Friday, June 30, 2017

Death of Linfielder Margaret Lever Dement, age 105


Linfield grad Margaret Lever Dement, age 105, died Jan. 10, 2017, in Madras, Oregon

Daughter of Henry Lever, longtime Linfield coach/athletic director

As a student she played on Linfield tennis team coached by Harry Dillin, when he was a prof, before he became the college's president. 

Margaret Lever Dement's obituary appeared in Madras Pioneer Wed., Jan. 25, 2017.

Here below is same obituary with slight editing by Wildcatville

Aug. 12, 1911 – Jan. 10, 2017

Margaret Dacotah Lever Dement, longtime Madras resident, passed away Jan. 10, 2017, at the age of 105.

Born Aug. 12, 1911, in Dixon, Missouri, she grew up as the eldest daughter in a family of nine children. During Margaret's youth, the family lived in Louisiana and then in Alberta, Canada, before moving to Oregon, where they lived in Wedderburn, Broadbent, and Myrtle Point, Oregon.


Margaret was a 1934 graduate of Linfield College in McMinnville, where her father, Henry Lever, was athletic director and celebrated multi-sport coach.

She taught in several Oregon high schools before her marriage to Karl Dement in 1938. After Pearl Harbor, Karl enlisted in the Navy. Three years later, when he returned home, they moved to Myrtle Point to make their home on the family ranch.

Throughout her life, Margaret's love of music was a constant theme. At various times she acted as organist, choir director, and pianist at the United Methodist Church in Myrtle Point. In addition, she volunteered as organist at St. Mark's Episcopal Church/Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd in Madras for over 30 years. She taught piano lessons over a span of approximately 80 years, with her 1980s students, including her two granddaughters from down the street. She also played honky-tonk piano for community theater productions and took the stage as an actress at times as well. In addition to music, Margaret pursued a wide variety of vocations and avocations.

After moving to Madras in 1964, Margaret worked as a reporter for the Oregon Journal, the Oregonian, and the Salem Capital Press.

She was a tireless worker for the Republican Party, starting with Mark Hatfield's campaign for governor. In later years, Margaret managed the Jefferson County Museum, and was very active at the local senior center. She was thrilled to have been named Senior of the Year in 2003. In addition, she educated and entertained many Central Oregonians with her numerous letters to the editor in local newspapers.

Throughout her life, Margaret was a dedicated traveler; her adventures included many trips around the U.S. and several trips to Europe. She always combined her love of travel with her own belief in the value of lifelong learning and especially enjoyed participating in Elderhostel (now Road Scholar) educational travel opportunities for adults.

Margaret is survived by her son, Thomas, of Spokane; daughter, and son-in-law, Marian and Jon Granby, of Madras; grandchildren, Kristina, of Hillsboro, Margaret, of Madras, and Christopher, of Tucson; two great-grandchildren, Tierson, of Madras, and Ford, of Tucson. Her surviving siblings are Barbara McLarty, of Ft. Collins, Colo., and Clarence Lever, of Newberg.

Her husband, Karl, and their son, Erik, preceded her in death.

A private burial will held in the Dement plot at the Norway Cemetery, near Myrtle Point.

Margaret's family members would like to invite the community to join them at a memorial service to celebrate her life. The memorial will be held at St. Mark's Episcopal Church/Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd, 395 S.E. "C" Street, Madras, at 10 a.m., Saturday, Feb. 11.

Memorials in memory of Margaret may be sent to St. Mark's Episcopal Church/Lutheran Church of the Good Shepherd.

(Family photos show Margaret at age 100 and young Margaret.)

::::::::::::::::::::::::::
See these stories posted at Wildcatville

=Margaret Lever Dement reflects on more than a century (posted Aug. 12, 2015)
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2015/08/margaret-lever-dement-reflects-on-more.html

….
=History Corner featuring Margaret Lever Dement (posted March 20, 2013)
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2013/03/history-corner-featuring-margaret-lever.html

….
=100th birthday party awaits Linfield grad Margaret Lever Dement of Madras, Ore. (posted July 28, 2011)
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2011/07/100th-birthday-party-awaits-linfield.html

……….

