Scrapes and bruises: All part of an athlete’s life
Don Cantrell
Prior to 1930, harbor area high school students had a choice of
attending three schools at a distance, which featured Santa Ana, Tustin
and Huntington Beach.
The best local student turning to Santa Ana High was an athlete from
Costa Mesa’s Westside named Harold (Hal) Pangle, who advanced his
interests to Oregon State with the turn of 1930.
Pangle, a sterling halfback, became part of a legendary “Iron Man”
team that stunned mighty USC in 1933 on the Beaver field before thousands
cheering. The Trojans were undefeated. The Beavers managed to gain a
shocking 0-0 tie.
And Pangle, at one point, was nominated for All-American honors. He
later became a colonel in the Army during World War II.
The early thirties also found Newport’s first athletic director, Ralph
King Reed, directing buses to local elementary schools so he could talk
sports with the boys and invite them to the Harbor High campus to examine
the athletic facilities. One group would include the noted Irwin
brothers, Al and Ralph, from Newport beach.
Although the facilities would impress many of the youngsters, the
recently completed construction revealed another side, which included
debris in all directions. And workmen had yet to clean up the mess around
the buildings.
Reed chose to stage a colorful highlight for the eighth graders from
Newport and Costa Mesa by setting up a competitive running event as a
fitting climax to a high school open house.
One of the best recalls came from Dave Phoenix, a top four-year
varsity tackle on the football team, who also had swimming and running
talent.
Reflecting back, Phoenix, who lives in Laguna Beach, said “Late in the
afternoon, runners all gathered in front of the gymnasium to compete on
what was then a long, oval, gravel-covered driveway that led from the
entrance to the school on Irvine Avenue, down past the back entrance to
the main building to the manual arts building, and then back up past the
entrance to the gymnasium and the resident caretaker’s home belonging to
Mr. Rollins, to exit on Irvine Avenue.
He said, “It was one-fourth of a mile of irregular gravel-strewn
surface studded here and there with rusty nails, bits of concrete and
broken glass that came as close to what might be called a trail of
torture as one could find.”
He added, “Of course we were all young, innocent, full of beans and
rarin’ to go. For some reason, I was somewhat favored to win,
particularly by the grammar school crowd from Costa Mesa. Walt Arnold,
Wayne Dye, Jack Grady and myself all lined up with the Newport crowd of
dark horses and Reedy started us off from the entrance to the gym with a
shot from his famous starter pistol.”
He continued, “Off I went barefooted and bushy-tailed leading the
pack. Up past the first turn on Irvine Avenue, downhill on the back
stretch, going like the wind and spurred on by the cheering crowd.
“I sped around the lower end with my eyes glued on the finish line,
slightly uphill and about 100 yards away when suddenly, with about 10
yards to go, my legs began to fail. What a horrible sensation.”
Phoenix said, “I could see Coach Reed, stopwatch in hand, and my
friends and classmates all shouting and waving their arms when disaster
finally struck. Down I went, sliding full-length in the gravel to within
three or four feet of the finish line.
“I don’t know who won the race, probably Jack Grady or Walt Arnold,
but I do know it took me some time to recover from the effects of that
driveway upon my tender carcass.”
He summarized, “Well, that event initiated my career as an aspiring
athlete at Harbor High. In those days, cuts and bruises, gravel runways
and hard-packed dirt fields were standard fare for the athlete--and we
were a long way from competent medical care.”
*****
Reed would also serve as the school’s first head football coach and
would hold that post until 1937, then turn the reins over to his 1937
assistant, Dick Spaulding, a native of Elsinore, who had previously
coached at El Monte and Fullerton.
In time, Reed would turn his attention to basketball and track and
field, and wind up his career with a flow of awards, trophies and CIF
honors.
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