Prep football: Oozing with spirit
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Barry Faulkner
It is not familial obligation, nor an obsession with the game that
brings them together once a week for a few months each fall.
But, since the early 1990s -- no one remembers the official point of
origin -- they’ve been congregating under Friday night lights, savoring
the untainted virtue of prep football, forging lasting friendships with
one another and, basically, yelling themselves hoarse.
At home or on the road, amid December drizzle or balmy late-summer
sunsets, they arrive early, stand in unison for every kickoff, and lavish
unyielding support upon teenagers they seldom, if ever, meet.
You’ll find close to a dozen of them at tonight’s CIF Southern Section
Division VI championship game at Orange Coast College, under their
home-made “Tar Pit” banner, supporting the Newport Harbor Sailors as if
their sons’ season depended on it.
“I played football at Costa Mesa High (class of ‘62), but my four kids
went to Newport Harbor and all my grandchildren (nine to date) will all
go to Newport Harbor,” said Rick Roberts, a 58-year-old retiree and
president of the Tar Pit.
Roberts coined the term to unify those who sit (and stand) along the
east corner of the Davidson Field press box, or wherever they can on the
road. “I’m not an alumnus, but I consider myself one.”
Mark Harris, a parks commissioner for the City of Costa Mesa and Tar
Pit vice president, is a Harbor alum (Class of ‘78), as is Tar Pit
devotee Fred Bockmiller (Class of ‘80), an engineer who regularly wears
his old letterman’s jacket to games.
But Tar Pit Secretary Jessica Harris, Mark’s wife and an office
manager, was a cheerleader at -- gasp -- Corona del Mar. Additional
members Mark Farrar, a trial attorney who played collegiately at Arizona
State, small business owner Jeff Kingsley, and Jackie Roberts, Rick’s
wife, have also adopted the school and its football team.
“They’re a fired-up group,” Newport Coach Jeff Brinkley said. “We have
good community support across the board and (the Tar Pit) is certainly a
part of that.”
Ed Johnson, another member of the group Bockmiller compares loosely
with the Cleveland Browns’ “Dog Pound,” stayed on after his son (former
All-CIF Sailor punter Eddie Johnson, who played the last two years at
Orange Coast College) moved on.
“None of us have kids in the program,” said Mark Harris, who brushed
some blue paint on white canvas to create the banner, a visual beacon to
members at road games. “But I’ve probably missed about 10 games since
1978.”
This year, Jessica Harris had hats made for members, who faithfully
wear the blue baseball caps with “Tar Pit” embroidered in white letters
on the front and “Get up or go home!” on the back.
The latter refers to the specific insistence, led by Bockmiller, that
every Harbor fan rise for the kickoff. But, Jessica Harris believes, the
quotation also captures the spirit of the group.
“If you don’t want to cheer, you shouldn’t come to the game,” she
said.
This ardent attitude, as well as some occasionally salty language,
have made the Tar Pit an acquired taste for some less-zealous rooters.
“But I think the parents are getting used to us and I try to make sure
the guys keep their comments tempered,” Jessica Harris said.
“The people who think we’re too loud, usually scatter pretty quickly,”
said Roberts, a former lower-level Harbor assistant coach (1983-90) whose
gruff exterior conceals a benevolent heart.
“The reason I come out, is, I believe adults should support kids in
positive activities,” Roberts, whose son Rick Jr. played varsity football
for the Tars in the mid-1980s, said. “I love to win, don’t get me wrong.
But I’d be here win, lose or draw, to support the kids. I admire the
effort they give and the program they go through is pretty rigorous. They
give up a lot and I think it’s a shame when they’re not supported.”
Several members said the Sailors’ recent run of success (five CIF
title-game appearances since 1992), is merely coincidental and not the
catalyst behind their allegiance. The Tar Pit, they avow, is no
bandwagon.
“The good years are a lot of fun, but it’s showing up every game in
the lean years that makes this group what is is,” Mark Harris said.
They all have their favorite Harbor memory, most of which have little
do with the CIF championships won in 1994 and ’99. And some have a
favorite player, more likely a lineman with whom they struck up a
conversation at a local restaurant, than a decorated star.
Bockmiller, just finishing his second one-year stint as president of
the Mesa Consolidated Water District, was a heavyweight wrestler at
Harbor and has always been a staunch supporter of Sailor athletics.
“When I was in high school, I was involved with a group called STOMP:
Superior Tars Advocating More Pride,” he said. “I fell in love with
football way back then, even though I was honest enough with myself to
know I wasn’t meant to be a player.”
Bockmiller said he pays little attention to college or professional
football.
“I don’t watch the Super Bowl and I don’t care about the Super Bowl,”
he said. “I watch, maybe the Army-Navy game, and the USC-UCLA game, but
I’m a high school fan. The purity of high school football keeps me coming
out, year after year.”
Farrar said he regularly gets bewildered looks from colleagues,
puzzled that he’d attend so many games without knowing any of the
players.
“I just love football, especially at this level,” Farrar said. “It’s a
great environment.”
Members of Rick Roberts’ church often shake their heads, when, having
thrashed his voice at Friday’s game, he still can’t talk Sunday morning.
“The quality of the game, ususally dictates the quality of my voice
for the weekend,” Roberts said.
Jessica Harris, whose knowledge of the game is still improving, said
she has a good time, even when her attention strays from the field.
“It’s a great Friday night of wonderful family entertainment,” she
said. “I like the band and the cheerleaders and I like to see our friends
every week. We’re always disappointed when football season is over and we
always look forward to it coming around again.”
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