White helping Chiefs to 6-0 record
DON CANTRELL
The harbor area can still identify with a link to the NFL through
former Newport Harbor High assistant coach Mike White, now an
assistant to head coach Dick Vermeil of the Kansas City Chiefs.
The Chiefs are 6-0 after rallying to defeat Green Bay Sunday.
White’s longtime friend from Irvine, Ed Mayer, believes KC has the
potential for a strong run toward the Super Bowl in Houston.
Mayer, who once helped lead Orange Coast College to a grid title
in 1951 under Coach Ray Rosso, feels the Chiefs are a positive and
dedicated outfit. He had a chance to visit White, Vermeil and many
players some months back.
White, a former head coach of the Oakland Raiders, and Vermeil led
the St. Louis Rams to victory in Super Bowl XXXIV in 2000.
Additionally, Vermeil once directed the Philadelphia Eagles to their
only Super Bowl appearance in 1981, and before that he guided UCLA to
a Rose Bowl win in the 1974-75 season.
They are all impressed with a superb breakaway runner named Dante
Hall. He had scored a touchdown on a punt or kickoff return in four
consecutive games this season before the streak ended Sunday.
They are also impressed because Hall is a solid team player and
one of considerable humility.
Mayer, who once teamed with former San Francisco Coach Bill Walsh
at San Jose State, is disappointed over the play of the 49ers, so far
this season.
Walsh is now the Niners’ team consultant. Last season, Mayer
visited Walsh and noticed a serious form of negativity with some
players that can infect the team atmosphere and behavior.
Mayer was always a highly disciplined player at Orange Coast under
Rosso and won the Rod Gould Memorial trophy at the end of the
championship ’51 season. He logged the most playing time that year.
White was a walk-on Newport assistant in 1989 between jobs and
felt honored to help Coach Jeff Brinkley and the ’89 Tars.
*
Incidentally, Rosso and his wife, Jean, recently returned from a
long summer visit to the mountains of Idaho with their motor home.
“It’s great to get back to the best climate in the world,” Rosso
said. “We sweated through the 100s most of our stay and travel, with
obvious slower adaptations. We were sorry to leave the mountains, but
pleased to get back to the ocean.
“Now, with the football season on, I’m pleased to see the Daily
Pilot really doing a great job of covering the high schools -- and,
especially OCC,” he continued. “It looks like a very promising season
ahead for OCC. The players and coaches are really dedicated and so
the future for 2003 looks good.”
Rosso has been excited about the season and continues to look
forward for the weekend.
“It’s satisfying to see our area really compete and of course the
Daily Pilot coverage is a primary factor in this effort,” Rosso said.
“I still enjoy high school football. Locally, Estancia is a making a
very strong move, Costa Mesa is greatly improved, Corona del Mar is
off to a good start and Newport is again heading for a championship
year.”
*
With baseball nearing a close, one recalls the late Eddie West,
who was a sports editor in Santa Ana, sliding gently out the
second-story window of the downtown Register building and placing
numbers in the inning slots for the World Series games.
There was no TV in those days and fans of the 30s and 40s would
have to catch the updates on the radio. There were no transistor
radios in the ‘30s, so downtown shoppers would count on West to post
the scoring on the building.
*
Boyd “Boggie” Horrell, a player on the only championship baseball
team the Harbor High Sailors ever had, may well have made history
when he slammed the only home run out of Lions Park in Costa Mesa.
The ’48 team, and perhaps, others rarely played at Lions Field. An
overflow crowd for the San Diego CIF playoff game in ’48 was
expected, so the school moved the game to Lions field.
Newport lost, 5-1.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.