Sidelines: High voltage:
- Share via
a clarification
Don Cantrell
Interesting how small world items often arise in the world of
sports.
Two names from the 1948 Newport Harbor High varsity football team were
in the air recently.
One, halfback Bob Watts, came up when an Orange Coast College staff
report, relative to the ’51 OCC championship team’s 50th reunion,
published a letter indicating Watts had died. The report came from a past
player and was not confirmed.
Fortunately, Watts, a Sunset League selection off the ’49 Tar varsity,
is very much alive. His mother did note that he had been sick and was in
a wheelchair. Otherwise, he is fine and well. Watts and his late brother
Frank helped operate their father’s Balboa Liquor Store for years. One
day, however, Bob took an opportunity to serve as an auditor in southern
Nevada.
Bob, who ran a 10.3 in the 100-yard dash as a senior prepster, was
also a member of the ’51 OCC football outfit.
He and classmate Don Knipp were mates on the ’48 Tar varsity and
played together in the opening season clash against St. Anthony, a team
that would end as the CIF co-champion with Santa Barbara, 7-7.
Harbor was a young, inexperienced grid team in ’48 and the Saints
didn’t have any fears about playing the Sailors on the Newport field.
This was Coach Al Irwin’s return to Newport and few expected anything
but a so-so season. Most of the players were just 16 or 17 years old.
Some were only 15.
Nonetheless, Irwin’s team, led by fullback Bob Berry and superb end
Bob Thompson, stunned St. Anthony from beginning to the final four
minutes of play. The Tars scored first and led, 6-0, until the Saints
scored, 7-6, then Harbor came back to lead, 12-7.
However, Watts had his punt blocked in the last minutes and it was
recovered on the Newport 10 by the Saints. Within that short span of
time, the Saints scored one last time, making it, 14-12.
Looking back once, Irwin, seeing the opportunity to grab a golden
victory, said, “I should have called for a safety.”
Watts could have turned and run into his own end zone. Out of a
safety, he could have punted the ball an estimated 45 yards and the
Saints would have lost good odds on the distance with little time left.
Knipp well remembers the battle against the Saints and how rare it was
to be confronting the very team that would capture the CIF title many
weeks later.
However, Knipp today can report another CIF experience that came the
family way through his nephew, Kevin, the son of Knipp’s brother.
Kevin, a junior reserve end for the powerful Edison High gridders,
found his team confronting Long Beach Poly for the CIF title this past
fall. On a glum note for Edison, Poly captured the crown. Poly has long
been a Southland power in football.
Kevin’s father, Bruce, was an outstanding Naval officer and FBI agent
in earlier years. As a kid, Bruce was one of the favorite young
quarterbacks for Rod MacMillian, former Harbor Boys Club director, and a
nifty varsity quarterback once for Irwin at Newport.
With amusement, Bruce once borrowed a play from the ’49 Tar varsity
quarterback and made it work for a long touchdown run. The play called
for the quarterback to line up for the snap and try to throw the rivals
off by stopping his direction, then calling for the team to re-huddle
since there “was a mistake.” Obviously, the team would not move while the
rivals would lift up and be set off balance. The varsity only made three
yards, but Knipp ran the length of the field.
His brother, Don, only had a problem with his gridmates in ’48 once,
but he figured out how to resolve it in a positive manner.
Fullback Berry and halfback Mel Smalley got into the habit of entering
Don’s locker to steal sandwiches from his lunch bag.
Smalley once said, “Boy, Mother Knipp made the greatest sandwiches.”
Don caught them one day and told them they could take the sandwiches,
but only if they started buying his lunch each day at the cafeteria. They
agreed.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.