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We came off a pretty good season the prior year and had four good
players returning; Phil Busby, Larry Gallagher, Alan Martin and Mel
Sololowsky. Senior Jim Rye was back after being out all last season due
to injury. In addition, we added four seniors; Rick Grams, Jerry
Steinkraus, Dick Phelps and Terry Showman to the team and a couple of
juniors; Dave Pyles and Ben Manchion.
If you notice the first two games we went across
the Narrows, which is rare. And is was rare that we beat anybody 73-36
or 74-52. Lake Washington and Federal Way were good programs.
Also this year is interesting because there were a
couple of games that were snowed out. Mount Tahoma was replayed but
Olympia we didn’t because it got down to the only place they could
schedule was down towards the end. There was no point because the
tournaments were starting and we weren’t going to be 18-1or 2 or
something. There was just no point in doing it and also the cost of
where ever the game was, Olympia or here, the cost was probably more
than the value we would get from going there.
Central was a tough team this year. They beat us by
14 and then we turned around and beat them by 16. This was the year
right before they won the State Tournament. I didn’t understand Bob
Moawad and he was a good guy I mean there is no doubt about Moawad was a
good guy. But Moawad I think wrote his thesis on democratic coaching.
The kids would decide the line-up before the game. They would rate the
players and they would decide who the line-up was and he would just take
the figures and put the team on the floor.
That year we lost to Port Angeles three times with
a combined total of ten points so all three games were very close. The
West games were pretty emotional too. You look at this team and the
thing that comes across about 1968, and ’67 too is that they were
competitive. I mean we went on the floor and rarely did we get wiped
out; the games were good, the crowds were big and raucous and the kids
were into it and so it was a pretty good time. You look at the nine
losses and six of them were by six points or less.
The North game, where we won 99-68, we had to put
the stops on anyone scoring. Meaning that at some point, you get to 99
and there is still game left and you can’t shoot. We had gone along and
the game was fairly close and then all of a sudden I felt nobody on
their team wanted to bring the ball up the floor. You know, they’re so
tired they don’t want to dribble up the floor against the press so
they’d start throwing the ball away and all of a sudden like that we’re
ahead by 10 and as you can see…as I can remember this, they didn’t
score. I just didn’t think a team should be beaten by that much.
This team finished 12-9. Right in the middle of the
season we had a very bad run; how we ever got to be 12-9, I don’t know.
Not that we didn’t score points but we allowed a lot of points. We
didn’t play defense because we didn’t believe in it. But we also
weren’t good enough to outscore them so it was dumb coaching I guess!
Martin started every game and Busby, Gallagher and
Grams started I think. There were some players here in this year. Pyles
was a definite prospect. He was good and so were Grams, Steinkraus,
Phelps, Busby and the great riot act in Rye. Ben Manchion was also on
the team. He came to us in the grades from Iceland. One game he got two
technicals and one of them he got because he said something in
Icelandic. Apparently it was obvious that it was not a complimentary
statement to the referee. Evidently you didn’t need to be Icelandic to
know that!
Alan Martin was one of our best shooters if not the
best pure shooter we had. I don’t like to say that because the game has
changed so much but 463 points…that’s a few balls through the hoop.
Grams averaged 13 a game and was tough. He only weighed about 100 pounds
or something but he could play the game.
There were also a couple of players that played on
and off…Taylor and then Mike Dotson came in for a couple of games.
Usually it’s because somebody gets ineligible. If it was a discipline
problem I never liked to talk about it and then find it in the paper
because I didn’t think that is was something at that age that should get
in the paper. I was a little bit afraid the sports writers back then and
still am.
This team played about as well as they could play.
They had no height; I mean sometimes we’d play Rye at center. They
referred to this team as the Manette Midgets. I mean I’m the tallest one
in the picture. What’s really scary is that Jorgy is taller than Pyles.
What is really scary is look at the two bookends up there on the top
row; Pyles and Gallagher. One is the second baseman and the other is a
shortstop.
No height but a lot of speed. Well we were all over
them; we never stopped. Pyles was exceptionally quick and Gallagher was
quite quick and he was a determined kid. I think this one playoff game
against South was where that incident took place between Gallagher and
the coach. We had come from way behind and we’re up within two points;
actually it was tied at 62 all and so I wanted to take a timeout. I
always save the timeouts so that I could use them at the end. Anyhow I
call them over and I say, “Okay, we’ve come from about 10 down now;
we’re going to beat these guys.” And I said, “They’ve got the ball out
of bounds; put up a mild pres, don’t foul them but don’t let them get it
up there.” There was only about five seconds to go and don’t let them
get up the floor but put some pressure on them. “Everybody
understand?” Yeah everybody understood. They threw the ball in;
Gallagher whipped around this guy; stole the ball. Now I have to be
honest, I thought he fouled the kid and he went in and made a lay-in and
so they packed Gallagher off the floor and when he got in the dressing
room, I thought about killing him because his theory was well I had the
chance and I was going to do it. Well he was depending upon the referee
and I don’t depend on referees but it was a very unusual feeling that I
had for that kid there. I thought we had them. They were tired and we
had lots of players here and so I thought we had them. And I didn’t want
to lose it on one call when in three minutes you got lots of calls that
you can win on.
This is the time that Rye went into the band and
the ended up moving. I was very much against the Knight sitting down at
the end of the floor where the band was sitting; and the guy who was the
Knight would sit there with a sword sticking up in the air. I kept
saying “Jesus, we don’t want that thing there…get him over on the
side.” And boy I was angry…I told the kids this time, “You guys just
stay away from that sword down there!” And so somebody threw too long
of a pass to Rye and Rye went up into that band and by the time he got
out of there; there were about three broken trombones and he put his
hand through a drum and they moved. The next game they were over on the
side.
Sometimes you get
teams that can’t finish. And you don’t know why but they just don’t
finish well. So I would image that you could say that about this team
but they were good and they were fun to coach and there were a lot of
interesting young men on that team. |