Wednesday, April 14, 2010

'The Eyes of the Cat are upon you'


In the University of Texas fight song are the words
'The Eyes of Texas are upon you...'


In Wildcatville, we say 'Don't Mess with the Wildcats' because

'The Eyes of the Cat are upon you...'

Thursday, April 01, 2010

Monday, March 29, 2010

“Go Get ‘em, Wildcats” should be Linfield fight song


Linfield Pep Band (not playing Linfield Fight Song)
before start of the
Oct. 10, 2008, Homecoming
football game at
Maxwell Field against Whitworth.

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

Offered through the March 2010 edition of Linfield E-Cat,
links to the Linfield Pep Band (in December 2009) playing:

  • Linfield Fight Song
  • Linfield Alma Mater
  • :::::::::::::::::::::

    When the Linfield Pep Band at Wildcat football games plays the Linfield Fight Song, what do you think? Well (if you even know it is the Linfield Fight Song), you will think the band is playing On Wisconsin.

    That’s understandable. The tune is On Wisconsin, official state of Wisconsin song and fight song of the University of Wisconsin Badgers.

    See below for lyrics to Linfield Fight Song and On Wisconsin.

    OK, if you agree Linfield Fight Song/On with Linfield/Really On Wisconsin is not appropriate as the college’s fight song, what should replace it? Here are three suggestions:

    Go Get ‘em, Wildcats Listen to Linfield Choir Medley which includes Go Get ‘em, Wildcats.

    Wildcat VictoryListen to the fight song of Kansas State University, home of the Wildcats.
    Tsunami SirenListen to part of blast as heard from a Maui Civil Defense siren.

    Wildcat Fight Song

    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!



    On Wisconsin
    Listen

    On Wisconsin, On Wisconsin
    Plunge right through that line

    Run the ball clear down the field, boys
    Touchdown sure this time

    On Wisconsin, On Wisconsin
    Fight on for her fame
    Fight Fellows, Fight, Fight, Fight
    We'll win this game!

Friday, March 19, 2010

Toyopet was part of Linfield student life for Brothers Kincaid, Mike and Terry

Mike and Terry Kincaid (above). The Toyopet Corona (photo) which they had as Linfield students looked like this, Mike said, except it was white. 

When brothers Mike (1969 B.S. Business) and Terry Kincaid were Linfield students they had “wheels” like no one else. They were driving a Toyopet with right hand steering. 

Before getting continuing this story, some background. Brothers Kincaid hail from Kailua (Oahu), Hawaii. Both are Kailua graduates – Mike in 1965 and Terry in 1966 -- from The Kamehameha Schools of Honolulu. They were outstanding student-athletes for the “Kam” Warriors. Mike was an all-Northwest Conference first team linebacker, lettering playing for both Coaches Paul Durham (1966 and 1967) Ad Rutschman (1968 season). He was a “Wildcat top defender” award winner, too. Mike lead the Linfield team in tackles in two seasons. 

Back to the story…. A Toyopet? It was one of Toyota’s earliest passenger cars. When the brothers needed transportation while studying at Linfield, their father came to the rescue. 

In 1966, via an associate of their father – Donald Kincaid, president of D.R. Kincaid, Ltd. -- bought a white Toyopet Corona 4-door sedan in Osaka, Japan. It was loaded on one of the company’s freight ships there. After the ship docked in Portland, it was off-loaded there. 

Mike and Terry picked it up. “I wasn’t expecting a right hand drive car,” said Mike. “So, I was a bit anxious (driving on the way) back to Linfield, had to adjust to look left (in) the rearview mirror and clearing the vehicle was a major adjustment. 

We got a lot of curious looks from other motorists all the time. It didn’t take long to become accustomed to driving it.” In 1966 the best known, best selling foreign car in the U.S. was the German-made Volkswagen Beetle. 

According to one history of Toyota, “By 1967, Toyota had become well established in the United States, albeit as a niche player.” The history includes the fact sales of the Toyota in the U.S. “hit 6,400 in 1965, and reached 71,000 by 1968….” 

The (3-speed manual transmission) Toyopet “we drove was unique by U.S. standards,” said Mike. It may have been one of the few new cars in McMinnville or Oregon with the steering wheel on the right hand side. Their car was manufactured for driving in Japan, where vehicles travel on right. “I believe it was the only Toyota I saw in Oregon and traveling “all over the Northwest,” said Mike. 