=Biography of Henry Lever, longtime Linfield coach (posted June 22, 2018)
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2008/06/biography-of-henry-w.html

::::::::::::::

As a student, Margaret Lever (Dement) played on Linfield tennis team coached by Harry Dillin, when he was a professor, before he became the college's president. Photo from a Linfield Oak Leaves yearbook shows the 1934 Linfield tennis team with arrow pointing to Coach Dillin (fourth from the left) and arrow pointing to player Margaret (M. Lever, third from the right). Harry Dillin served as a Linfield economics prof (1931-1943) and as Linfield president (1943-1968). 



Tuesday, June 27, 2017

Grandpa Ad Rutschman watched grandson Adley Rutschman - Oregon State University baseball catcher in June 2017 College World Series in Omaha -- on TV in McMinnville, where Ad was helping out at a Linfield College 2017 football camp

Sports column from 6/23/2017 Omaha, Nebraska, World-Herald daily newspaper (click on URL link below or scroll down to read text)




Posted here is Wildcatville photo of Ad Rutschman taken 5/19/2017 in Corvallis at OSU baseball facility.


BASEBALL

Chatelain: Mike Riley’s mentor’s grandson starring in two sports for Oregon State 

Column by Dirk Chatelain/ World-Herald staff writer

Jun 23, 2017 Updated Jun 24, 2017 


Against his will, the legendary coach got a new cellphone last week. His kids made him do it — “I lost the vote.”

Ad Rutschman’s old model was pretty simple. He pushed send to make a call and send to answer a call. Now there’s voicemail and texting and all sorts of stuff, which is a good thing because long-lost friends and ex-players have been trying to compliment him.

“I cannot believe the phone calls that I’m getting,” said Rutschman, 85. “I had a phone call from one of my high school teammates that I haven’t seen in probably 50 years. … (Tuesday) morning I had 12 messages and I’m just learning to use the dang cellphone.”

What’s all the fuss about?

Rutschman’s grandson is making quite a name for himself (and grandpa) at the College World Series. The Beavers lost 3-1 to LSU on Friday, but it wasn’t the fault of 19-year-old Adley. The freshman catcher threw out two Tigers trying to steal.

The second play was a jaw-dropper. Rutschman scooped a pitch out of the dirt, shuffled his feet and fired to second to nail Cole Freeman with breath to spare.

“Goodness, that’s some kind of arm,” analyst Kyle Peterson told the ESPN audience. “This Oregon State coaching staff is raving about Adley Rutschman. Offensively, there’s still some steps to be taken, but this is a big league-ready arm right now.”

Grandpa Ad was watching in McMinnville, Oregon, where he was helping out at a Linfield College football camp.

“They haven’t fired me yet,” Rutschman said.

They wouldn’t dare. Linfield is where Rutschman became an NAIA icon. He’s the only college coach — at any level — to win national championships in baseball (1971) and football (’82, ’84 and ’86).

The first of those football titles came with a young defensive coordinator from Corvallis. You may have heard of him.

Mike Riley.

Riley’s first paid coaching job was at Linfield. He arrived in 1977 and stayed six years. Rutschman became his mentor.

“He’s actually the best teacher of sports technique that I’ve ever been around,” Riley told me in 2015. 
“He taught guys how to play.

“How to hit, how to field, how to pitch, how to drive block, how to backpedal. He could teach it all. He was one guy in football that could coach any position. To this day, I admire that. There’s not many guys like that. I don’t claim to be that guy.”

In those days, Linfield coaches juggled multiple duties. Rutschman was the football coach, baseball coach and athletic director — he taught three classes, too. Riley assisted Rutschman in all three areas. He was Linfield’s junior varsity baseball coach. His wife, Dee, kept the scorebook.

“There wasn’t much of a crowd,” said Rutschman, who retired from full-time coaching in 1991. “And there wasn’t much publicity.”

(Nebraska’s connections with Linfield don’t stop with Riley. John Cook spent his first year of college in McMinnville before transferring home to San Diego; he remembers Rutschman. Same goes for Danny Langsdorf, who played quarterback for Linfield in 1994-95.)

