Sunday, October 30, 2016
Soon to be Linfield Hall of Famer, Dennis Anderson, discovered Linfield famous football 'Streak'
Read Linfield Sports Info 10/24/2016 news release headlined:
‘Hall of Fame ticket deadline approaching’
“Alumni and friends are asked to
reserve their place at the event no later than Friday, October 28.”
One of those in the “Class of 2016” to be inducted during
Linfield Athletics’ 19th annual Pacific
Office Automation Hall of Fame Banquet the evening of Nov. 12, 2016, is alumnus
Dennis Anderson (Class
of 1958) for
meritorious service.
Dennis Anderson, now living in McMinnville, was a long-time
Honolulu daily newspaper sports writer. He played football for Linfield when Paul Durham was coach. (His son, Bryant Anderson, played Linfield football
for Ad Rutschman.)
Research by Dennis discovered Linfield’s famous football
Streak.
Read about Dennis in a Sept. 27, 2001, Los Angeles Times
sports column:
Wednesday, October 26, 2016
NW Conference grass football fields: Two that are and one that was
Story posted Oct. 26, 2016, but written as if you
read this on or after 11/6/2016.
And then there were two.
Two grass football fields.
Whitworth University’s Pine Bowl in Spokane and the University of Puget
Sound’s Peyton Field at Baker Stadium in Tacoma are the only grass
fields remaining in the Northwest Conference.
In this 2016 season, the Linfield Wildcats played on both: Oct. 22, at
the Pine Bowl and Nov. 5, on Peyton Field.
Whitworth is looking to replace its Pine Bowl grass with artificial turf
as part of a major upgrade of the facility, according to “The Campaign
for Whitworth” fund-raising information posted at the university’s
website.
However, UPS’s grass Peyton Field is safe. Wildcatville has
learned the university has no plans to put artificial turf on either
Peyton Field or East Field, where UPS plays soccer and lacrosse.
This brings us to Linfield’s Maxwell Field, sometimes called the
Catdome, at Memorial Stadium on campus in McMinnville.
In 2004, Linfield removed the Maxwell Field grass and replaced it with
artificial turf. In 2014, the artificial turf was replaced with new
artificial turf.
Replacing the grass in 2004 was momentous because in 1935 Linfield
became the first Oregon college with a grass football field.
Not even the University of Oregon, Oregon State University and others,
including the University of Portland (which no longer plays football)
and small colleges had grass football fields before Linfield. (Portland
State University did not exist in 1935.)
Henry Lever (photo), Linfield’s football coach (1930-1938, 1940-1942) and
athletic director (1930-1949), was the key reason Linfield quit playing
football on dirt and sawdust and started playing on grass.
Sports editor L. H. Gregory’s column in the Oct. 21, 1936, Oregonian
said, “The change over the Linfield college football field over a year
ago from old mud and sawdust nice, springy turf cost the enormous sum of
$350.”
“ ‘And we didn’t use any secret recipe,” said Coach Henry W. Lever, the
many mainly responsible for making Linfield the first Oregon college to
pull its football out of the mud.
“ ‘Any other school that wants to replace hog wallow football with the
turf kind can do the same for not much more than $600 at most, provided
the field is already graded and drained. That’s essential, of course,
and runs into money.”
“ ‘At schools like the University of Oregon and Oregon State college
their fields are already graded and drained, just as ours was under the
old mud arrangement, and that makes it simple. One little tip –
concentrate on bluegrass. We seeded to both bluegrass and bent, but the
bluegrass costs deep and gives your turf solidity. Anyway, that’s our
experience.’ ”
The column quotes Lever saying, “We didn’t seed our field until May of
1935, and played on it the same fall,” explained Coach Lever. “That was
last season, and we had four games, three of which were played in
old-fashioned downpours of Oregon rain, but it held up wonderfully.”
It was a dramatic change to compete in a football game on Maxwell Field
grass instead of dirt and sawdust. But, grass Maxwell Field was Jekyll
and Hyde.
When the weather was good and the Maxwell Field was dry, it was very
good.
But, when the weather was rainy, the field was wet and could and
often did turn into a quagmire.
A photo with this story from the 1975 Willamette at Linfield football
game gives a glimpse of muddy Maxwell. It does not convey the smell.
In 2005, Linfielder Marv Heater (Class of 1951) who played football for
the Wildcats coached by Paul Durham, told Wildcatville the “smell of
Maxwell Field sticks quite vividly in my memory. It was unique because
of the type of fertilizer that Steve Thomas used on the field. (Good old
turkey droppings.).
“We were happy after a game in the mud to get to the shower and wash
away the small and grime. We probably washed half of the top soil from
the field into the drains throughout the season.”
