Tuesday, April 23, 2019

Fans in McMinnville Figure Linfield to Be Oregon's Best Football Team (in 1962)



 
Fans in McMinnville Figure Linfield to Be Oregon's Best Football Team

By DICK LEUTZINGER of The (Eugene, Oregon) Register-Guard

Thursday, Nov. 22, 1962

As important as this weekend's little affair between Oregon and Oregon State may be to some people, it's strictly second-rate stuff as far as the folks in a little community about 40 miles southwest of Portland are concerned.

In the small, out-of-the-way community of McMinnville, the 7,600 citizens have their own team, Linfield College, to root for. To them, Oregon and Oregon State are bush league, as exciting as a chess match, as significant as the rainfall in Siberia.

While most people agree the winner of the Webfoot-Beaver scuffle is undisputedly the state's most successful football team, the population of McMinnville would be inclined to argue even if both teams could win.

Linfield, they say, is champion. The Wildcats would get chopped up in minutes against either of the Eugene or Corvallis outfits, yet there's still no denying it: Linfield is, and has been for most of the past seven years, Oregon's winningest team.

Not a Loss

Paul Durham, who's been coaching at the 1,000-student McMinnville school for as long as most people there can remember, had a team this year that didn't lose to anybody. Last year it lost only to Pittsburgh State in the Camellia Bowl.

In fact, since 1955, the Wildcats have lost only nine games while winning 51. They've won 21 regular season games row, 14 straight at home and 12 in league play. They are the only team in Northwest Conference (NWC) history ever to have put two undefeated seasons back to back.

Naturally, Linfield plays schools of comparable size. Yet considering the similar restrictions on recruiting facing all NWC schools, Durham's success has been amazing.

Each school in the conference is allowed to give through grants-in-aid, an amount not exceeding 30 times one student's tuition. It must be spread out so no student-athlete receives more than three-fourths of his fees through scholarship.

In other words, since a year's tuition at Linfield is $800, the grants-in-aid may total $24,000 but no one athlete may receive more than $600 in aid.

Durham figures any athlete looking for as much financial aid as he can get will shy away from Northwest Conference schools anyway and splits the grant-in-aid allotment tip even further, giving the full three-fourths only to outstanding two-sport athletes.

Not Just Football

The 30 - times - tuition allowance, incidentally, does not cover just the football team, but is all the league allows for the four major sports combined football, basketball, baseball and track.

Durham's success, besides teaching sound football, obviously must lie somewhere other than being able to hire his talent. It does.

Time he's just completed his 15th season as Linfield's head coach and the school's excellent curriculum in physical education have provided Durham with a network of self-appointed recruiters the likes of which couldn't be hired for any kind of money.

When this season began, 174 Linfield graduates were coaching, mostly in small high schools in Oregon and Washington. In recent year, many of them, have sent their best players to Linfield.

Testimonial of this is the fact that on this year's 58-man football squad, only nine players arc from out of the Northwest.

The players themselves, after taking a quick liking to Durham and the school, often talk their friends into enrolling, too.

Such a case brought Durham one of his fullbacks a year ago. The fullback. Bob Ferguson who went to South Eugene, decided on Linfield because its all-conference guard and Bob's friend, Fred vonAppen, played on the same team as Ferguson at South and told him about Linfield.

Played Key Roles

Both played key roles in the Wildcats' second straight undefeated season which ended just last week with a 13-0 win over arch-rival Pacific, a team the Wildcats have been playing since 1896.

VonAppen, who weighed less than 180 pounds when he was an all-district tackle at South in 1959, now weighs about 215 and is expected to be on the all-NWC team for the second straight year when it is announced soon.

Fred wanted to play football in college, knew he probably wouldn't have much chance at a large school "They wouldn't give me the time of day, he says of Oregon laughingly so he enrolled at Linfield.

Durham, who was starting vonAppen in a few games by the end of his freshman year, thinks highly of him. ". . . . he's big, strong, agile, determined, dedicated, anything you want," he smiles.

His only problem, Durham says, is a result of having grown too fast. "I think he took on weight a little too fast and it hurt his agility a little. I think he'll improve some more next year, and if we have another good year, he'll be a candidate for Little All-American.

”If he keeps his weight down around 215 (he weighed 223 before the season), he'll catch up in agility."

Reacting to defensive changes in the best part of Fred's game, according to Durham and open-field blocking the only weak part. "If he corrects that, he can be one of the best guards that ever played in our league.

"He's as determined and dedicated to the game of football as anybody I've ever had," Durham says.

Coach Durham, who doubles as Linfield athletic director and sports editor of the town newspaper, doesn't rate Ferguson so highly, but Bob hasn't been around as long as vonAppen.

A sophomore scholastically now, Ferguson still has three years of eligibility since he missed his freshman season because of an injury. He suffered a dislocated shoulder during pre-season practice before he ever attended a class his freshman year.

Bob, a 195-pound power runner not quite as fast or as tricky as first-string fullback Dennis Vitale, nonetheless saw considerable action this past season.

Vitale was used mainly on fast fields, but since the Wildcats played several games in the rain, Ferguson got in enough times to carry the ball 46 times for a 5.4-yard average.

"He's a real strong runner," Durham says. "He punishes the defense . . . runs right over it. We were lucky to have him with this weather."

After Linfield had played Chico State during the Columbus Day storm, the Chico players said Ferguson had hit them harder than anyone they'd seen all season.

"He has a tremendous explosive charge," Durham says, thinking ahead to next year when he may also use him as a defensive end. "Nobody's going to push him around out there he doesn't like it."

He was probably thinking nobody's going to push Linfield around next year cither. After all, only seven players will be lost by graduation and this season was just supposed to be a building year.



Photo cutline: BOB FERGUSON “...A Real Strong Runner"

Photo cutline: FRED VONAPPEN “…He's Big, Strong, Agile …”
Postscript:
Thanks to Bob Ferguson, this article from the Nov. 22, 1962, issue of the Eugene, Ore., Register-Guard daily newspaper. It’s about infield football players Bob and Fred vonAppen, both Linfield Class of 1965 both also grads of South Eugene High School. Both are members of the Linfield Athletics Hall of Fame, too. Plenty of quotes in the article from Coach Paul Durham (Linfield Class of 1936).
An original clipping of the article was given to Bob “by an old South Eugene High classmate. Her mom had just passed on and she was going through her mother’s stuff and found the article. While she was attending Stephens College her mom saved all articles from the newspaper about her daughter’s South Eugene High classmates. I had never seen the article,” Bob said. “It is a nice ‘blast from the past.’ ”
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Below are photos of Bob Ferguson from "Eugenean" yearbook of South Eugene High School