So where does young Adley come into the picture? Ad Rutschman’s son Randy was a catcher on the ’71 national championship team. Randy became a coach himself — and the father of a spirited son.

You should’ve seen their Little League practices. Ad showed up an hour early to watch Randy drill the fundamentals. Adley couldn’t get enough.

“My golly, every time you turned around, he was after Randy to go someplace and hit,” Ad said.

That included Oregon State, where Randy aided the baseball program with catching instruction. No wonder Adley wanted to be a Beaver.

Baseball wasn’t his only gift. His senior year of high school, Adley drilled a 63-yard field goal in a playoff game.

One major-conference coach inquired about his football interest. Adley describes it like this:

“My high school football coach called me in his office one day and we were talking about stuff.

“At the very end, he’s like, ‘Oh, I forgot to tell you that about a week and a half ago, Mike Riley called me about you. I just told him that you’re gonna play baseball. Is that all right with you?’

“I was like, ‘Yeah, sure. I kinda wish you would’ve told me.’ ”

But Adley had already committed to Oregon State and he wasn’t backing out. He intended to play only baseball in college. Then last summer Gary Andersen invited him to fall camp. Rutschman won the kickoff job.

He experienced Husky Stadium in Seattle and the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. At Stanford, he kicked to Christian McCaffrey.

Grandpa laughs about that one. In the fourth quarter, Adley pooched to McCaffrey, tackled him at the 37-yard line, then helped him up.

“I got tackled by the kicker?” McCaffrey told him. They patted each other on the butt.

“I can’t believe the experience he’s having as a freshman in college,” Ad said.

The past week is hard to beat. Adley’s starting for the No. 1 team in the country. Throwing out runners at second base. It was a thrill playing at the Rose Bowl, but the pressure-cooker of TD Ameritrade Park is “unlike anything I’ve ever experienced.” His grandpa feels it, too.

“It’s so doggone exciting I can hardly wait from one ballgame to the next,” Ad said.

Who knows how far Adley goes from here? He may be kicking field goals for Oregon State this fall. He may be in the big leagues one day, just like Kyle Peterson said. But it’s going to be hard to match the legacy of his namesake.

“The dude’s in seven Hall of Fames,” Adley said.

That’s true, but Grandpa never won in Omaha.

Sunday, June 25, 2017

Polly's Office


Door to "Polly's Office" (a.k.a. mostly home football games ticket booth) at Catdome/Maxwell Field at Memorial Stadium. Door photo taken 6/9/2017.

Polly Sommers is Linfield Athletics secretary/athletic ticket manager. Other photos* (6/9/2017) show front exterior of Polly's Office and other photo (6/10/2017) she stands with Scott Carnahan, Linfield Athletic director.
*Signage on front of office relates to tickets for 2017 NWC baseball tournament, held 4/21-23/2017 at Helser Field, which adjoins Catdome/Maxwell Field at Memorial Stadium.








Saturday, June 24, 2017

Linfield Football’s dominance of the Northwest Conference, 2009-2016

















By Gerry Painter - Wildcatville contributor, statistician, Linfield grad and Linfield Football season ticket holder

Read Gerry's story by clicking on this URL link ...



... however, if you can't access the article via the link, the story text follows:

Joe Smith became Linfield College head football coach in 2006.

The first three seasons (2006, 2007 and 2008) with him as head coach saw the Wildcats finish with identical six wins and three loss records.

The first two games in 2006 were, in order, losses to Western Oregon and Hardin-Simmons. Many were concerned that the “Streak” might be coming to an end. Not to worry! The Wildcats won six of the remaining seven games losing only to Whitworth in a very close game, 17-13.

Joe has now been the Linfield head football coach for 11 seasons and begins his 12th this fall. During those 11 (2006-2016) his teams have won 103 of the 123 games played for an 83.74 percent winning record.

According to “Linfield Coaching Chronology” by Kelly Bird, Linfield Athletics’ sports information director, on page 6 (see photo with this story) of the Linfield Football ‘Game Time’ home football game printed program of Oct. 15, 2016. (The percentage on the day of the game, before it was played was 83.9.) Joe now holds the best winning percentage (84 percent, see URL in Postscript at end of this story) of any coach in the history of Linfield Football dating back to 1896.

