In all kinds of weather
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Don Cantrell
One of the worst-ever rain storms to sweep over the grid at
Davidson Field made its mark in the season of 1934 when Harbor High
played host to Huntington Beach.
One could have called it, “The Puddle and Mud Bowl.”
The late Judd Sutherland, the ’34 Tar captain said, “It was so bad, both
teams argued with the refs all afternoon as to where the ball should be
placed following a tackle. The ball carriers would get hit, then slide
15-20 yards across the mud.”
The team also had a fine quarterback named Charles Langmade, but some
felt he had a problem and that it surfaced during the huge rain game.
The word got around that Langmade couldn’t remember his plays so some
claimed he drew them on his grid togs, which once made Sutherland laugh.
He said it didn’t appear that it bothered then-grid coach Ralph Reed
“because he never asked Langmade to wipe them off.”
That’s how the tale went for many years until after Langmade returned to
the Harbor area after years of serving as a gynecologist in Pasadena. His
version was much different. He only had the play numbers marked down, not
the plays, he explained.
The amusement? Langmade said, “I wasn’t stupid.”
At any rate, Langmade did have a fanciful idea when he went to USC and
felt he could continue on with his role as a quarterback since the Harbor
High mates had lofty views of his potential.
His first burning shock in the Trojan lockerroom soon prompted him to
fold the uniform back up and slowly ease out the side door.
His opening view caught the face of a giant lineman fumbling around his
locker with the gear and flashing a wide mouth that featured no teeth. In
those days, helmets had no face gear and it often found numerous tough
guys losing their front teeth.
Reflecting back on Harbor High grid coach Reed, Sutherland once said, “I
like him very much, but he was not a real football coach. He was a fine
basketball and track coach.”
He added. “He wanted to give local football fans a run for their money,
so he’d run all this razzle-dazzle stuff like the Statue of Liberty and
swingout plays. I don’t wish to knock him, but he was a pretty
happy-go-lucky guy who asked nothing more of the guys than to ‘play your
best. Win, lose or draw, it doesn’t matter--just have fun.”’
Not all players agreed with Sutherland about Reed, including one of the
school’s most versatile athletes of that time, Al Irwin, who returned to
Harbor High in 1948 and took charge of that football team.
Out of amusement, Irwin had a habit of by-passing most of life’s
controversial issues on and off the sports field.
Rain was expected at least one time during the fall of yesteryear, but
not “swamps” and most fans and players, no doubt, recall those contests
clearly.
Another kind of weather that came once in the fall was wind and sometimes
it became the intense Santa Ana winds, which created maddening problems.
Some of the hot and heavy winds were so severe, the schools would not
allow their bands to take the bus or attend the game.
The devil winds were not so bad if they blew hard during the week, but if
one thundered across Orange County on a game night, the teams could count
on trouble.
One of the most severe attacks was recorded the evening of Nov. 2, 1946
when the Sailors rolled into the Santa Ana Bowl to play the defending CIF
champion, Santa Ana High, led by outstanding triple-threat Johnny Fouch.
The wind had already swept the field fairly clean of most field markings.
The white chalk had spread from one side to another.
Reflecting back, tackle Bob Robins said. “He (Coach Wendell Pickens) made
sure we understood the talent we were up against, but he stressed that
anybody can handle a team if they gave it their best ... I have never
seen a coach that had the respect of a team any more than him.”
The ugly winds affected both teams and it was 7-7 at halftime. However,
it was the Harbor spirit that kept hampering the Saints. Winds affected
the Tar punting game and blew the key extra point off course. Fouch
attempted a PAT run at the end and it collapsed. Final count was 13-13.
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