The brothers drove it for two or three years. He said the car “had a lot of guts.” Apparently their Toyopet was similar to the Toyota Corona being sold in the 1966 in the U.S. with a 90-hp engine and a 3-speed. By comparison, the 1966 Beetle had a meager 50-hp engine. The brothers had the Toyopet a couple of years when, alas, it was wrecked in an accident. While the Toyopet is long gone. Memories of the car live on for Mike and James. Background information:

  • In addition to his Linfield business bachelor’s degree earned in 1969, Mike earned a MBA/master’s of business administration in 1975 from Pepperdine University in Malibu, Calif. 
  • When Mike was a 1967 season first team All-Northwest Conference linebacker, there were two other players in the conference selected for the same honor. One of them was Willamette’s Cal Lee, a grad of Honolulu’s Kalani High School. 

  • Mike’s Linfield football playing career included playing in two historic games, both season openers. In 1968, it was the Wildcats’ 15-13 win over the University of Hawaii in Honolulu during Paul Durham’s last season as Linfield coach. In 1968, in Ad Rutschman’s first game as Linfield coach, the ‘Cats beat Boise State 17-7 in Boise. A story about the Boise win says Mike “contained many a (Boise State football team) sweep” vs. Linfield.
     
  • In high school, Mike was an outstanding athlete. In addition to playing football, he also competed in high school for Kamehameha in basketball. These days his athletic pursuits include handball and canoe sailing. For more information about Mike and canoe sailing, see these two stories:

HSCA title chase gets extreme

Kailua on the Water

Mike Kincaid, former 'Cat football player mentioned: Kailua on the Water

Part of an article from
April 2006
Honolulu Magazine

Kailua on the Water

The heart of Kailua may not be on land at all, but in the ocean, where generations of Kailuans have found adventure, recreation, even comfort.

There’s no shortage of people in Kailua who were born, raised and never left because of the water. I was fortunate enough to find more than a handful who were willing to share their thoughts on why.

"As soon as I could walk I was making little canoes out of corrugated tin roofing and tar," says Mike Kincaid, who was born on what was called the "Bishop Track" of Kailua in 1946--dairy farm land, which ran all the way to where Enchanted Lake now sits. "We would see who could make a canoe that could get all the way to the mouth of the river. When we got too old for that, we began paddling out to Flat Island for surf sessions."

Kincaid still recalls the handful of summer cottages on Lanikai Beach, hanging with the cowboys who tended to the dairy farms at Campos Dairy (where Daiei now is), and surfing the shore-breaks at Kalama.

In 1986, Kincaid helped launch the Naholokai Sailing Canoe Race series, to revive and teach Hawaiian sailing techniques. That same year, nine sailing canoes lined the bay in Kailua, and the sight alone hooked Kincaid--who had recently returned from a decade on the Mainland--on spending the majority of his time sailing her waters. Since then, he has participated every year in the event, which occurs in 72-hour stints between April and October, and sails between all the major Islands before returning to Kailua.

"It teaches you a lot about the ocean. It teaches you more about yourself. The experience is a cleansing, of sorts," shares Kincaid, who was president of the Hawaiian Sailing Canoe Association for 18 years. "It’s a spiritual journey that can be fluid and graceful at 10 or 12 knots, or exciting at over 20 knots. Either way, Kailua is the greatest training ground for a sailor. It’s full of unadulterated, head-on trade winds. Anyone can paddle or sail downwind. But you have to learn to do both into the wind before you consider yourself any type of waterman."

"HSCA title chase gets extreme" story mentions Mike Kincaid, former Linfield football player

HSCA title chase gets extreme
By Cindy Luis
Honolulu Star - Bulletin
Sep 20, 2002.

Before the X Games, before ESPN, there were sailing canoes. The original Polynesian extreme sport has been around for more than a thousand years.

The modern version -- the -- has been around only since 1986. It's a cultural revival of ancient Hawaiian skills being put to the test at up to 14 knots on the open ocean.

Tomorrow, it's a test to see which crew will win the Kendall Pacific Challenge as well as the overall racing series title. Just five points separate first from third place and, for the first time in the history of the HSCA, an Oahu crew could win the championship.

Kauai's Marvin Otsuji, captain of the Kamakakoa, has 152 points after eight races this season. Chasing him are Mike Kincaid of Oahu (152 points) and Kauai's Sharky Aguilar (147).

"It's such an on-the-edge sport," said Kincaid, HSCA president. "We average 10-11 knots and, at 14 knots, we're really smoking. Looking back on some races, there's been times when we ask, 'What are we doing out here?'

"It's more than a hobby. We get to practice what our Hawaiian ancestors did, learn those skills and use them. It's more than just getting out and sailing. We pick up that cultural aspect as well. The thrill is in connecting all the dots."
The nine-race schedule includes five interisland races and four coastal competitions. Tomorrow's finale begins at noon and runs from Nawiliwili Harbor to Waimea, about 28 miles around the south shore of Kauai.