Steve Thomas (Class of 1948) was an exceptional groundskeeper for
Linfield from 1948 until his untimely death in 1977.
Turkey dropping as fertilizer for Maxwell Field were not used Steve
Thomas’ entire groundskeeping tenure. But, with or without “turkey,”
Maxwell Field had a special smell and stickiness which existed until the
grass was replaced with artificial turf.
Maxwell Field’s grass is gone, but some can still see it and smell it.
Photos:
--Pine Bowl at Whitworth University, Spokane. By Tommy Butler for
Wildcatville. Oct. 22, 2016.
--Peyton Field at Baker Stadium, University of Puget Sound, Tacoma. By
Wildcatville. Nov. 8, 2014.
--Henry Lever, Linfield 1938 Oak Leaves yearbook.
--Henry Lever, Linfield 1938 Oak Leaves yearbook.
--Willamette at Linfield football on Maxwell Field. By Wildcatville.
Nov. 15, 1975.
Postscripts:
--When Maxwell Field grass was removed in 2004, some of it was saved as
sod and planted to the left as you enter the auxiliary entry gate (to
the far left as you face back of Memorial Stadium) off on Lever Street.
Saving the grass and replanting it was thanks to Steve Davis (Class of
1972), Linfield Athletics Hall of Famer.
--Steve Thomas was a member of Linfield’s 1947 NW Conference championship baseball team coached by Henry Lever.
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::
For brevity, the 2003 story below was edited by Wildcatville in 2016.
Linfield moves to make mud a thing of the past
By John Nolen, Oregonian, Aug. 23, 2003
Mud so thick and slick that players couldn't take two steps without
falling down.
A helicopter hovering for hours to dry the field after a snowfall.
Conditions so unplayable that three national championship games were
moved to a nearby high school.
Such memories of Maxwell Field are part of Linfield College's football
lore. But tradition or not, such miserable game conditions should end by
next year.
Maxwell, home of the college football program with a national-record 47
consecutive winning seasons, is getting artificial turf.
Fund raising is under way for $1.1 million to reconfigure the football
field and surrounding track and replace the natural grass with FieldTurf
in time for the 2004 season.
Jay Locey, a Wildcats coach or assistant coach since 1983, said the
present field, rebuilt in 1986, holds up well during September and
October.
"Everything's fine -- until we get a good rain," he said. "But one day
of that can destroy the field."
Ad Rutschman, the former Wildcats coach now an assistant under Locey,
remembers playing Pacific University one afternoon in 1986.
So does Doug
Hire, who was an all-American lineman for Rutschman.
"It was the muddiest game I remember," said Rutschman, 72, who has been
associated with Linfield football for almost 40 years.
Said Hire: "Conditions were so bad you couldn't take two steps without
falling down."
Steve Davis, another former player and a former Linfield sports information director,
recalls when a helicopter was brought in to dry the field for a 1970s
playoff game.
"It snowed Monday or Tuesday, and late in the week we hovered a
helicopter for the entire day," Davis said. "It worked. The field was
dry enough for Saturday's game."
In 1982, 1984 and 1986 -- Linfield's national championship seasons --
the field was unplayable for the championship games. So all three finals
had to be moved to nearby McMinnville High School.
Not only will the natural grass be replaced with FieldTurf, but also the
entire field layout, including the track and field oval, will be moved
12 feet east.
"It needs to move because the eighth lane of the track is right up
against the grandstand, which is dangerous," Rutschman said.
News that artificial turf would replace natural grass drew mixed
reactions from former Linfield players.
"Some guys were saying, 'You're kidding, give up the grass field for
artificial turf?' " said Larry Doty, a former Wildcats running back.
"I remember one pretty mucky playoff game in 1978," Doty said. "Those
conditions helped us out that day."
The Wildcats also won in the mud because of a quarterback named David
Lindley, Locey said.
Lindley, in 2-1/2 seasons (1984-86) as a starter, guided the Wildcats to
a 25-2 record and two NAIA national championships.
"He had large hands and was so good in the mud that he had a definite
advantage," Locey said. "He was a mudder."
It was an overtime loss to Central of Iowa in the mud during the 2000
NCAA Division III playoffs that triggered the move to replace the
natural grass, Locey said.
#
Monday, October 24, 2016
Fake Andy Warhol visited Linfield on Oct. 4, 1967
More about Fake Andy Warhol's Oct. 4, 1967, Linfield visit:
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2011/03/do-you-remember-in-1967-when-fake-andy.html
……………
......................................
The Tuscaloosa (Alabama) News - Feb 17, 1968
Slated at UA, But … Will The Real Andy Warhol Show Up?
https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1817&dat=19680217&id=WAAdAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MZsEAAAAIBAJ&pg=7250,2782904
...................