“Linfield Coaching Chronology,” by Kelly Bird, Linfield Athletics’ sports information director, appears on page 6 of the Linfield Football ‘Game Time’ home football game printed program of Oct. 15, 2016.

Joe’s teams have outscored their opponents by an average of 22 points per game, while gaining an average 362 yards per game.

However defense has been an important factor, as Linfield has held its opponents to an average 223 yards per game, a margin of offense over defense of 139 yards per game.

Before Joe became head football coach of Linfield he was its defensive coordinator for several years. When he became head coach he appointed Jackson Vaughn, one of his defense assistant coaches, as the new defensive coordinator. The resulting outstanding defense, led by Jackson, is not unexpected.

Of the 20 Linfield Football games lost during Joe’s head coach tenure only five have been won by a Northwest Conference team.

Whitworth has won two of the 12 games they have played Linfield during the Smith era, and Willamette has won three of 11 games—the last win being the shocker in 2014, 31-28, in McMinnville. No other NWC team has beaten Linfield in the 75 games played. The result is eight straight NWC championships.

Will dominance by Linfield Football continue indefinitely? Let’s hope so. Get ready for Linfield Football 2017, another season of Linfield’s superbly coached football playing to the best of its ability led by head Coach Joe Smith and his excellent coaching staff.

PHOTO CUTLINE -- Gerry Painter with a huge (80 pages long when photo taken by Wildcatville at Maxwell Field on June 24, 2017) Excel spreadsheet he has maintained for several years. In the spreadsheet he enters details of every Wildcat football game played since Linfield’s famous “Steak” began in 1956.

POSTSCRIPT
http://www.linfield.edu/sports/records/fb/coachingchronology.htm



Friday, June 16, 2017

Speaking of Howard Graves ...

See Howard Grave's obituary here:
http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2017/01/obituary-for-journalist-howard-graves.html

Below see scans of what he provided (except for the SPD/SDX Otter Rock, Ore., notepad page) in 2011.


Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Carnahan’s number retired at ceremony feting Wildcat AD, coach


















--Headline: Carnahan’s number retired at ceremony feting Wildcat AD, coach

--Story by Rusty Rae, Sports Editor
McMinnville News-Register/N-R, 6/13/2017
(Slight edit made by Wildcatville.)

--Photo by Tim Marsh for the News-Register

--Photo cutline: Scott Carnahan with the framed retired jersey and Ad Rutschman share a few words after Rutschman announced the school had retired his jersey.
…………….

Retiring Linfield Athletic Director and head baseball coach Scott Carnahan found himself in an unfamiliar place Saturday at Ted Wilson Gymnasium -- in the spotlight-- where administration, coaches, players and family lauded his 34 years of service to the college.

More than 200 staff, friends and former players gathered at the gym for the send-off, hearing from a gold list of speakers, including President Dr. Thomas Hellie, Head Football Coach Joe Smith, who was a baseball assistant for Carnahan, Seattle Mariners assistant coach Scott Brosius, a former player and coach at Linfield, several former players, and his wife, Cathy, and son, Chris. The event was emceed by longtime Linfield athletic voice Dave Hansen.

Smith said if there was a Mount Rushmore of Linfield Coaches, it would include Paul Durham, Roy Helser, Ted Wilson, and Ad Rutschman – adding Carnahan would need to be chiseled into the monument after his many years of service.

Several speakers noted how, under Carnahan’s leadership, the college’s athletic facilities improved to one of the best venues in the Northwest Conference. They cited his relationship-building skills and positive mentality, which allowed the college to do more with less.

Rutschman described how Carnahan embodied the ethos of the athletic program, noting “Carney” continued the tradition of a blue-collar work ethic and doing the right things correctly.

At the end of his delivery, Rutschman announced the college had retired Carnahan’s number 6. He brought out the framed jersey, which will hang in the athletic facilities along with those of other Wildcat greats.

Former player Michael Lindblad, a pitcher for Linfield from 1991-94, summed up the feelings of many of the 200 attending the event, saying, “Mentor, teacher, coach and father figure to our whole Linfield family.”