It's a relatively short course for the 15 six-person canoes entered, with the first finisher expected around 2:30 p.m. It's also a relatively easy run, compared to Na Holo Kai, the 8-hour-plus race across the Kauai Channel from Haleiwa to Nawiliwili.

"Saturday, it's anybody's race," said Kincaid. It doesn't favor the Kauai guys. The guy who steers the best will win. It will be a horse race."

Tui Tonga, captained by Jason Dameron of Kauai, won this event last year and also the July Na Holo Kai. With 37 points, he is not in contention for the overall title.
Neither is Terry Galpin, captain of the all-women's Moa E Ku, who has 75 points. In its distinctive shocking pink and blue canoe, it's the only women's crew to have done all five of the interisland channel races this season.

"I have had wahine mentors over the years, Laola Lake and Emily Godient, who were the first wahine captains in HSCA," said Galpin. "Their skills and knowledge have always pushed me to become better. The men have been very supportive, too. In the early years, it was Uncle Mike (Kincaid) and his nephew, Nakoa Prejean, who taught me the skills needed to be able to captain the canoe safely.

"As the steersman, my crew's lives are literally in my hands. This isn't a sport for the timid."

Monday, March 08, 2010

Who's the Linfield grad, famous for folding chair ritual at Wildcat men basketball games?


Olympia Beer commercial, May 5, 1981. Location shoot at a tavern in a Puget Sound mountanious area.

Who's the Linfield grad, famous for folding chair ritual at Wildcat men basketball games?

In this TV commercial his line is, "Can't do that."

When Ted Wilson was Linfield head men's basketball coach, the fame of this student (now grad) was at Wildcat hoops games in Riley Gym. Watching the game floor level, he sat in a metal folding chair in the corner near the South Forty. When he knew the game was in hand -- the 'Cats were going to win -- he'd fold the chair. It was -- thank you George Pasero -- akin to Coach Red Auerbach lighting up his famous cigar when the Boston Celtics had a game in hand.

Give up? He is Dennis "Den" Surles.

Trivia:

In the early 1950s, Den Surles' father, Leonard Allen "Len" Surles, and Theodore R. "Ted" Wilson were students at the University of Oregon and friends. Their initial friendship was when Len was a teacher and coach at Baker, Ore., High School and Ted had the same duties at La Grande, Ore. High School. Baker (now called Baker City) and La Grande are in eastern Oregon, about 45 miles apart. Back at the UO, Len and Ted each earned physcical education master of science degrees in 1952.

Len's thesis: "The contributions of a fundamental physical education course toward physical fitness."

Ted's thesis: "A study of the development of balance through certain controlled methods."

Friday, February 05, 2010

"The Streak" special section, Oct. 18, 2005, McMinnville N-R


In October* 2005, the McMinnville News-Register produced a special "The Streak" section about the Linfieldfootball team assuring its 50th consecutive winning season.
.............
Info at the N-R Website varies about the specific date of publication, Oct. 17 or Oct. 18, 2005.
............
Below are different parts of "The Streak" section. Each part is linked.
......

Friday, January 29, 2010

Positively influenced by Ad Rutschman


This story posted in January 2010. Updated March 2010.

There’s not enough room or time to list every former Linfield football player or former Linfield assistant football coach who served and was positively influenced by Ad Rutschman for the 24 years (1968-1991) head was the Wildcats’ head football coach. But, nonetheless, here are a few of them:





Mike Riley and Randy Mueller. In January 2010, bkfootball.com selected the first all-time All-Idaho Football All-Star team. Former Linfield assistant football coach Riley (born in Wallace, Idaho) was named the team’s head coach. Mueller, Linfield grad and former Wildcat quarterback (born in St. Maries, Idaho) is the team’s general manager. Riley is Oregon State University head football coach. Mueller is senior executive for the NFL San Diego Chargers.

Jay Locey. He was an assistant football coach (starting in 1983) at Linfield before becoming head football coach (1996-2006). He is now an assistant football coach at Oregon State University.









      Todd Spencer. He’s an assistant football coach at Georgia Tech and used to be at Navy. He was a Rutschman assistant working the offensive line while Spencer earned a M.A. degree in physical education from Linfield in 1981.









        Matt Cate. He was appointed by California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on May 16, 2008, as Secretary of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. A Linfield business administration grad, he was a National Scholar Athlete. He lettered in football for the Wildcats during the 1984, 1985, 1986 and 1987 seasons.
      Ed Langsdorf and his son Danny Langsdorf. Ed, now college scout for the NFL San Diego Chargers, was an assistant football coach before he succeeded Rutschman as head coach, serving the 1992-1995 seasons. Danny, now an Oregon State University assistant football coach, is a Linfield grad and played quarterback for the Wildcats, lettering in 1994 and 1995.

