August 28, 1969 Shelton Mason County Journal | ![]() |
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August 28, 1969 |
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ch • • Blazer Coadl
.........."............................`................................................... New Coa Greets Highcllmbers Issuesgll
Bill Dickie's SIDELINE SLANTS ,,c s ' e ForTurn#
Iiiii Jack Stark, formerly a coach at Simon Fraser University :' :**;
A Treasure Worth Digging For!
football or other special shoes. Junior-size
footballs are used by the three younger age
groups, reguhtr-size balls by the three older
divisions. Satisfactory proof of age is
required when registering. No other gear is
necessary.
While Paulcy hasn't pin-pointed tile date
of his 1969 PP&K program, registration will
be open through October 10 and the
competition will take place very soon
thereafter. That means there are
approximately six weeks between now and
the first lap on the road to Miami.
If 1 had a boy tar boys) in that
8-through-13 age bracket who had
reasonable physical coordination and
showed any propensity for throwing and
kicking a football I'd be encouraging him
(them) with all the soft-sell at my command
to start practicing RIGIIT NOW. And Jfl
wasn't so hot at teaching him the techniques
of punting, place-kicking, and passing a
football i'd try to get a capable coach to
show him. *lhcn I'd see that he practiced and
practiced and practiced, every day, twice on
Saturdays, Sundays and holidays, tYom now
ttntil .lira Pauley stages his 9th annual PP&K
event.
Mason County boys, poteutially, can
punt, pass and place-kick a football as well
as their peers anywhere. If they'll work at it!
With dedication and determination on their
own part, with gnidance and prodding from
pop, with competent coaching from one
source or another, there can be a national
finalist at Miami from Mason County just as
well as from New York, Chicago, or Los
Angeles.
SPORTS SPLINTERS - Craig Jacobsen,
winner in the 12-year-old division last year,
is the only Mason County PP&K grad to
survive the zone competition, Craig won at
Tacoma in 1968 and went on to the district
contesl at Seattle, but was eliminated there.
Craig is eligible for his final year of PP&K
competition this year.
Rain patters on the panes this Sabbath
evening, atuned to tapping typewriter keys
struggling with the labor pains of another
Sideline Slants nascency.
It conceives an atmosphere salutary to
football foible, pigskin plot, and gridiron
gambit despite the August sheen of the
calendar. It brings to mind (don't press for
rationale, please) Jim Pauley's punt, pass and
kick party calendared for its ninth annual
staging a few weeks hence.
This little sports shindig for boys eight
through 13 years offers rich rewards for
those talented enough to lap its top
treasures. And that's exactly what triggers
this piece.
In the eight years past no winner in any
division of Pauley's PP&K party has made
much of a run at the treasure chest. One
wonders why !
A theory, a supposition shapes. Is it
poverty of practice, paucity of prepareS:ion?
Could be! In fact, what else'? Latent talents
among Mason County lads tbr kicking and
throwing a football equal those of any other
given locality. This is indubitable,
irrefutable, uncontroversial. It's a fact
plain, unvarnished, naked. Ergo: Pauley
PP&K kids SHOULD be bagging a bigger cut
of the swag than they have in eight years of
search so far.
The jackpot is worth a large, yet
economical, investment .... of boyish energy,
dedication and time; of adult coaching,
encouragement and prodding. Look what
that PP&K treasure chest holds:
(I) local winners in each of the six age
divisions (entrants compete against: their
own age year) win trophies and proceed to
(2) zone contests in Tacoma for more
trophies; (3) zone winners enter district
competitions in Seattle (again with trophies
at stake); (4) district victors move on to area
eliminations in San Francisco with a '49cr
pro football game and special banquet as
part of a weekend trip; 15) area success in
the west takes the grid kids to a division
showdown at Detroit December 14 when
another pro football game and banquet are
pieces of the parcel; 16) division m:lsters
then go to the mitional finals at the NFL
championship playoff in Miami's Orange
Bowl with sidetrips to Cape Kennedy and
,,it pac Museum, a banquet in the
Kennilworth Hotel where the boys meet
NFL stars and Commissioner of Professional
Football Pete Rosellc, famous sports
announcers and other visiting dignitaries,
and they'll see the annual Orange Bowl
Fireworks Spectacular and other highlights
of the Orange Festival and Greater Miami.
Where the competitions are held in
conjunction with NFL games the action
takes place between halves of the games. All
trip expenses are paid by the Ford Motor
Company not only for the contestants but
also for their parents and the local Ford
dealer sponsoring the contestants.
Now that's a mighty attractive treasure
chest to tap, lads and dads. it's worth
training and sacrificing and sweating for,
especially when the costs of outfitting are
merely a pair of sturdy tennis shoes and a
football. Contestants are not allowed to u
It might interest Sideline Slants readers
to know that a boy with a secondtgeneration
Sllellon backgrotlnd nlade it as far ilS the
Arc: competilioll at San l::rancisco in 1967.
That was former ttighclimber basketball and
baseball star Bill Taylor's youngest son,
Scott, who advanced through the 8-year-old
division out of Anacortes, where his dad is
high sctlool vice principal now after a highly
successful coaching career in basketball and
baseball. Scott "blew it" (his own
admission) last year but will be after the
10-year-old honors this fail.
Jack Stark, Shclton's new football head
coach, held his first meeting with his aide
staff last week (except for newly, added
assistant M:ike Simms, the Coloradan who
hadn't arrived in town yet.) Reports are staff
members were much impressed with the
complete organizational detail of his plans
and with his offensive plays book.
in British Columbia and Nooksack Valley High School in
Washington State, has assumed his duties as head football
coach of Shelton High School for the 1969 season.