In addition to having his jersey retired, Carnahan was presented a golf cart decked out in the Linfield’s cardinal red and purple, as the audience chanted “Carnee! Carnee! Carnee!..” led by incoming athletic director Garry Kilgore.

Carnahan, addressing the audience at the conclusion of the festivities, spoke of his love for Linfield. “Cathy has always known Linfield is my second love – and sometimes it has been number one,” he said.
.....

Photos by Wildcatville below including one showing Polly Sommers of Linfield Athletics handing golf cart keys to Carney.









Monday, June 12, 2017

Linfield sports related fight songs

==Wildcat Fight Song
(a.k.a. Linfield Fight Song, tune is "On, Wisconsin")


On with Linfield, On with Linfield
Fight right through that line
Take the ball right down the field
A touchdown’s sure this time
RAH, RAH, RAH!

On with Linfield, On with Linfield
Fight on for your fame
Fight Wildcats, fight, fight, fight!
To win this game!



==Go Get 'em, Wildcats
(An unofficial Linfield fight song)
Go, go, go, go, go get 'em Wildcats!
Go, go, go, go, go get 'em Wildcats!
Why wait too late? You may be rueing. Be up and doing.
Go, go, go, go, go, get 'em Wildcats!
Go, go, go, go, go get 'em Wildcats!
Fight on for your Linfield,
Go get 'em Wildcats!


Sources:

Listen to these songs:

Sunday, June 11, 2017

Dorothy E. Helser was born June 11

Dorothy Evelyn Helser

June 11, 1915 - November 20, 2013 


Dorothy "Grama" Helser, joined her Lord on November 20, 2013, at the age of 98. 


Memorial services will be held on December 14 at the Carlton First Baptist Church, at 2 pm, with Pastor Kevin Cope and former Pastor Sid Johnson officiating. Private interment will be held at Evergreen Cemetery in McMinnville. 


Dorothy was born June 11, 1915 in Everett, Washington to parents Walter and Hulda Wall. 


She grew up in Bremerton before attending Linfield College from 1933 to 1936 where she met her husband, Roy Helser. 


They were the first married couple to attend Linfield together which required approval from the President of Linfield, then graduated together in 1936. 

Husband Roy played professional baseball for the Portland Beavers for over ten years while they raised three children. 


Following Roy's baseball retirement, the family moved back from Portland to McMinnville where Roy coached at Linfield. 


Dorothy went back to Linfield to get her teaching degree and taught elementary school for 5 years then French and Spanish at McMinnville High for 20 years. 


They retired to their beach house at Devils Lake and Dorothy taught Spanish for an additional four years at Taft High. 


Dorothy and Roy loved living at the coast where she worked in her garden, supported her church, and hosted many dear friends and family. 


They moved back to McMinnville in the early 1980s, where she passionately supported Linfield, volunteering with the Alumni Association and often attended Linfield football, basketball and baseball games. 


She taught Bible studies twice a week, read like she was making up for lost time, enjoyed many crafts and church activities, and helped out her dear friends who had lost spouses. 

Dorothy is survived by her sons Denny Helser and wife Kathleen Janzen (Salem), Roy Helser Jr. and wife Jennifer Helser (Lincoln City), daughter Susan Petersen and husband Wayne Petersen (Washougal), nine grandchildren, twelve great grandchildren, and one great-great grandchild. She will be tremendously missed by all. 


To leave an online condolence, please visit the Online Guest Book at www.macyandson.com. 


In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to the Roy and Dorothy Scholarship Fund at Linfield or to mission work at your own church. 


Her final message was "I hope to see you all again in Heaven."




Thursday, June 08, 2017

‘Linfield’s Top ’Cat Retires: Scott Carnahan’s farewell to arms’ …... N-R story by Rusty Rae 5/30/2017








































--Headline above and story below --by Rusty Rae, a Linfielder and N-R sports editor -- from McMinnville News-Register/N-R May 30, 2017. Three photos which accompany the story are here as are three photos by Wildcatville.--

Scott Carnahan, Linfield’s Athletic Director and head baseball coach retiring this June, is the epitome of the Linfield way.