Oregonian: Linfield student Bob Heckard helped bring Fake Andy Warhol to Linfield in 1967
http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2017/10/how_andy_warhol_hoodwinked_ore.html
“We were completely hoodwinked,” said Heckard, a student at the time who helped bring Warhol to Linfield. “It was a weird experience that, in the end, just got weirder.”
Linfield Fake Andy Warhol appearance in 1967 mentioned in these links:
http://greg.org/archive/2007/04/06/the_fake_warhol_lectures.html
https://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=33908472
It'll take longer to read these than total time of Fake Andy Warhol 1967 Linfield appearance.
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2011/03/do-you-remember-in-1967-when-fake-andy.html
Below, some Oregonian
1967 and 1968 coverage of Fake Andy. If articles too small to read, click on
each, one at a time, for easier to read versions.
In order, from the first posting below to the last, dates of articles are Oct. 1, Oct. 2, Oct. 5, Oct. 7 and Oct. 9, 1967 and Feb. 7, 1968.
In order, from the first posting below to the last, dates of articles are Oct. 1, Oct. 2, Oct. 5, Oct. 7 and Oct. 9, 1967 and Feb. 7, 1968.
......................................
The Tuscaloosa (Alabama) News - Feb 17, 1968
Slated at UA, But … Will The Real Andy Warhol Show Up?
https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1817&dat=19680217&id=WAAdAAAAIBAJ&sjid=MZsEAAAAIBAJ&pg=7250,2782904
...................
Oregonian: Linfield student Bob Heckard helped bring Fake Andy Warhol to Linfield in 1967
http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwest-news/index.ssf/2017/10/how_andy_warhol_hoodwinked_ore.html
“We were completely hoodwinked,” said Heckard, a student at the time who helped bring Warhol to Linfield. “It was a weird experience that, in the end, just got weirder.”
Linfield Fake Andy Warhol appearance in 1967 mentioned in these links:
http://greg.org/archive/2007/04/06/the_fake_warhol_lectures.html
https://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=33908472
It'll take longer to read these than total time of Fake Andy Warhol 1967 Linfield appearance.
Sunday, October 23, 2016
Water Crew late getting to Linfield at Whitworth football game 10/22/2016
The Water Crew (John S, John O, Bill, Eric) was about 20 minutes late on 10/22/2016 getting to Whitworth’s Pine Bowl in Spokane (for Linfield at Whitworth football game) due to an auto accident which occurred ahead of them and their vehicle on I-90. Traffic was stopped on the highway. While sitting in the vehicle in stopped traffic, John S. sent a text reading, "There is an accident about 1/2 mile ahead of us. We are stopped cold."
--During the game, in this photo provided by Wildcatville,
Bill Harland watched action from Linfield sideline.
--Crew members drove from McMinnville to Spokane and back to
attend/work the Linfield at Whitworth football game on 10/22/201. That’s about
790 miles round-trip. The Crew stopped on 10/23/2016 (Spokane to McMinnville) and
John S took this photo of (l-r) Eric, Bill and John O. John S titled it, “Bringing
home the win from Whitworth.”
Tuesday, October 18, 2016
Happy Birthday! Coach Durham
Oct. 18 is the birthday of Paul Durham, Linfield football coach 1948-1967, long-time athletic director and faculty member. He’s considered the “Father of Linfield Athletics.”
Born
in 1913 in Portland, Ore., he died June 22, 2007, at age 93 in Honolulu. After
leaving Linfield in 1968, he moved to Hawaii to become director of athletics at
the University of Hawaii.
A
gentle soul with amazing leadership ability and “likeability,” he was the coach
who started “The Streak," Linfeld’s national record of consecutive winning
football seasons.
A
1936 Linfield grad, Coach Durham lived on the Mainland 54 years (all in Oregon,
24 years of which were in McMinnville as a student or with Linfield) and in
Hawaii 39 years.
Disclaimer:
Photos/video taken by Wildcatville on Oct. 5, 2016. Lest you worry, the lei (school colors
cardinal and purple with white) flowers are not real. They are silk. No damage
was done to the Coach Paul Durham statue/monument located next to the Linfield
athletics/p.e. building. Coach Durham statue wore the lei momentarily. Now, the
lei is ready for next birthday!
Mahalo
to lei stylist Anna O'Sullivan Bowman, Linfield Class of 1982. Born and raised
in Kailua, Hawaii, she was always surrounded by beautiful flowers. In 1981, she
was a founding member of Phi Sigma Sigma chapter at Linfield. Anna owns/operates
Studio Flowers in Clackamas, Ore. www.studioflowerspdx.com, 503-910-1375.
Sunday, October 16, 2016
Odis Avritt and his famous chili before 10/15/2016 Willamette at Linfield football game.