      The brothers Lopes, Lance and Steve. Lance is NFL Seattle Seahawks’ VP/General Counsel and business development. Steve is University of Southern California senior associate athletic director. Both lettered in football for Linfield, Lance is 1981-1982-1983 and 1984 and Steve in 1980, 1981, 1982 and 1983.


      Wes Suan. He is a Southern Methodist University assistant football coach. His football coaching background includes serving at the University of Hawaii and Linfield, where he lettered 1971, 1972,1973 and 1974. In addition to coaching football at Linfield, he also served as assistant athletic director.

      Reflecting, Ad Rutschman says, "Wonderful memories and wonderful people. At last count, about 120 or more became head coaches. I have no idea how many became assistatn coaches."

      Sunday, January 24, 2010

      Water Crew: 2009 Wisconsin Whitewater football trip

      When Linfield’s Wildcat football team traveled to Wisconsin to play the University of Wisconsin Whitewater in semifinals of the 2009 NCAA Division III football championship playoffs, Water Crew members John Schindelar and John O'Connor were part of the team’s traveling party.

      Schindelar told Scott Carnahan, Linfield athletic director, that traveling with the team to Whitewater “was the experience of a lifetime for us. It gave us an opportunity to get to know all the people associated with Linfield athletics.”

      Immediately prior to the trip, Schindelar said he and O’Connor had not missed a Linfield football game in the 2009 season and “there was no reason to miss” it. As with all road games during the season, Water Crew members pay their own way for airfare and lodging.

      UWW won the game, 27-17, played Saturday, Dec. 12, 2009, on artificial turf on a sunny and chilly day – with snow on the sidelines -- at its Perkins Stadium in Whitewater, Wisc. The following week, UWW won the 2009 NCAA DIII national football championship, beating Mount Union in the Stagg Bowl played in Salem, Va.

      In preparation for traveling, Schindelar and O’Connor consulted with Water Crew member Eric Lundeen, who has lived and gone to school in Wisconsin. The two Johns followed several of Lundeen’s recommendation including wearing long underwear.

      The team flew/from on a chartered flight from Portland International Airport to Dane County Regional Airport in Madison, Wisc. It was transported in Wisconsin via chartered buses from Van Galder Bus Co. of Janesville, Wisc. The team stayed at a motel in Janesville, which is located about 20 miles from Whitewater and about 40 miles from Madison. The team left Portland on Dec. 10 and returned to Portland on Dec. 12.

      Itinerary for the team included practicing in the University of Wisconsin Madison’s Dave McClain (indoor) Athletic Facility on the UW Madison’s campus in Madison, Wisc.

      All photos here, except for exterior to the Dave McCain facility were provided by Schindelar. Photo ID (from top to bottom):

      • Linfield Water Crew’s John O’Connor (left) and John Schindelar posing at Perkins Stadium on Friday, Dec. 11, 2009, while Linfield football team did a “walk through” on the field.

      • Linfield football team on the field, before kickoff, on game day, Saturday, Dec.12, 2009.

      • UW Whitewater Perkins Stadium on game day.

      • Linfield head athletic trainer Tara Lepp, Brandy Mailer, athletic trainer and John O’Connor of the Linfield Water Crew pose at Perkins Stadium prior to start of the game on game day.

      • Ryan Carlson, Linfield football video guru, former Linfield football player, creator and coordinator of catdomealumni.com outside one of the Linfield team’s chartered buses taken after the game.

      • Linfield head athletic trainer Tara Lepp, and Brandy Mailer, athletic trainer, in the team’s Perkins Stadium locker room on Friday, Dec. 11.

      • University of Wisconsin Madison's Dave McCain facility.

      Tuesday, January 05, 2010

      Purple not standing alone as a Linfield color


      While purple is a dominant color these days for Linfield College athletics, the college and athletic team colors are cardinal and purple.

      A “few” years ago, Linfield’s football teams home purple jerseys were the one or one of the few Wildcat teams displaying the color. Other teams showed more cardinal than (if any) purple. For that matter, the Linfield baseball hat was cardinal and blue.

      • “Cardinal L” is (was?) the name of the Linfield club for athletic letter winners in all sports.
      • "Cardinal Circle" is (was?) a senior men’s honorary comprised of varsity letter winners of all sports.



      Why? Because Linfield athletic letters are (were?) cardinal in color.

