From the sidelines
Don Cantrell
One big reason to celebrate the millennium came through a phone
call from Los Angeles to Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Famer Al Irwin
recently, which brought on a burst of good cheer.
After 63 years, it was a fond reunion call from Henry Maunder, his
Newport Harbor High gridiron teammate from the mid-1930s, and a splendid
sprinter on the track.
Maunder, the first black student-athlete to ever play for Harbor High,
was quite popular with classmates and teachers.
It wasn’t clear in later years if he followed plans to attend UCLA,
but he did pursue plans to establish a furniture firm in Los Angeles.
“I was really surprised,’ Irwin said. “But it was great to hear from
him after all these years.”
There are many former grid mates who admired and respected Maunder and
who still live in the harbor area. Among them, Louis Glesenkamp, Ralph
Irwin, Craig Phoenix, Walt Kelly, Charles Langmade and Bill Dickey.
His coach, the late Ralph Reed, passed away in April of 1985, the
victim of a car crash. Three of Reed’s top sprinters in the mid-30s were
Maunder, Rollo McClellan, Glesenkamp and Kelly.
After the word gets around, it’s possible some of the old mates might
reach out and try to draw Maunder down for a happy reunion.
Memory of another noted black student-athlete once came from David
Phoenix, Craig’s brother, who went on to play tackle for Santa Ana Junior
Copllege.
Phoenix, a big, four-year letterman tackle for the Tar varsity in
1931-34, started for Santa Ana in the celebrated trip to play powerful
Pasadena.
Unfortunately for Phoenix, Pasadena had little trouble, starting famed
tailback and future All-American Jackie Robilnson. With good humor years
later, Phoenix said Robinson flew past him over left tackle and had no
trouble leaving him flat on the ground.
He had never confronted anyone like Robinson before on a football
field.
One version of an old Ralph Reed-Al Irwin story was that Reed would
use the big 212-pound fullback in the middle of the field to play guard
and help move rivals down the field. When Newport nears the goal, Reed
would have Irwin enter at fullback and punch the ball over for six
points.
Some years later we would ask how Irwin did it. Frank Sheflin, brother
to legendary fullback Harold Sheflin, said, ‘That as easy to say -- he
ran like my brother and hit with tremendous impact.” Harold made All-CIF
in 1942.
There no such award programs when Irwin played, save for Orange League
honors.
Kelly, cousin to the Irwin brothers, was a 6-foot-4 athlete who made
all-league at end in football, all-league at center in basketball and
earned a flood of track and field medals, as well.
He later advanced to College of the Pacific, where he continued on
with basketball.
But his name became bigger than that in World War II when he shined as
a co-pilot on a B-24 bomber in the South Pacific. One of his biggest hits
was a Japanese cruiser near New Guinea. The action drew front page
headlines across the United States.
He flew numerous missions, but his team’s last mission found doctors
forcing him to stay on base to heal. Sadly, his crew never made it off
the field after it tried to leave. It blew up at the end of the runway.
Glesenkamp recalled one memorable event for himself during WWII out of
the South Pacific.
He was standing lightly at the top of his Army tank on the beach among
other tanks and he heard his name called out from across the years. It
was an old friend and it gave them an opportunity to talk away the
afternoon.
Glensekmap later returned to Harbor High and became a life-long
employee on the staff. He also drove the athletic buses for many years.
Reed also valued Glesenkamp because he spent many of his own free
years giving Tar athletes help with training in hurdles and pole
vaulting.
He and the Irwins also recalled a stout blocking back on the 1934 team
who won every mate’s admiration, and that was George Shafer.
In time, Shafer joined the Army infantry and was shipped to the
Philippines, where he was killed by Japanese troops. Some claim Shafer
was among the first American casualties.
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