For more than a quarter century, he has practiced and refined his practicum of success. Dedicating himself to the betterment of the athletic department and the college, personifying the values of integrity, hard work, and perseverance, Carnahan has continued the tradition of those before him: Paul Durham, Roy Helser, Ted Wilson and Ad Rutschman.

In doing so, the athletic department has grown both in terms of facilities, and perhaps more importantly, by the influence the department has had on the men and women as members of the Linfield family.

Carnahan actually began his Linfield career in the fall of 1969, as a Wildcat freshman. He was recruited to play all three sports at Linfield – football, basketball and baseball. When his father was hurt in a serious logging accident, he moved home to help the family, enrolling at Centralia Community College. While there, he played basketball and baseball before returning to Linfield to finish his college career, competing in football and baseball his junior year, and baseball his senior year.

After graduating from Linfield, Carnahan said his goal was to coach (baseball) at the college level, but didn’t know where that might be, noting, “Obviously, I loved the place (Linfield) when I was here as a player,” he said.
 
But out of college, his career turned in a different direction. He had a contract with the Portland Mavericks (at the princely sum of $300 per month) – which didn’t work out – he lasted three weeks. He worked for Evergreen Aviation for nine months before he discovered his path to teaching and coaching. The position at Evergreen was attractive, three times the starting pay for teaching. But in the nine months of employment with Del Smith, he was on the road six, and that simply did not allow him time for his wife.

“My wife Cathy and I were living in the Michelbook Apartments. She was teaching in Yamhill-Carlton. I was on a world-wide trip with Del and had just flown into New York. I called home only to find the number was disconnected,” he remembers.

Frantically, he called his dad, who let him know “Cathy moved.”

Carnahan learned his wife had taken a job in Chehalis and Carney had been offered a job at Onalaska High School. “And by the way, you have to be home tomorrow for teacher orientation,” his father told him, marking the beginning of his journey as a teacher and coach.

He jumped on a redeye to Portland, where the family had left a car for him, drove to the high school, arriving in time for the 8 a.m. teacher orientation. He coached there for two years. When the levy failed (a blessing in disguise, he notes), all high school sports were discontinued. So, he moved to the Chehalis High School, where he coached for two years. He interviewed to for head baseball coach at Big Bend Community College – and was offered the position.

Story continues below





















Story continues from above

“I told them I would get back to them. About three miles out of Moses Lake (Washington), Cathy turned to me and said, ‘If you come here, you will be coming here alone’.”

Obviously, he did not accept that position, but one at Lower Columbia College came open. Carnahan had been the runner-up there the previous year, and when it opened up again, he was chosen. He taught, coached baseball and also assisted the basketball coach – Mike Polis. Mike’s son, Mickey, is now the assistant coach for Shanan Rosenberg at Linfield. For Carnahan, life is about relationships – and they last forever.

Fast forward six years, and Carnahan is in Arizona, driving the team bus. As he pulls into the parking lot for a Mariners’ spring game, out of the parking lot comes a van. It stops – and it’s none other than Ad Rutschman, who at the time (1983) was coaching both football and baseball.

Rutschman let Carnahan know this was going to be his final year coaching baseball, and there would be a position opening, and he should apply for the position. Carnahan went through the interview process and that summer was named baseball coach at Linfield.

You might assume the rest of the story is history – and so it is – but then you’d be missing the crux of Scott Carnahan’s Linfield adventure.

Remembers Jimmy Ray, Carnahan’s bench coach and friend of more than 30 years, “When I came to Linfield for my visit, the grass in the infield was crotch-high; a cat ran across the field and made a deposit on the home plate area; when I asked where the training facilities were, coach Rutschman smiled and told me ‘We don’t get injured here.’ And when Ray walked through the locker area at old Riley Gymnasium and heard someone yell ‘showers’ when one of the toilets was flushed, he again asked Rutschman what was that and Ad said, ‘Jimmy, that’s our agility drill’.”

Such was the state of facilities at Linfield in the early 1970s. Today, thanks to Carnahan (and he would list a cast of thousands who helped), Linfield has some of the best athletic facilities in the conference and the baseball park remains one of the best in all of the Northwest.