      Shown here are examples of cardinal (and some purple, too) in relation to Linfield athletics. From a Linfield 1970 grad, who completed in athletics while a student between 1966-1970 is a first-year letter winner jacket; a second-year (and subsequent) letter winner jacket (note cardinal letter on blue); part of a senior letter winner blanket; a current vintage coat designed/owned by Linfield football fans, a decal and pennant from the Linfield bookstore; a Linfield diploma (purple cover with cardinal and purple inside); a current “vintage” purple Linfield water bottle


      See Linfield Athletics Website’s Traditions section and read about
      “Cardinal and Purple” and “Why the Wildcats?”


      “Purple is the Color”

      Purple is the Color
      Football is the game
      Were the Linfield Wildcats
      and winning is our aim
      So let’ give all of the ‘Cats a cheer
      For the Linfield Wildcats will be here
      So let’ give all of the ‘Cats a cheer
      For the Linfield Wildcats will be here

      *With apologies to the Portland Timbers’ “Green is the Color,” a version of “Blue Is the Colour,”a song associated with professional soccer’s Chelsea Football Club in England.
































































































































































































      Wednesday, December 30, 2009

      Machida returns to Linfield College

      Photo of Linfield 1984 football team added by Wildcatville in 2009

      By RODNEY S. YAP, Staff Writer
      Maui News, December 18, 2004

      WAILUKU–Keith Machida took a trip down memory lane last month when he returned to McMinnville, Ore.

      Machida was one of more than 40 players and coaches from the 1984 Linfield College national championship football team that returned to campus on Nov. 13 to be inducted into the Linfield Athletics Hall of Fame.

      For many of the team members, the reunion was a chance to see one another for the first time since the Wildcats’ season 20 years ago.

      Linfield had to overcome seemingly insurmountable odds to capture the NAIA Division II national crown that year, and Machida remembers it well.

      “We were trailing 22-0 in the third quarter,’’ the 1980 Maui High School graduate said Friday. “We were playing Northwestern of Iowa for the title at McMinnville High School because the field we usually play on was torn up from the rain and mud. We scored 33 points and won 33-22.’’

      It was memories of that game and other highlights from that season that got plenty of the former players fired up.

      “We shared a lot of stories,’’ Machida said. “We actually drove down to the field and kicked a field goal. That was the first score we made and everybody thought we were crazy to kick a field goal. Then we got a turnover and scored again and went for two and got that.’’

      Machida recalls the Wildcats’ first touchdown because it was a 1-yard pass to him from quarterback David Lindley.

      “We ran the same play for the two-point conversion,’’ said Ma-chida, who hauled in that pass, too.

      Hall of Fame week at Linfield coincided with the Wildcats’ regular-season finale. Linfield nailed down its fifth consecutive Northwest Conference championship with a 48-14 defeat of Willamette.

      Currently ranked No. 2 and in the championship game of the NCAA Division III tournament, Linfield is led by quarterback Brett Elliott, who set the school single-season yardage record with 4,313 yards, surpassing the record of 3,084 set last season by All-American Tyler Matthews.
      Elliott has also thrown more touchdown passes (59) in one season than any quarterback in the history of college football.

      The Wildcats will take on Mary Hardin-Baylor today in Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl XXXII in Salem, Va.

      Freshman Ryan Ishizu, a former Maui High running back, is on the team’s roster, but Machida said Ishizu will not be one of the 53 players who suits up for Linfield in today’s game.

      The current Linfield team has 11 former Hawaii prep players on the roster, including four from Kamehameha Oahu and two each from Hawaii Preparatory Academy and Radford.

      Machida said the 1984 team had its share of Hawaii players, including two offensive tackles and a guard. Machida was the tight end who garnered second team all-league honors.

      “I always played tight end,’’ said Machida, who remembered a simpler game. “I remember when I was there, they just gave us a hook – to hang your stuff on. And if you were really special, they would give you a cardboard box to put your stuff in. Back then we didn’t play on FieldTurf, we played in the rain and the wind.’’

      Machida keeps up with this team and sees some differences between this year’s squad and the teams from his day.
      “I listen to the games on the Internet and this is a very good Linfield team,’’ Machida said. “We ran out of the slot formation back then and operated out of the spread formation and threw the ball much more.’’

      Hawaii talent helps Linfield football

      Article includes Wildcatville 2009 editing and photo addition

      Fullback Puni Ellis of Kailua helped Linfield's offense outscore
      opponents 650-256 this season. Photo by Kelly Bird, Linfield Sports Info


      Thursday, December 23, 2004

      Football players living the life at Linfield
      Hawaii talent has helped the school
      go 49 years without a losing season

      By Dennis Anderson
      Hawaii Grown Report

      Football legend Bill Walsh was talking with a small group of disciples at halftime of a game in California three years ago when he offered his opinion that "Linfield has the football program that every small college should aspire to emulate."

