coach. I loved the guy and
consider him a very dear friend.”
Thomas, who followed another Newport coach, Don Lent, to Magnolia
High, achieved high marks at the Anaheim school. He had two winning
seasons, 7-2 and 6-3 under his direction in 1971-72.
However, he didn’t favor the head role and returned to assistant
coaching. He served as an assistant to Herb Hill at Loara High and
for Hal Sherbeck at Fullerton College. The teams won consistently
over the years.
Milum, a sound punter and good runner, finally chose to enroll at
Oregon State College because he valued Coach Tommy Prothro, who had
established the single-wing offense. He would become the second
Harbor gridder to play in a Rose Bowl game. Roy Ward of the ’46
Newport team played in the Rose Bowl for UC Berkeley.
Reflecting back on the Harbor High years, Milum said there were
numerous impressive peers, including tackle Mirkovich, tackle Bob
Cantu and fullback Berry. He said, “They were real studs.”
He said, “Berry was a real raw-boned athlete. He hit with constant
impact.” He recalled that Berry was remindful of his older brother,
Bob Berry, who ranks high in the record books in rushing and scoring.
Looking back, Newkirk said, “Thomas was probably the best of all
of us on the line in terms of stability, leadership, character and
other things -- a rock-solid guy.”
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