Sidelines column: Lee Trine ...
- Share via
Don Cantrell
One of Newport Harbor High’s sharpest middleweight football mentors
was a well-dressed and strict disciplinarian named Lee Trine.
Trine, a former football coach at the University of Redlands, knew how
to tutor champions at any grade. His health prompted him to leave
Redlands and football and return to teaching algebra and geometry at the
high school level.
It was surprising after he had settled at Newport, when he accepted
Athletic Director Ralph Reed’s bid to take charge of the Bee football
team.
It is assumed that Trine, a stern individual, believed his system
could handle the physical demands of middleweight football. Reed would
have favored Triune at the varsity level, but obviously respected the
past health problem.
Off the field, Trine was a friendly and helpful teacher to all
students. Math students were constant visitors to his home on Balboa
Island, where they knew he would help them kindly with their math
problems.
In his first opportunity at Tar football, he was granted the reins of
the 1936 Bee squad, which included five top future gridders -- Sheflin
brothers Bob and Frank, lineman George Lumel, speedster Rollo McClellan
at quarterback and versatile Glenn O. Thompson at fullback.
There was ample talent, but the key element was the coach, Trine. And
the superb development would carry them to the league championship, which
became Newport’s first grid title.
It would take time.
The ’34 Tar varsity grid captain, Judd Sutherland, pictured one
example of Trine’s stern methods. He said, “I recall watching one Bee
game where the tackling was so lousy, Trine kept the players on the field
at halftime. He lined them all up in two different lines, then ordered
them to start tackling each other all through halftime. Newport then
whomped the other team in the second half.”
McClellan said, “His basic knowledge of football was probably the best
in the county.”
Although the atmosphere around Trine was generally sober and
businesslike, there were moments of unexpected humor and tickled ribs.
One could be related by Lumel, who remembers times when Giichi Omori, a
halfback and one of the four Japanese-Americans on the team, responded to
a request to tutor Lumel on how to cuss in Japanese.
Ray Crowley was known as the most mature player. McClellan said.
“Mister Trine was always on (Crowley’s) back. (Crowley) knew about the
girls.”
Reflecting back, McClellan recalled most of the victories, which
included: Anaheim, 12-7; Huntington Beach, 7-0; Orange, 13-0; Garden
Grove, 12-0; Capistrano, 14-0; and Tustin, 46-6. And it was doubtful any
rival every scored on Harbor’s first team.
McClellan also recalled that Trine and any other physical education
department staff member, was know as “Mister.” In the early days, only
Athletic Director Reed was known as “Coach.” McClellan said, “It was sort
of an unwritten understanding.”
The ’37 yearbook said, “McClellan was the outstanding star of the Bee
team, accounting for most of the points by his hard-hitting at
quarterback.”
McClellan was a stocky blockbuster, who, in time, could run 10.2, one
of the fastest 100-yard times in the Orange League.
The Bees ran out of the short-punt formation and the play they ran
consistently was geared up for McClellan. The up-halfback would hand off
to McClellan, set 10 yards back, and he’d blaze up the middle.
In fact, the key play was called “the 25 McClellan’s hole,” which was
designed to angle between center Lumel and running guard Dick Carlson.
Although pleased with his role, McClellan extended immense credit and
praise toward his teammates. He said, “There were only 24 members, but
that was enough.”
He recalled Lumel sometimes trying to make a deal across the line with
rivals. Lumel would say, “If you don’t hit me, I won’t hit you.”
McClellan said it fooled some rivals sometimes.
At season’s end, McClellan’s father chose to pay for a big banquet for
all the players at a nice restaurant in Balboa.
It led to an emotional scene when “Mister” Trine finally entered the
door. McClellan said, “There were tears on his cheeks.”
He said all his mates were “very touched.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.