It wasn’t the sod ... it was the ice plants!
One of the bristling sports stadium issues from yesteryear emerged
after the opening of the Orange Coast College football stadium in
1955.
In time, it closed on a note of amusement, but if flashed with
degrees of mixed emotions for a short spell.
Ralph Reed, the Newport Harbor High athletic director, had been
confronted with a scheduling conflict at Newport’s Davidson Field one
autumn day in ‘55, but he smiled and thought OCC officials would ease
the problem by granting one free evening at their brand new stadium.
After all, he figured, on a diplomatic note, that both Newport and
Huntington Beach high schools had willingly granted the use of their
football fields to OCC for seven years.
No problem, right?
Wrong, he soon discovered on a glum sign.
Dr. Basil Peterson, the OCC president, informed him the request
could not be granted because he feared an extra contest would “team
up the sod.”
Apparently, he sensed nothing disturbing about his response.
Wrong. Reed and many others on the prep side of the fence
reflected on the fact that taxpayers in both districts had paid for
the stadium and, actually, the entire college facility, not to
mention use of their own facilities for years.
And one local newspaper ran a sharp editorial, noting that a
reasonable explanation would have been acceptable, “but tearing up
the sod” prompted a wide round of guffaws.
It was assumed that Peterson finally sensed that he best resolve
the matter soonest and retire to his study.
Without any explanation of the turf concern, he chose to grant
Reed his request.
The future would find more such requests heading for OCC, but it
became a peaceful scenario for years to come.
The old issue did arrive one night years later when this corner
was discussing it with the late Les Miller, a Newport grid coach in
1943-45 and a long-time Lions Club member.
Through the Lions, he came to know another member, Peterson, and
shared compassion over numerous college matters. It once featured
commentary on the stadium hassle.
Miller laughed to recall “tearing up the sod,” and said, “It
wasn’t the sod, it was the ice plants ‘Pete” had workers plant on the
sloped ground of the stadium’s south side. He feared an overflow
crowd would damage the area.”
Amusingly, that would be the projection in 1956 because the huge
crowds would come with the college’s own games on Saturday nights.
The prep games did not feature such crowds for Newport and
Huntington Beach, unless powerful Anaheim, with star Mickey Flynn,
was on the calendar.
*
A recent interview with Virgil Pinkley, son of the late Alvin
Pinkley, a one-time mayor for Costa Mesa, produced many fond notes
out of the past.
Virgil recalled the great fun his dad used to have staging free
malt and ice cream feeds via his drugstone in past years for Newport
athletes.
He laughed to recall a period when “Pink” would freeze bottles of
pop for the kids, but he had to check them now and then or they would
pop and blow up.
With amusement, Virgil remembered a yarn about “Pink” from his
young days. He said, “He would trap gophers and sell their tails.”
Basketball days brought fond memories for Virgil. He recalled “how
he used to grab the back of shorts to slow other players down.”
Virgil and George Yardley, a ’46 Newport grad and a member of the
Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Mass., shared the same
basketball fun during World War II at the Santa Ana Army Air Base
hustling out to watch a great air base cage squad, which included two
sterling players, Jack Hupp and Jack Hanson.
In fact, Virgil recalled a night when the air base team confronted
the Harlem Globetrotters and defeated the visitors.
Yardley played on the ’46 Newport team while Virgil performed with
skill and polish on the ’48 Tar team.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.