      Emulating the football program at the small Oregon college this year would include winning the NCAA Division III national championship, going 13-0 and extending college football's all-time, all-divisions record of consecutive winning seasons to 49 years.
      It was the fourth national championship for a program that has extensive Hawaii threads woven through its unparalleled run of success, from the first player from Hawaii to play at Linfield -- Al Wills in 1949 -- through this season's 10 players and two coaches.

      Fourteen players from Hawaii have earned All-America recognition at Linfield; 27 have been all-conference.

      In the 1970s and '80s, a typical Linfield roster included more than 20 players from Hawaii.
      Current offensive line coach Doug Hire (Pearl City '83) was an offensive guard on the 1984 and 1986 NAIA championship teams and was a first team NAIA All-American in 1986.

      Coach Doug Hire. Wildcatville photo

      Hire noted that former coach Ad Rutschman, who was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame after 24 winning seasons and three national championships at Linfield, said that "evaluating position by position, the best players he coached were from Hawaii."

      Hire's explanation is that, "It's part of the upbringing, the way we play in Hawaii, being very physical players."


      The most physical of the Hawaii players at Linfield this season was junior defensive end Brandon Tom (Kamehameha '02 of Kailua).

      Tom is a two-time All-Northwest Conference selection and got a lot of attention on ESPN2 last Saturday for his big plays in Linfield's 28-21 victory over Mary Hardin-Baylor of Texas for the NCAA III championship in the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl in Salem, Va.

      Tom made eight tackles, including sharing a quarterback sack that ended the Texas team's last bid for a game-turning score at the Linfield 19 late in the fourth quarter.

      "He has it all," Hire says. "He's explosive, a dangerous pass rusher with power moves and quick moves. He's tall (6-2) and physical (225 pounds).

      Tom led Linfield's defensive linemen in tackles for the season with 53 in 13 games, including 4 sacks and 5.5 others for losses.

      The other Hawaii players who got into the national championship game were senior fullback Puni Ellis (Kamehameha '00 of Kailua), sophomore defensive end Nik Soo (Kamehameha '03 of Kamuela), and redshirt freshman special teams stalwart Keone Tawata (Radford '03)

      In the coaching box with Hire was graduate assistant Daryl Agpalsa (Kamehameha '98 of Waikele), who made a small-college grand slam -- first-team offensive guard on four All-America teams -- in his senior season of 2002.

      Ellis was the starting fullback in a passing offense that seldom used a fullback. He only carried the ball 14 times the last two years, but he scored five touchdowns and blocked for many others.
      "He was our MVP Diamond-in-the-Rough utility player," Hire said. Ellis also played wide receiver, linebacker and special teams during his five-year Linfield career.

      Soo often started as the opposite defensive end from Tom. "He's got a motor, he does not stop,"

      Hire said. "Nik made huge gains from his freshman year and will be a phenomenal player."

      Soo was in on 45 tackles, including 5.5 for losses.

      Tawata blocked three kicks during the season. "He is fast, physical and crazy -- an impact player on all special teams," Hire said.

      Also on the postseason roster was redshirt freshman wide receiver Josh Vierra (Kamehameha '03 of Kahalu'u).

      The other players from Hawaii on Linfield's regular-season roster were:

      Freshman cornerback Chris Thorpe (Radford '03); redshirt freshman, second-team linebacker Kevin Kauweloa (Waianae '03), redshirt freshman, scout-team wide receiver Brad Lau (Hawaii Prep '03 of Kamuela); physical freshman fullback Ryan Ishizu (Maui '04 of Pukalani), and redshirt freshman back-up punter/kicker Stan Fisher (Punahou '03 of Kailua).

      "If you want to experience our winning tradition and get a great education, this is the place to come," pitched Hire, who is in Hawaii to visit his parents and recruit.

      Ellis, the only senior among the current Hawaii ohana, said Linfield has been a perfect fit for him.
      "I always wanted to go to a small college," he said. "You don't feel that ohana-ness at a big school.

      "I grew to be a better person here."

      Linfield's Hawaii connection blossomed under 13-year coach Paul Durham.

      When Durham brought his Linfield team to Honolulu in 1967 and beat University of Hawaii 15-13, UH was so impressed that they hired him as athletic director. He served seven years. (Durham, 91, currently resides in Waikiki and still attends every UH football, volleyball and basketball game, and plays golf once a week.)

      One of Durham's first Hawaii recruits and Linfield's first All-American from Hawaii (in 1961) was Hugh Yoshida, who served as athletic director at UH from 1993 to 2002.

      Former UH football coach Fred vonAppen also was an all-star at Linfield ... but that is another story.

