1942 team successful during turbulent time
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The biggest World War ever was underway when Newport Harbor High’s
1942 football squad was preparing for a powerful motion toward
capturing a Sunset League Championship.
Many knew the military call to duty would be there after the
season in December and numerous seniors would be missing graduation
ceremonies by June of ’43. The draft was taking young men at age 18.
Newport had never won a varsity grid title before and its players
were often limited since it was one of the league’s smallest schools.
It only had 13 players before the ’41 season started, but Coach
Wendell Pickens’ draw of four middleweights from the Bee team lifted
the total to 17. He could only count about 24 by the fall of ’42. On
the bright side, ’42 marked one of the strongest turnouts in school
history.
The backfield was paced by fullback Harold Sheflin, quarterback
Vernon Fitzpatrick, blocking back Lorey Langmade and halfbacks Ed
Miller and Paul Myrehn. All were fast and clever in running patterns.
Keith Engelhardt was an exceptional reserve, who once ran for three
or four touchdowns in one game.
The line featured stout players like tackle-end Manuel Muniz,
tackle-end Bill Neth and tackle Bob Gaynor, end Carl Oberto, guards
Tom McCorkell and Don Tripp, as well as center Wendell Crawford.
Other vital reserves were tackle Roger Neth, tackle Dick Freeman,
centers Don Bingham and Joe Shafer, end Harold “Red” Cass, tackle
Bill Bertuleit and guard Wilber Van Riper.
Operating out of the old short punt, the Sailors upended nonleague
foes St. Anthony, 42-0; Laguna Beach, 50-0; and Santa Ana, 7-0.
League rivals who fell before the Tars included Fullerton, 41-12;
Orange, 42-0; Anaheim, 54-0; Excelsior, 26-7; Long Beach Jordan, 7-0;
and Huntington Beach, 52-7.
The Sailors finished the regular season with nine wins and no
defeats, scoring 319 points.
The reward was a trip to the CIF small schools playoffs, where the
Tars met Bonita High on the Bearcats’ field near Pomona.
Bonita sparkled with versatile halfback Glenn Davis, who would
later become a Heisman Trophy winner at Army, but Newport’s 215-pound
fullback, Sheflin, kept him at bay until an ankle injury took Sheflin
out of the game just before halftime.
With key Newport injuries on the board, Davis felt free to scamper
for several scores and Bonita won, 39-6.
During his Army career, Davis once told Time Magazine that Sheflin
was one of the finest players he ever confronted.
Sheflin was named the No. 1 All-CIF fullback for the season and
his mate, Muniz, was voted to the second team at tackle.
Langmade was second-team All-CIF in ’43 while tackle Freeman was
voted to the All-CIF second team in ’44.
Numerous Tars advanced later to star for Sana Ana Junior College,
including Sheflin, Oberto, the Neth brothers, Myrehn and Chuck
Dennis. The Dons won a title in ’45 under Coach Bill Cook.
Bill Neth, in time, became an assistant football coach at Santa
Ana, serving for seven years. He also became a lifelong career man as
a distributor for the Los Angeles Times.
Prior to that, he was offered a player’s position with the pro
Hollywood Bears, but turned it down.
The dreadful war spelled numerous setbacks for Harbor gridders.
Fitzpatrick was killed by Japanese fighter pilots while parachuting
over Leyte, Philippines in December of ’44. Sheflin, a deck gunner,
was blown off his ship and suffered a lung injury. Muniz was wounded
on the island of Okinawa.
After the war, Sheflin played on a limited bases with Sana Ana,
while Muniz went on to play four years at Arizona State and was once
voted to a Little All-America team. He was offered a position with
the pro New York Giants, but declined due to knee injuries sustained
in college.
Pickens was drawn into the Navy as a physical instruction officer.
He was released after the war and returned to coaching at Harbor
High. In 1948, he accepted the post of athletic director at Orange
Coast College.
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