Stark was an offensive back coach at his last coaching
position, Simon Fraser, where he contributed heavily to the
Clansmen's fine 13 win, 6 loss record in his three years at
that school.
Prior to his job in Canada, Stark acquired seven years of
coaching experience in Washington, including two years as
head coach at Nooksack.
One of Stark's pupils at Simon Fraser was quarterback
Wayne Holm, who averaged 212 yards per game on offense to
win NAIA All-American Honorable Mention, finishing 17th
in the NA1A in total offense.
In a letter to the Highclimber grid hopefuls, Stark
stated, "Each man who checks out a uniform will have an
equal chance at playing for the varsity. The difference
between your making this club or not will be your
determination .... desire ... and dedication. Football is a
hard, tough contact sport that requires excellent mental and
physical conditioning. It will be advantageous tbr the team if
you report in good physical condition so the preparation for
llllllllllllllllllllllllll!
Golf Club Calendar
mlllllllllllllllllll
HOST GOLFERS HOG
BEST BALL HONORS
He m e-course golfers proved
somewhat hoggish hosts for the
first Bayshore Best Ball
tournament last weekend, a
project of the 19th Hole Club, the
men's division of the Shelter Golf
Club.
Nine of the 14 merchandise
prizes totalling $1,000 in value
were claimed by Shelton entrants,
including one of the two major
awards.
Val Sienko and Glen
Robertson, present and
immediate past presidents of the
19th Hole Club, teamed to win
the $150 low net prize with their
best-ball card of 123 for 36 holes
of competition Saturday and
Sunday.
The other major prize, for low
gross, went at 137 strokes to the
Grays Harbor team of Paul Rudis
and Wayne Johnson. This came
out at seven under Bayshore's
144-stroke par for 36 holes.
The next two low nets went to
home-course entries. Lefthander
Harry Cole and Keith Simpson
came in at 125 for $130, Rex
Barnard and Darrell Denniston at
126 for $110. With an interuption
by Ed BIonski and Tom Garrett
of Grays Harbor, who earned
$100 for their 127 net, Shelton
golfers then picked off the next
four places. Jim Archer and Harry
Peterson pocketed $90 for their
128 while tied at 129 and worth
$50 each were the teams of L.L.
Mclnelly-Rocky Hembroff, Andy
Tuson-Dick James, and Bob
Olson-Art Noggles.
Visitors did a little better in the
competition for the $25 9-hole
lap prizes, taking three of the five
available. Bob Prue and Dave West
of Centralia had the best 9-hold
card at 29 in the Saturday
morning round while Shelton's
John Long and Dave Dunnington
had a 30 for best in the
afternoon. Sunday's three prizes
went to a trio of 29-stroke cards
psted by Bob Turner and Bud
Knutzen of ShelteR, Don and
II IIIII
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i
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• Sunday Breakfast Buffet
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- .. L . I II III ILIIIIIIIL._ '
Page 10- Shelton-Mason County Journal - Thursday, August 28, 1969
Jack Arthaud of Grays ltarbor,
Thor Peterson and Dave Phillips
of Centralia.
No one captured the special
$100 prize offered by the
National Bank of Mason County
for a hole-in-one, but Bob Morgan
of Capital City came within two
inches of it - from the back tee
on No. 3 yet in Sunday
afternoon's concluding round.
The 34 team entries fell short
of making the tournament a
financial triumph, by am, rrow
margin, but in all other respects it
was acclaimed highly successful.
Visiting competitors lauded the
condition and layout of the
Shelter course and praised the
hospitality of their hosts in all
respects. Prospects for a
financially successful tournament
next year appeared bright.
; !i !
SHELTON HIGH SCHOOL'S new head football coach, Jack
Stark, is already at work with his assistants, left to right,
Michael Sims, Bill Brickert, Ron Ellis and Paul Johanson.
i
the first game can be primarily learning. There will be new
material to be learned, therefore the less time we have to
spend on conditioning, the more time wc will have to work
on offense and defense."
On Tuesday, August 26, there was a squad meeting for
all those who wished to turn out. The meeting dealt with
general information and instructions for checking out
cquipnaent.
The first turnout for the Highclimbers wits held the next
day, Wednesday.
The Shelter Highclimbers play nine games in the 1969
season. They will face six league opponents in the middle of
their schedule, including the returning Port Angeles
Roughriders. They open on the twelfth of September with
the traditional Elma Eagles game in Ehna.
The Climbers, with their new tlead Coach, Jack Stark,
will try to improve on a 1-8 win-loss record lasl year. In the
'68 season, they beat l!hna 14-0, then went on to lose eight
straight, including four shutouts.
1969 HIGHCLIMBER FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
September 12 ...................... ELMA there
September It) ................ BEI_,LARMINE here
September 26 ........... *EAST BREMERTON here
October 3 ............. *WEST IREMERTON there
October I0 ................ *SOUTII KITSAP here
October 17 ............... *PORT ANGELES there
October 24 ................ *NORTH KITSAP here
October 31 ............. *('IN'I'RAL KITSAP there
November 7 ....... IOHN RO(;I'RS. I'UYALLUP here
* League ga mcs
tlead Football
Shelter junior
Buitenveld,
that all junior
planning to
this season
physical exal
insurance by Set
Buitenveld
having these two
turn out for the
the program,
those not able
this date to
meetings and
program
insurance a
Fraternal League
Action To S
Fraternal
start Septeml
with a short
Timber Bowl.
All bowlers
the meeting.
6:45 p.m.
Swing
Meetm
The Si mps°t
league will meet c
1069 for a
to elect officers
The meeting'
at the Timber B0wl.
for the b0st
in town
AL |
st
Dick Lewis
Phc
EveningS'
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• IAIlllNIll n . . • .,