      Linfield's Hawaii All-Americans

      Football players from Hawaii who have been selected All-American while playing for Linfield College (with their high schools in parentheses):

      1961: Hugh Yoshida (Iolani), linebacker
      1964: Tony Ah Yat (Kamehameha), end
      1972-73: Bernie Peterson (Kalani), tight end
      1977: Pat Silva (McKinley), quarterback
      1978: Paul Dombroski (Leilehua), defensive back
      1980: Ed Kama (McKinley), offensive tackle
      1984-85: Keith Machida (Maui), tight end
      1986: Doug Hire (Pearl City), offensive guard
      1986: Jody Tyrell (Moanalua), linebacker
      1988: Chris Kelly (Moanalua), defensive end
      1991: Shaun Aguano (Kapaa), running back
      1992-93: Julian Tyrell (Moanalua), linebacker
      1993: Kahale Huddleston (Baldwin), defensive end
      2002: Daryl Agpalsa* (Kamehameha), offensive guard
      * First team on four All-America teams

      Players from Hawaii who have earned all-conference honors:

      Al Wills (Saint Louis), tackle, 1950, '52
      Rogers Ishizu (Maui), halfback, 1967
      Marco Min (Waipahu), quarterback, 1974
      Billy Yamamoto (Kalani), safety, 1977
      Jose Guevara (Moanalua), offensive tackle, 1985
      Aundre Pace (Radford), tailback, 1987
      Tony Pang-Kee (Castle), defensive back, 1987-88
      Peter Ranta (Kalaheo), safety, 1988
      John Santiago (Damien), punt returner, 1991

      Wednesday, December 23, 2009

      When was the last tie in Linfield varsity football history?


      The NCAA football rules committee, meeting February 1996 in Kansas City, Mo., voted to require a tiebreaker in all college football games. Instead of a game ending in a tie, an overtime tiebreaker system was adopted.

      What was the last tie football game in Linfield varsity football history?

      The score was 20-20 on Sept. 18, 1993, in Tacoma: Linfield vs. Pacific Lutheran.

      It was Linfield’s first game of the season, not counting the Wildcats’ season-opening 34-14 win over its alumni. Both Linfield, coached by Ed Langsdorf, and PLU, coached by Frosty Westering, were in the NAIA.

      A story in the Sept. 19, 1993, Seattle Times said, “A 1-yard touchdown run and 2-point conversion with 1 second remaining lifted fifth-ranked Pacific Lutheran to a miraculous 20-20 tie with second-ranked Linfield at the Tacoma Dome last night.”

      Tuesday, December 22, 2009

      Linfield will play 802nd game to start 2010 football season

      Since Linfield College began playing football in 1896, the Linfield Wildcats have played 801 games.

      When the Wildcats open the 2010 season on Sept. 11 at California Lutheran, it will be their 802nd game during what will be Linfield’s 96th season playing football. During those seasons -- the years 1896-2009 -- Linfield has won 524 games, lost 246 and tied 31 for a .674 winning percentage.

      Linfield’s 2010 regular season football schedule:

      September - 11 at Cal Luth, 25 at La Verne.

      October -
      2 vs. Willamette, 9 at UPS, 16 vs. Pacific (Homecoming), 23 at PLU, 30 vs. Menlo.

      November - 6 vs. Whitworth (Hall of Fame Game), 13 at L&C.

      Sources:
      Linfield 1
      Linfield 2

      For your information:
      Penn football makes NCAA history with 1,300th game

      When the University of Pennsylvania football team beat the BrownUniversity Bears 14-7 in overtime on Oct. 31, 2009, in Providence,R.I., it marked the Penn Quakers' 1,300th game, the most in NCAA history at any level. Penn began playing football in 1876. The 2009 season was Penn's 133rd playing football. Penn is located in Philadelphia.

      Source:

      Saturday, December 12, 2009

      Webcast: Linfield @ UW Whitewater 12/12/09







      Posted on Sat, Dec. 12, 2009
      Wis-Whitewater tops Linfield 27-17 in Div III semi

      The Associated Press

      Jeff Donovan completed 17 of 26 passes for 276 yards and a touchdown to lead Wisconsin-Whitewater to a 27-17 victory over Linfield in the Division III semifinals. The Warhawks (14-0) advanced to their fifth consecutive Stagg Bowl appearance, where they'll face undefeated Mount Union in the final next Saturday in Salem, Va. The Warhawks went up 20-17 on Jordan Wells' 68-yard reception and a one-yard run by Antwan Anderson. Levell Coppage added a 40-yard touchdown run for Wisconsin-Whitewater with 1:05 to play. Linfield fell to 12-1.

      Friday, December 11, 2009

      Wildcats thrive on a tradition of winning













      12/10/2009

      Little Oregon college thrives on winning tradition

      McMINNVILLE, Ore. (AP) --- There's a hand-painted sign above the entrance to the Linfield Wildcats' locker room at Maxwell Field that reads: "Are you a better football player today than you were yesterday?''

