Sidelines: The summer, and fall, of ’42
Don Cantrell
What major local events arose 60 years ago? One featured government
trucks and buses coming to Costa Mesa to load Japanese-Americans,
including two 1941 Newport Harbor High varsity footballers Johnny Ikeda
and George Matoba, for shipment to internment camps in Arizona by order
of President Franklin D. Roosevelt in the spring of ’42.
The President feared for their safety, but also feared possible
sabotage. Despite such World War II fears, U.S. scholars never discovered
any evidence of threats by Japanese-Americans.
An estimated 120,000 Japanese-Americans on the West Coast would be
transported to inland locations. Ironically, many of the dedicated
Japanese-Amercians, in time, would volunteer to join an Army division
that would become one of the most honored divisions in World War II after
fighting in Italy and France.
Many of the friends of Ikeda and Matoba would express sorrow over the
developments, but would continue on in high spirits to build a
championship football team at Harbor High.
Quarterback Ikeda and guard Matoba experienced the pleasure of playing
with fullback Harold Sheflin, who would become a No. 1 CIF selection in
‘42 after leading Newport to the league title and a CIF small schools
playoff final against Bonita. The Tars lost, 39-6.
They also became stout friends with quarterback Vernon Fitzpatrick,
who later lost his life while parachuting over Leyte, Philippines when
Japanese fighter pilots machine-gunned him in mid-air.
Joe Muniz, a ’44 blocking back, who lived near the Ikeda family in
west Costa Mesa, once said, “I’ll say this: When it came to football,
Fitzpatrick and Ikeda were about nip and tuck for guts.”
After the homes were seized and the farms were vacated, the
government, according to former Newport Mayor Ruthelyn Plummer, a Newport
student and song leader in the early 40s.
“Rotating buses would come once a week to take the boys and girls in
gym teams out to harvest the crops,” Plummer said. “Our high school
became a source of labor. I remember picking strawberries. And it was
backbreaking work. I’ll never forget it. I don’t know whose idea it was,
but it was an ingenious one to save all those valued crops.”
She often dated Fitzpatrick before he left to join the paratroopers in
Georgia for training.
The ’42 coach, Wendell Pickens, made certain he could visit with Ikeda
before he left for Parker, Ariz. Ikeda said he always valued the
compassionate gestures.
Was there a premonition about a superb year in early September of ‘42?
“Yes,” tailback Ed Miller said. “I think we felt we were better, but
not that we weren’t apprehensive. Yet there was something about that
whole experience I could never forget, made even more odd because war had
started. A lot left school (after the Bonita loss) to join the service.”
Somberly, Miller concluded, “It was almost unsaid that this football
season was our one last hurrah.”
With one of the toughest lines in the Southland, Newport hammered all
rivals into the turf, save for Santa Ana and Long Beach Jordan.
The Tars won those two, 7-0.
There were only 23 players on the ’42 varsity, but the second unit was
strong enough to hold its own if called upon.
Six rivals were held scoreless. During the regular season, Fullerton
scored 12 points while Excelsior and Huntington Beach could only score
seven each. The ’42 Tars scored 327 points in 10 games.
Newport placed five on the first All-Sunset League team, including
Sheflin, Fitzpatrick, Manuel Muniz, Bob Gaynor and Don Tripp. Four were
named to the second unit, including Carl Oberto, Paul Myrehn, Lorrie
Langmade and Tom McCorkell.
Sheflin was named to the CIF first team, while Muniz earned second
team recognition.
Pickens once said Fitzpatrick always made Newport two touchdowns
stronger.
Another lineman, Bill Neth, who ran a 10-4 100-yard dash, later made
the first team All-California squad in the junior college ranks while
playing for the Santa Ana College Dons. His brother, Roger, was a second
team tackle on the 42 Newport team. Later, he played first team with his
brother at Santa Ana.
Muniz would be named to one All-America team at Arizona State and
drafted by the New York Giants. However, he later rejected the Giants
because of injured knees.
A number of colleges had been interested in Sheflin, including USC,
but he would have to back away due to a lung injury from WWII before he
was blown off the deck of a ship. He had served as a deck gunner.
But they all made their marks in ’42.
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