Though he never expected to become athletic director, Carnahan began working on athletic facilities when Ted Wilson Gymnasium and the athletic offices were built. He became athletic director in 1996 when Rutschman stepped down. Carnahan was the ideal replacement for Rutschman as he understood the culture of the athletic department and, through his baseball coaching, the management of facilities had already developed significant relationships within the Linfield community. The Linfield baseball stadium is one of many examples of the Carnahan touch.

Jim Wright Stadium and Helser Field cost the college $200,000, but Carnahan estimates its value at a million dollars –because of the relationships he has developed with alums, community leaders and business owners, and the passion for simply getting things done, regardless of the challenge. Carnahan’s charisma earned the trust of countless donors, and his integrity found others willing to jump aboard the Linfield athletic train to provide volunteer time and talents allowing the athletic department to lead the conference in facilities.

Virtually every athletic venue has been upgraded, but these upgrades are the result of Carnahan’s blue collar worth ethic and integrity. Look no further than Linfield’s current gym and athletic offices, the swimming pool and Rutschman Field House to see how the college’s athletic endowment has grown.

Notes Ray, “Carney brought a healthy discontent for the present.” In other words, Carnahan had a vision for what Linfield’s athletic facilities could be and was able to get anyone standing nearby to jump onto that bandwagon.

This season, he was named the Northwest Conference’s Coach of the Year as the ‘Cats won yet another conference title, and Carnahan etched his 600th win into the record books. He has coached the most baseball games as a Linfield coach and also has the most wins.

Carnahan’s winning record is no surprise. One of his early mentors, Washington State head baseball coach Bobo Brayton, told him “Pitching and defense win games.”

Over the years, Carnahan has become a savant in the area of developing catchers and pitchers. Particularly in the area of pitcher development, Carnahan has been able to take talented arms and make them better, without forcing them to change from what made them great initially.

That he’s had numerous offers from other institutions is no secret, but his love of Linfield has kept him and Cathy in McMinnville.

Carnahan returned to Linfield as a student too late to share the joy of the 1971 national championship the baseball team won under Rutschman, also one of his mentors.

But when NY Yankee star third baseman, Scott Brosius, a Linfield grad Carnahan recruited to the baseball team, came asking for a letter of recommendation because he was interested in coaching college baseball, Carnahan, who was besieged by the multitude of details and duties of the athletic director position asked, “Why don’t you take the baseball position here?”

And when Brosius led Linfield to the national championship in 2013, it was Carnahan who groomed the pitching staff for Brosius, and who called the pitches during those games. After eight years at Linfield. Brosius moved on to coach professional baseball, and Carnahan was back coaching baseball until his retirement this year.

Linfield head football coach Joe Smith, who was an assistant baseball coach for Carnahan prior to becoming the head football coach, said of Carnahan, “He has the ‘it’ factor. Nobody really knows what ‘it’ is, but Scott has it. A part of what has made Scott successful is the ability to relate to just about everyone and his absolute integrity. His handshake is his word and people know they can trust him to do what he says he will do.”

Notes Jordan Harlow, a member of that championship team and now assistant coach with the ‘Cats, said, “It is amazing how he interacts with people. His success is no accident. His work behind the scenes has really been an eye opener for me on how to be successful.

“To me, Carney represents the fabric of what has made Linfield’s athletics great for so many years,” he added.

Somewhere, among the many mementoes he saved from his time at Linfield, there is an aerial photo showing the Linfield athletic facilities with the college in the background. His wife Cathy had “Carney’s vision” added to the photo and it serves as a representation of what he has accomplished in his years at the college.

While the facilities are certainly visual extensions of his accomplishments, he says what he will miss most is the relationships with coaches and students.

“It’s really more about what you’re trying to teach through the game. Perseverance, overcoming adversity – things like that which are really meaningful to me.

“When you see guys after they have left school who are leading successful lives and who hold the Linfield experience close to their hearts – those are the things that are important to me. Being able to make a difference in the lives of student athletes who come to Linfield – that is the thing I will hold close to my heart,” he said.

It’s the Linfield way.