A treasure that’s rare to find
ROGER CARLSON
It doesn’t seem that long, but as summer approaches it will be 15
years since Don Cantrell and his Newport Harbor High Sailors became a
regular feature in the sports pages of the Daily Pilot.
What began with a feature on the 1949 football team became one of
my most valued items in a package dedicated to “Locals Only.”
Cantrell has focused on the Sailors of the ‘30s and ‘40s, and for
many years produced his material gratis. That’s right, he’d bang out
his stories and even paid the postage to get them here from his
Albuquerque home.
There were two factors. After years of pressure in the news
business, he said he didn’t want any more pressure. And, in 1989, let
me tell you, as a sports editor, I virtually had no budget, and was
in a daily scramble to hold on to whatever wasn’t nailed down in the
department, lest it would be sold for firewood.
Time and circumstances eventually turned things around, and
Cantrell remains one of the great constants of Pilot sports coverage.
Cantrell was the Sailors’ quarterback on the fabled 1949 team of
Al Irwin, the one which went 8-1, finishing second to Sunset League
champion Fullerton and without a berth in the CIF playoffs when the
eliminations were virtually a tournament of champions.
But his story with the Sailors begins a little earlier when as an
eighth-grader he and a friend traded a ride on the handlebars as they
bicycled up the grade from PCH to 16th Street to see the Sailors duel
Anaheim at Davidson Field in 1945.
They watched a bull elephant in the backfield named Ralph Freitag
pound away at the Colony, but Anaheim won, 26-13, which helped seal a
winless season (0-6-1) in Les Miller’s last of a three-year run as
the Sailors’ coach.
In time he would become a quarterback for the Tars with a rather
unique background. How many senior quarterbacks have you heard of who
did not take a snap as a junior, and was a two-way starting tackle as
a sophomore?
A career 5-foot-7, 155-pounder, he became Irwin’s field general in
1949 and the Sailors exploded, averaging nearly 36 points a game, but
missed the brass ring when Fullerton prevailed, 43-27, despite three
TD passes by Cantrell in the Sunset League showdown.
With such standouts as Bob Watts, Dick Jones and Bill Kindell all
on the injured list in the Fullerton game, circumstances left the
Tars with a lifetime of wondering, “What if?”
There was a good chance Newport could have gained a berth in the
playoffs as a co-champion, but Fullerton survived with an 18-13
victory over Downey with the latter camped on the Fullerton 1-yard
line as time ran out to claim the undisputed championship. It was the
same Downey team which Harbor had blasted, 40-0.
Cantrell’s athletic career would be short at the University of
Willamette in Oregon, although he did enjoy moments in a freshman
game against the Oregon Ducks when he scored on a quarterback sneak
and completed all five pass attempts.
Cantrell’s career as a quarterback, however, has really never been
the issue on these pages.
I ran into him while covering a prep football game in a tiny press
box at Laguna Beach High in the early ‘70s.
In those days the general attitude for any sportswriter was very
competitive and chit-chat between a Pilot writer and anyone from the
Register or Times was out of the question. You’d better watch what
was going on because the only help you could count on was after the
game when talking with coaches and/or players. And, of course, I was
always delighted when it was apparent the competition was struggling,
which was often.
It didn’t work with Cantrell, who was writing for the Santa Ana
Register at the time. How could anyone stone-face the affable
Cantrell, who would do everything but dust off your chair for you?
We were friends immediately and Cantrell’s persona has never
changed. The nicest guy in town.
A resident in Albuquerque with wife Leslie for the past 23 years
with two sons (Jesse and Dillon) attending the University of Arizona,
he has remained a consistent friend of the Pilot and of Newport
Harbor High.
When looking back his focus often centers around the stories of
Johnny Ikeda and his family’s trials during World War II and the
internment camps, of Vernon Fitzpatrick and Hal Sheflin, of Al Irwin
and the Muniz brothers, among many, many others.
Seasons come and seasons go, but for Cantrell, Newport Harbor is
not 1949, but from the 1930s to the present, and therein lies the
true spirit of a true Sailor.
Cantrell prefers to describe himself as “semi-retired,” which
amounts to “retired,” but with the responsibilities of putting
together a column for the paper.
“You never run out of Newport football stories,” said Cantrell by
telephone. “The old guys can always come up with something that even
I have never heard before.”
Cantrell’s statistics as a quarterback don’t realistically stand
up to a Shane Foley or Steve Bukich, or a number of other standouts
in the Long Gray Line.
Clearly, they had more completions, more touchdown passes, more
yardage and more honors.
But no one even begins to approach the number of Sailors Cantrell
has touched with his special brand of loyalty and interest. And it’s
that asset which gives him that “community treasure” status.
Hey! See you next Sunday!
* ROGER CARLSON is the former sports editor for the Daily Pilot.
His column appears on Sundays. He can be reached by
rogeranddorothea@msn. com.
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