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Caution: Projectile Vomiting Depicted in this Pioneer@Salinas Report

We've all heard of games called (stopped, canceled) on account of rain, riots and earthquakes. And then there was a game almost called in Salinas on account of projectile vomiting. Well, more about that later...

For old-time, hometown, Friday night lights kind of flavor, the humanity-packed westside section of The Pit, as the old Salinas HSchool sunken stadium has been forever called, is "the" sweetest place to be for hsfootball fans and folks of all cultural backgrounds in this city still surrounded by miles of sprawling fields of agriculture memorialized in novels by John Steinbeck. Sure, the mega-bucks Salinas Sports Complex is where Palma generally packs 'em in, or where big local area "grudge" matches are held (Salinas High vs. North Salinas, I think, next week), but that house, nice as I've heard it is, in no way can compare to the berm-surrounded, shoe-box configured heirloom of a jewel where the Cowboys of CCS/Monterey Bay-Gabilon were hosting the CCS/Mt. Hamilton Pioneer Mustangs of San Jose this Friday night (9/11/15).

Okay, the game itself (or at least the 1st half which is as long as I stayed) wasn't quite the quality as one would find during most WCAL games or games played in the Sac Juaquin Sectional vortex of hsfootball, so, with the Salinas Coyboys cow-punching the Mustangs 28-0, with three running TDs in the 1st Qtr and one passing TD in the 2nd Quarter, with it seeming like Pioneer was in for a second week of being drubbed by more than 50-points (Valley Christian 54, Pioneer 0, last week), one's eyes kind of roam around the stadium, a lot, and the mind kind of starts recalling a couple games it's owner once played there when he was a hsfootballer, one game in particular that almost got called on the account of projectile vomiting.

By the way, if one does decide to treat oneself to a game at The Pit, know that the field is a bit darker than most (since, I swear, those are the same wooden telephone pole light stanchions with the same few lights per pole that were screwed in just after Thomas Alva Edison invented the light-bulb). But the pepperoni pizza slices (can a slice of pie have too much pepperoni?) are actually very good (light years better than The Pit's field lights and darn better then the embarrasing crap they sold at the Home Depot Stadium during the CCS State Bowl games). Their cheerleaders and dance team dress respectfullly, picture Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders but without red-white-&-blue vests and an a lot of clevage, and before the game started, and before the school a'capella choir sang a very beautiful version of the National Anthem, the cheer/dance gals did a nice version of the Radio City Rockets routine (why is it that many cheer/dance teams from upper income area schools do dance routines that border on vulgar whereas the cheer/dance teams from moderate to lower income schools do dance routines which do the school and community proud?)

So, now, the promised projectile vomiting part. At The Pit, as the visiting team, many, many Friday nights ago, on the opening kick-off, our receiving squad was in the midst of setting up something we had practiced all week: a picket fence kick-return play, you know, where after the ball is kicked, most of the team runs to one side of the field where one guy after another starts taking-up positions about 5-yards in and on each major lateral field stripe, like a picket fence except with football players instead of wooden slats. The deal was, that I would take the kick-off and start running like heck toward the side-line and then down-field between the picket-fence made by my teammates, the idea being that in order for the opposing team to tackle me they'd have to get through each picket in the fence! Well, apparently, Salinas High had never seen nor practiced how to break though the picket fence and so once I hit the opening, it was like looking down a gaunlet or a perfecty straight, long intestine stretching toward the goal line.

Poor choice of words there, intestine. Because after making it past the first two pickets (who banged the heck out of the Cowboys who ran into them) I suddenly see two of the pickets, two of my teamates down on the 50 yard line and the the 35 yard line turn toward the side lines and, clutching their stomachs, start to vomit, mind you, not just regular vomiting, but dreaded projectile vomiting! For sure, this was a tactic I did not recall our coaches teaching us during the week when we practiced the picket fence play. But I kept running down the right sideline and, bang, bang, bang, the pickets were stopping the would-be tacklers. By then I had picked-up a lot of speed (it was like running a hundred yard dash, straight ahead, no fancy foot work, no zigging or zagging, just running like heck, and with enough momentum to farily leap over the first and second pools of vomit now inside the picket fence where my two, still vomiting pickets in the fence were now on their knees, the would-be tacklers, no doubt, stopping short and wondering what to do since they had never practiced trying to tackle a ball carrier leaping over pools of vomit. Or maybe they simply didn't want to get their uniforms soiled.

Then, it all went downhill. About the moment I landed after leaping gazelle-like over the 35-yard line picket and his growing pool of vomit (and thinking, wow! I'm only a few pickets away from my first-ever kick off return TD, I guess, because by then I was breathing heavily, I got a nose and lung full of my 35-yard line picket's stomach contents and, suddenly, my guts started acting like that scene in the first "Alien" movie, where the little monster eats it way out of the guy's stomach, and by the time I got to the 15-yard line, I could feel my lunch about to make like Mt. Saint Helen's and I could run no more and pulled-up out of bounds, about 10 yards short of pay dirt and, yep, vomited my guts out.