Wildcatville video presents ... Odis Avritt and his famous chili before 10/15/2016 Willamette University at Linfield College football game at the Catdome/Maxwell Field at Memorial Stadium in McMinnville, Oregon.
Thursday, October 13, 2016
Linfield 84-yard interception return for TD on 10/8/2016
Sat. 10/8/2016, Forest Grove, Ore.
Linfield’s #20 Mikey Arkans
intercepts Pacific pass, returns it 84 yards for Wildcat TD with 13 seconds to
go before half. Visiting team Linfield won NWC game, 48-10. Video from an
Oregon Sports Final's ‘Plays of the Week’ on Portland, Ore., KPTV-Channel 12.
Thanks from #Wildcatville ...
wildcatville.blogspot.com ... www.facebook.com/wildcatville to
#Catdome for tweet!
This video is a copy of a copy. Not the best rendition, but you get the idea.
This video is a copy of a copy. Not the best rendition, but you get the idea.
Monday, October 10, 2016
Slideshow: Linfield 48 at Pacific 10 football 10/8/2016
Photos and video by Tommy Butler, Linfield football fan, and John Schindelar, Linfield Water Crew.
Sunday, October 09, 2016
Ad Rutschman hired as Hilhi football coach 1958, Linfield football coach 1968
Oregonian
– Friday March 7, 1958
Hilhi
Selects Rutschman
Martinson Quits As Gridiron Pilot
HILLSBORO
-- “The Hillsboro high school board this week appointed Ad Rutschman, Hillsboro
native, head football coach …" Rutschman, 26, was born in Hillsboro and
graduated from Hilhi in 1950. He became freshman coach of football, basketball
and baseball in 1954, and since that time has been assistant to Norm Martinson
(who resigned as Hilhi head football and wrestling coach and track & field
assistant coach) and to Lou Samsa, as well as head baseball coach.
=
Ad Rutschman hired as Linfield College Football Coach
Sunday
Oregonian - Feb 25, 1968
Linfield
Hires Rutschman
To Coach Wildcat Gridders
McMINNVILLE
– “Ad Rutschman, highly successful Hillsboro High School mentor, has been named
head football coach at Linfield College…” The announcement of his appointment was made Saturday.
...................
Linfield football postseason games with Ad Rutschman as head coach:
Linfield football postseason games with Ad Rutschman as head coach:
1974 -- Lost to Texas Lutheran, NAIA national football playoffs in
Seguin, Texas
1976 -- Lost to Oregon College of Education, Oregon Bowl of NAIA
District 2 in Monmouth, Ore.
1977 -- Lost to California Lutheran, NAIA national football
playoffs in Thousand Oaks, Calif.
1978 -- Beat Carroll and lost to Concordia (Minn.), NAIA national
football playoffs in McMinnville, Ore.
1979 -- Lost to Oregon College of Education, Oregon Bowl of NAIA
District 2 in McMinnville, Ore.
1981 -- Beat Oregon Institute of Technology, Oregon Bowl of NAIA
District 2 in Klamath Falls, Ore.
1982 -- Beat California Lutheran, Westminster and William Jewell to
win national title, NAIA national football playoffs in McMinnville, Ore.
1984 -- Beat St. Ambrose, Hanover and to win national title, NAIA
national football playoffs in McMinnville, Ore.
1985 -- Lost to Pacific Lutheran, NAIA national football playoffs
in Lakewood, Wash.
1986 -- Beat Pacific Lutheran, Carrol, and Baker to win national
title, NAIA national football playoffs in McMinnville, Ore.
1991 -- Lost to Pacific Lutheran, NAIA national football playoffs
in Puyallup, Wash.
Monday, October 03, 2016
Sunday, October 02, 2016
Saturday, October 01, 2016
Journalist Floyd McKay (Class of 1957) honored during Linfield Homecoming 2016
During Linfield Homecoming 2016, journalist Floyd McKay delivered
an address and received a Linfield Distinguished Alumnus Award, both on Friday,
Sept. 30, 2016.
Address was in Linfield's
TJ Day Hall, formerly known as Northup Library.
Award received during
the Linfield’s Finest event in the Grand Ballroom in downtown McMinnville.
McKay’s parents were Linfield employees. His is a
McMinnville High (1953), Linfield (1957), Maryland (master's) and UW (Ph.D.)
grad.
A former Linfield adjunct faculty member (communications),
he is a professor emeritus (journalism) of Western Washington University, Bellingham,
Wash.
McKay’s career includes reporting and being a columnist for
the (Salem) Oregon Statesman daily newspaper and news analyst/commentator for
Portland's KGW-TV.
He and his wife, Dixie Johnson McKay (Linfield 1957), live
in Bellingham.
Wildcatville
photos
Floyd McKay postings of possible interest: