Days of yore tied in ’74
ROGER CARLSON
They had two returning All-Sunset League blue chips and a lot of
experience, so there wasn’t much doubt how the Sailors of 1974 felt
as Bill Pizzica took charge in the first of his five-year run as
Newport Harbor High’s football coach.
There had been changes in the Sunset League -- Edison, Fountain
Valley and Los Alamitos had replaced Anaheim, Santa Ana and
Huntington Beach, giving it super-power status and it was generally
considered the toughest league in Southern California.
The outlook was clearly optimistic despite the specter of
December’s tragedy when 17-year-old senior John Gust lost his life in
an auto accident near Lone Pine.
Gust was ticketed for Washington State before the tragedy cut him
down, putting him in a legendary status.
“People were laughing at him [as a sophomore and early in his
junior season],” recalled Vinnie Mulroy during a recent visit from
his Marin County home in Kentfield.
“He wasn’t much of an athlete at all, just sort of roly-poly.”
Obviously unhappy with his plight and surely prodded by his
coaches, Gust went to work like none other and before it was over as
a senior in 1973 he was named the varsity’s Most Improved Player.”
How improved? One varsity starter in that season of ’73 made the
mistake of mocking him (Bucko Shaw) and Gust decked him, breaking his
jaw. “I’m done with this,” was how Gust explained his reaction to the
taunt. In a nutshell he wasn’t taking any more from anyone, and he
was truly a central figure in the makeup of the Sailors, in his
senior year of ‘73, and for those who went on to play for the Sailors
in ’74.
“We drew on that,” said Mulroy, “and it was a rallying cry. [As a
team] we worked harder the next year.”
Sadly, a shooting star snuffed out all too soon.
That hard work was apparent early as the Sailors dominated Mater
Dei in a preseason scrimmage.
Harbor’s starting lineups for its season-opener with visiting
Fulllerton consisted of Mulroy, with All-CIF credentials, and Mark
Steverson at wide receiver and tight end, tackles Dave Helfrich and
Jeff Starr, guards Rick John and Marc Willsey, and center Scott Reid.
In the backfield were Gordon Adams at quarterback, fullback Steve
Foley, flanker Tom Bazacas and all-league returnee Brian Theriot at
tailback, who drove two sets of coaches crazy with his dancing,
white-shoes celebration after scoring touchdowns.
Defensively, Joe Castorena, Pete McGowen, Dan Stranja and Jimmy
Helfrich were up front, the linebackers were John Phipps and Steve
Richardson, and the secondary consisted of Foley, Phil West, Dave
Simmons, Ron Lamerton and Shaw.
Theriot’s 1-yard TD run on the Fullerton game’s first series set
the tone and in the fourth quarter the Sailors put it away with a
10-point run, highlighted by an Adams-to-Mulroy touchdown pass of 27
yards, and a 33-yard field goal by Art Sorce.
Field goals of 51, 37 and 25 yards by the USC-bound Sorce proved
decisive in the Sailors’ 16-6 victory over rival Corona del Mar in
the second nonleague game. Harbor’s only touchdown was by Theriot
from 4 yards out in the first quarter.
Again, a stunner in league play followed as 0-2 Westminster,
coached by Bill Boswell, opened the Sunset League derby with a 21-7
shocker over the Sailors.
A 33-yard TD pass from Adams to Mulroy had the game tied in the
first quarter at 7-7, but Westminster’s running game was too much to
handle.
So there they were with an upset loss and powerful Edison on the
horizon, very much like the situation a year ago with a loss to
Anaheim preceding the spectacular 20-17 victory over Loara.
A 71-yard march in the game’s final minutes reversed a 16-10
deficit and the Sailors, with a 6-yard pass from Adams to Steverson
with 36 seconds left. Sorce, who had kicked a 34-yard field goal in
the first half, hit his second PAT for the winning edge.
A 39-yard touchdown pass from Adams to Mulroy had cut Edison’s
lead to 13-10 before a third Edison field goal late in the fourth
quarter set up the final numbers.
Powerful Los Alamitos was next and the Griffins jumped to a 10-0
first-quarter lead.
Theriot rushed for 156 yards and a 10-yard touchdown run.
But it was the diminutive up-back, Bazacas, who turned the outcome
inside out with a 31-yard dash up the middlel, setting up Foley’s
2-yard scoring run to give the Sailors the winning margin with 6:08
left.
Mulroy caught a 23-yard scoring pass, Theriot and Bazacas scored
touchdowns and Sorce had a 42-yard field goal as the Sailors eased
past Marina, 24-6.
Foley’s 43-yard dash with 3:32 left extended a precarious 34-28
lead into a 41-28 victory over Fountain Valley in a game which the
Sailors jumped to a 27-6 halftime lead.
Theriot and Foley, with scoring runs of 59 and 25 yards,
spearheaded first-half fireworks.
Herb Hill and his Loara Saxons, always a problem, were next,
setting up one of the Sailors’ all-time moments as Shaw, out of his
“monster” position in the secondary, intercepted at the Newport
goal-line and rumbled untouched 100 yards to extend a two-touchdown
lead into a 21-0 halftime bulge at La Palma Stadium.
Lamerton’s three interceptions helped stave off the Saxons, who
eventually fell, 21-14.
The Sailors took advantage of five Western High fumbles and an
interception to claim a 19-7 victory in the league finale, and
coupled with Edison’s 10-8 victory over Westminster, provided the
Sailors with the undisputed league championship.
Co-champs with Anaheim a year earlier, it remains the only
back-to-back championship efforts in Newport Harbor varsity football
history.
Theriot went 16 yards for a TD, Steverson caught a 15-yard scoring
pass from Adams and Sorce booted home field goals of 48 and 32 yards.
Mulroy, McCowen, Shaw, Lamerton and Sorce were first-team
All-Sunset League choices as the Sailors tuned up for the CIF
Division 4-A playoffs. Helfrich, Theriot, Castorena and Richardson
were second-team choices by the Daily Pilot.
Sorce booted four field goals (25, 21, 31, 22) for a single-game
CIF record and it gave him 13 for the season (another CIF record) as
Long Beach Poly fell in the first round, 25-14, at Harbor.
Bazacas (27 yards) and Foley (5 yards) scored touchdowns as the
Sailors improved to 9-1.
Powerful St. Paul was next in line, but before the Swordsmen could
show their stuff, the CIF Southern Section booted them out of the
playoffs because three St. Paul coaches were caught spying on a
Pioneer High practice two days before St. Paul ripped Pioneer in the
first round, 44-8.
Cheating against lightly regarded Pioneer? What must have they
been up to the rest of the season?
Thus Pioneer got the dubious distinction of meeting Harbor in the
second round and was promptly eliminated, 37-0.
Sorce kicked three more field goals; McCowen and Dan Christy ran
for touchdowns and Adams found Steverson and Rich Harrison on scoring
passes. It was 24-0 at halftime and perhaps the Sailors’ easiest
victory of the year.
Injuries and illness caught up with the Sailors in the CIF
semifinal against West Torrance at Veterans Stadium in Long Beach.
With Mulroy hobbled by cracked ribs, McCowen out with torn
ligaments, Theriot and Foley both ill, West Torrance took advantage
to claim a 24-0 victory. It was 3-0 through three quarters.
There is the added twist to this memorable ’74 team in because of
the personalities -- many which resembled the cast of the 1978 movie
starring John Belushi, Animal House.
The late Bucko Shaw, who used to award “Bucko Points” for
outrageous acts, was, without a doubt, Belushi.
I’ll let you dream up the others in what was a madcap series of
mis-deeds.
The Sailors would not win another league title until 1983, in the
midst of the Mike Giddings era of ‘82-85.
* ROGER CARLSON is the former sports editor for the Daily Pilot.
He can be reached by e-mail at [email protected].
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