Championship success follows Woodhouse
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Don Cantrell
Bob Woodhouse, a Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Famer, is pleased to
reflect on the success his old friend, Coach Lou Holtz, enjoyed this past
year as head grid mentor at the University of South Carolina.
Woodhouse, 67, however, said, “I expected that, anyway.”
For Holtz, it was a rough and negative year the prior season since he
was spending most of his time caring for his ailing wife and the 1999
team lost every game his first year.
Woodhouse, a one-time rugged tackle under Coach Al Irwin in 1948-50,
said Holtz’ 2000 finish at 7-4 was a winning season.
“The conditions were more positive and he had the same players,”
Woodhouse said. “It took him one year to turn things around. I call him a
‘fix-it guy.’ He can go in and turn things around, which has been evident
at a number of top-ranking football schools.”
Woodhouse thought Holtz’s work at South Carolina “was a real magic
act.” Woodhouse has a picture of Holtz entering a school, and after a few
years juggling things into a winning pattern, departing for a new
challenge.
“I think he finally gets kind of bored,” Woodhouse said.
He had hoped that another old friend, head coach Jim Mora of the
Indianapolis Colts, could have advanced further in the NFL playoffs this
past season.
Woodhouse, who knew Mora as a player at Occidental and an assistant
coach at the University of Washington, admires the skill and work of
Mora. But, Woodhouse said he didn’t have a close observation this past
year. He wondered if Mora wasn’t granted enough control.
Mora is often seen as a calm leader. However, “he can get angry
sometimes,” Woodhouse said with a laugh.
One of the major highlights for Woodhouse came in mid-November of
1999, when he was inducted into the San Diego County High School Coaching
Hall of Champions.
Woodhouse, a 1951 graduate of Newport Harbor High, was also inducted
in 1988 into the National Football Foundation Hall of Fame and named as
recipient of the Clare Van Hoorebeke Award for outstanding contributions
to prep football in Southern California in 1994.
A spokesman for the sponsoring of San Diego Hall of Champions stood in
front of 800 people and said, “Bob Woodhouse coached teams that were
always known for their tenacity and strict discipline. He believed
everyone was a starter, asking to just give 100%.”
The other bright spotlight for Woodhouse was appearing at the San
Diego event and becoming aware that four of his old Harbor High mates
were there to attend the big banquet, including Virgil Packham, Maurice
Langdale, Rex Bell and Walter Willcut.
“I couldn’t believe it,” Woodhouse said. “Two came from northern
California and two came from Costa Mesa. And, they all had glowing smiles
on their faces.”
One of the unfortunate things now facing Woodhouse is back surgery.
Next month will mark his second back operation.
Woodhouse, a resident of Cottonwood, Ariz., is disappointed this time
because it may spell the end of his motorcycle riding.
“I may be turning to four-wheeling in the future,” he said.
The lessened skill of four-wheel riding will be hard for him to handle
since he has always been an active person.
He was a stout member of the 1949 Harbor High grid team (8-1) and the
championship team at Orange Coast under Ray Rosso in 1951.
Some of Woodhouse’s teammates from both schools has included: Bob
Berry, Langdale, Mel Smalley, John Kingston, Glenn Griffith, Dick Jones,
Gino Boero and Wayne Welty.
Woodhouse also helped lead Harbor to a Sunset League track and field
championship in 1951. He ran the the half-mile.
He coached more than 20 years at San Marcos and San Pasquel high
schools in San Diego.
He also played at Long Beach State, then served 15 years as an
assistant coach at Rancho Alamitos High in Garden Grove.
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