Sidelines: Reed was king
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Don Cantrell
Forty years have passed since the late Ralph King Reed called it a
day at Newport Harbor High as the original athletic director. He coached
from 1930 to ‘62, a total of 32 years.
Students and athletes, who have come to know his name as it stands on
the gymnasium, have often wondered who he was and how he came to warrant
the enduring tribute. The building took on his name in mid-November of
1985.
Reed had perished in a car accident after his auto flew off an exit
ramp in Santa Ana and crashed into a pole on April 27, 1985. Many have
assumed he had a heart attack and lost control of the vehicle. He was
born Sept. 3, 1900 in Elyria, Ohio.
Interestingly enough, he and the first principal, Sidney Davidson,
hailed from the upper Midwest. Davidson was born in Wadena, Minn.
Davidson, who had previously served at Huntington Beach High, hired Reed,
via Excelsior High, as his faculty member. His second faculty member was
an outstanding lady named Marie Hiebsch, a choir and orchestra leader.
One fitting note her way toward Reed came years later when musical
activity had decreased considerably. Having learned this, Reed took it
upon himself to rally athletes into visiting her and joining the choir.
She was thrilled over the help.
Initially, Reed coached all the sports, but bowed away from varsity
football after the ’37 season. His love always stood strongest with
basketball and track and field. He coached numerous championships in
those two sports.
An inland daily paper once claimed he coached the first-ever football
title at Newport, which was a gross error. Reed did well in the last of
seven years of tutoring football, but there were no title. The first grid
crown was taken by the Bee team of ‘36, coached by Lee Trine. The ’42
varsity champs were directed by Wendell Pickens. The Tars also went to
the ’42 small schools playoff finals, but lost to Bonita, 39-6.
Reed did have football favorites from Newport’s past, which included
three of his own players, fullback Al Irwin in 1932-35, fullback Rollo
McClellan and quarterback Glenn O. Thompson from the ’37 team.
Two others he admired from the champ ’42 outfit were All-CIF fullback
Harold Sheflin and second team All-CIF tackle Manuel Muniz.
Two of his greatest athletes emerged from basketball and track. One
was George Yardley, Class of ‘46, who, in time, broke the single pro
scoring record in basketball and was subsequently named to the Naismith
Pro Basketball Hall of Fame, in Springfield, Mass. The other, Tod White,
Class of ‘55, broke the national prep mile record in the California state
meet at the Coliseum with a clocking of 4:20 flat. The record stood for
six years. Incidentally, Reed himself had been a miler at Oberlin
College, Ohio.
Yardley and White always had lofty words for Reed and his style of
coaching.
Irwin, who returned years later to coach football and swimming, often
praised Reed over the years for his direction in sports and sportsmanship
for the Harbor High athletes.
One of Reed’s favorite possessions over the years was a coveted CIF
lifetime pass for all sporting events. And, according to one family
member, he consistently attended three or four sporting events each week
for more than 20 years using that pass, which had come his way from the
late CIF commissioner, the late Ken Fagans of Balboa Island.
Former athletes also had fun recalling numerous events laced with
amusement.
McClellan, who had played quarterback on the ’36 championship Bee
team, approached Reed in early ’37 and made the effort to sell him on his
ideas over some of his own plays. Reed may have thought about the comment
briefly, but soon told McClellan he would be playing fullback, not
quarterback. McClellan still laughs over the incident.
Boyd (Boggie) Horrell, a versatile athlete from Class of ’48 who
sometimes had a few choice quips out of line, once found himself locked
in the locker room towel cage. One fellow said Reed turned the key.
However, he later returned to allow Horrell outside.
Reed always made an effort to keep his athletes toned down and clear
of any personal vanity. Hence, the athletes were sometimes bothered when
they would run practice heats for an upcoming event and find Reed giving
them a slower time.
“He wanted us to try harder,” one athlete once said.
Another athlete recalled how Reed often strolled the hallways of
school to seek out help for his athletic events.
“One day he talked me into coming back to the gym at night twice a
week to referee his adult municipal basketball games,’ the athlete said
with a laugh.”
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