It was our team's equipment manager who figured it all out, that the three of us who puked in The Pit (and had to go to the hospital) were the only players on the team who 1.) had ordered egg rolls and 2.) sneeked those egg rolls out of the restaurant where we had lunch, later on eating those tomane-laden little buggers shortly before the game started, mind you, this being in the days before the had come-up with specially planned and perfectly timed pre-game meals and easily digestable snacks. Of course, before leaving The Pit at half-time this Friday night, I had a thought of going over to the Pioneer side of the stadium and, for a bit of nostalgia, revisiting the 10 or so yard line where I had decades ago barfed my egg rolls and fortune cookies, to see if the grass in that area was discolored or maybe growing oddly, but, well, one thing new in The Pit, at least since after I played there, is artificial turf. So, I simply bought a slice of pepperoni pizza from the consession stand and drove home having throughly enjoyed my return to The Pit and my memory of racing down the sideline along the "picket fence," well, at least an enjoyable recollection of the racing down most of it. Muds

Riordan Math

Mr Direct and Ted Smithers hit the nail on the head about the Riordan however some interesting data points:

Riordan won CCS in 2007 with 2 WCAL wins. Since then, the Crusaders have gone through 6 (count them) coaches with the same horrid results. When this senior class were freshmen (2016) there was hope, hype and promise. Last year when they matriculated to the varsity, it was the same horrid result. (1 - 9). Now a new coach (he was DC last year) along with coached from 2007 Championship team and we are to believe they will make a difference. Not exactly. This class has enjoyed success at each level as a class until last year's train wreck (choo choo). Yes, they did beat SHP 48 - 21, but SHP is not a WCAL team and they just did not play well at all.

6 coaches in 9 seasons? It about the PLAYERS and getting the best out of what you have. This class (2016) came in with so much hope, hype and promise, it would be great to see what happens when you turn athletes lose. They have shown they can control the LOS with is huge so now they have to score and play defense.

Maybe the new coach can bring some of that De La Salle experience and preparation to the Crusaders to enable them to win WCAL games. As majority of the staff are from the 2007 CCS team, maybe this team can find a way to make a CCS berth with Serra's post season ban. Is that possible? 9-2 as freshmen, 7-4 as sophomores, there is hope. Can they go 4-3 in WCAL? Are they for real or hype?
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Newark Memorial Girls Basketball - Scrimmage Needed

Due to Heritage High canceling a scheduled scrimmage this afternoon, Newark Memorial is looking for a Girls Varsity & JV HOME scrimmage for November 19, 5:30 & 7:00 pm, at Newark Memorial (Event Center).

We are available for an AWAY scrimmage on either November 23 or 28.

Please contact Coach Darryl Reina at darryl14r@aol.com or at (510) 917-4060.

Open until filled. Thanks!

Travel Ball Programs

With the all travel ball teams/programs out here in Northern California...What do you as parents/players look for when deciding on a team or program? Is it winning, development, cost, coaching, teammates, location, scheduling, or programs reputation/history? I am sure in some way its a little of all these things but whats your/your child's top priority when choosing a team to play for?

I think the top thing I was looking for is development. There are a ton of programs that claim to be a development program but the coaches/ practices fall short. It seems like practices are non exsistant. They seem more like game day coaches and even on game day they don't develop the players as I think they should with the price and promises they give.

Thoughts?......

Coach Donnellan (Stance1) No Longer the Coach at Drake

I'm hearing that after many years of success at Drake, Coach Doug Donnellan is no longer the coach at Drake. He's is one of the better coaches and people in the high school coaching ranks and will be missed. Don't have the exact details, but I'm sure that parents who feel their kids were slighted had much to do with the departure. Good luck in your future endeavors and congrats for all you did and all you accomplished.

FREEDOM 31 AMADOR VALLEY 28

Freedom shocked Amador valley twice tonight with a 63 yard bomb on the first play of the game from Sweeney to Gio Fauolo and then with only nine seconds left Sweeney unloaded another bomb for 62 yards on a catch and pitchout to the Don receiver who pitched out the ball to Dominic Dominguez and he was off to the races and the score was 31-28.. with 23 seconds left in the game, Amador Valley's McCullough barreled over from the two yard line to over take Freedom on what looked like the winning TD and just pulled ahead of Freedom 28-24....But the 62 yard pass play mentioned above followed AV's score which was the final blow to a wild four quarter of drama...
In between the first and the fourth quarter, both teams were busy pushing each other back and forth with Rivers doing the majority of the ground work for Freedom and McCollough and Jones for Amador Valley....In the first quarter, Freedom did not have one first down, but the 63 yard pass over shadowed that.

Freedom Freshmen got by Amador Valley 26-7
JV Amador Valley.....06.....00.....07.....00-----13
Freedom.....................00.....06.....00.....08.....14

Varsity
Amador Valley.....07.....00.....07.....14.....28
Freedom..............07.....03.....07.....14.....31

For Freedom, they ran 21 times for 155 yards, had two interceptions, two fumbles punted four times and had only five yards in penalities and seven first downs and 22 passes for 133 yards..
Amador Valley missed one field goal, ran up 160 yards on 34 carries, passed 25 times for 258 yards, were intercepted three times , fumbled once, punted four times had 20 yards in penalities and 15 first downs.. Now Amador Valley had a chance to score a second time in the first quarter, but Jones on a rollout to the left elected to pass inside the 10 yard line, but Freedom Picked off the pass and stopped a possible scoring drive.
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