      It's a reminder of a message players there have been taking to heart for decades, since the Division III team embarked on its streak of winning seasons in 1956.

      That 54-season streak is the longest in the nation among NCAA schools of all divisions - far surpassing Florida State's current run of 33straight winning seasons. However, the Seminoles are cutting it close at 6-6 this season, facing West Virginia in the Gator Bowl on Jan. 1.

      Linfield is a private university of some 2,100 students in the heart of McMinnville, located about 35 miles southwest of Portland, in Oregon's Willamette Valley wine country. The town is known as the birthplace of children's author Beverly Cleary, and for a famous UFO sighting in the 1950s that spawned a yearly festival there.

      In many ways Linfield looks like a small East Coast college plunked down in the West, complete with red-brick colonial dormitories and a bell tower that chimes on the hour.

      Football Saturdays during the fall are all about the Wildcats.Purple-clad fans dot the town's main streets before games and cars proudly display their Wildcat flags. The atmosphere harkens back to a simpler time.

      "Linfield is Linfield, I think, because of that winning tradition,''said former quarterback and current assistant coach Brett Elliott."Every year we continue that tradition, the streak that we're on, it fuels the fire, so to speak.''

      The Wildcat mystique was born under Paul Durham, who coached the team from 1948-67, and then continued by coach Ad Rutschman, head coach from 1967-91.

      Rutschman also served as the baseball coach for 13 seasons and the school's athletic director for 25 years, and currently works as an assistant to coach Joseph Smith. Rutschman is the only college coach at any level to have won national titles in both football and baseball.

      He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1998.

      "Much of the success I think stems from Ad Rutschman. Ad was a great coach. I would liken him to a John Wooden-type of coach, he was such a great teacher,'' said Oregon State assistant coach Jay Locey, who coached the Wildcats from 1996 to 2006 and led the team to its last national championship in 2004.


      "It is about the development of people first,'' Locey said. "The winning is the byproduct.''

      This season the Wildcats are in the postseason for the 21st time in school history. They won three NAIA Div. II national championships, in1982, 1984 and 1986, before joining Div. III 12 years ago.


      The current Wildcats were unranked going into the season, and for the first time in nearly a decade, they weren't even expected to finish atop the Northwest Conference.

      But Linfield, 6-3 last season, has kept winning all the way through last weekend's Div. III quarterfinals against St. Thomas of Minnesota.

      The Wildcats (12-0) visit Wisconsin-Whitewater (13-0) in the semifinals on Saturday. Wesley (13-0) is at Mount Union (13-0) in the other semifinal.

      The winners will go to the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowl, the division's championship, in Salem, Va., the following weekend.


      Elliott led the Wildcats to the championship in 2004. The Utah transfer was known for throwing an NCAA all-division record 61 TD passes his junior year.

      "It sounds like a cliche, but this really is a family,'' Elliott said."Every time I come back here, from the NFL, from the Arena League, it feels like home. It feels comfortable. It feels right.''
      Locey said the streak has taken on a life of its own at Linfield.

      "The neat thing is that you do have a sense of duty,'' Locey said."You didn't want to be a player or coach on the team that was there when the streak ended.''


      This season's quarterback, Aaron Boehme, said his team wanted to put an individual stamp on the Wildcats' legacy. So far they have,surpassing expectations and going undefeated.

      "Because we had those really good runs before my freshman year ... we tried to get away from that,'' Boehme said. "Not get away from the tradition, but to focus on ourselves and not rest on those laurels.''




      Associated Press story. Wildcatville photo.

      Tuesday, December 01, 2009

      Vote for Linfield Coach Joe Smith as Liberty Mutual ‘Coach of the Year’

      Thanks to Debbie Harmon (dharmon@linfield.edu), Linfield alumni director, the following information as of 12/1/09

      Liberty Mutual has a contest for football 'Coach of the Year' at each NCAA division level.

      The top 15 coaches will be considered in the evaluation phase.

      One football coach from each NCAA division will be honored with the Liberty Mutual Coach of the Year Trophy, $50,000 for the charity of his choice, and a $20,000 scholarship endowment for his school’s alumni association.

      Joe Smith, Linfield head football coach, is currently ranked #15. Please help keep him in the top 15.

      Contest ends Dec. 6, 2009. You can vote once per day at http://www.coachoftheyear.com

      Wildcatville photo info: Coach Joe Smith (left) leaves Wildcat huddle during Nov. 28, 2009, UMHB game on Maxwell Field.

      Sunday, November 22, 2009

      Oregon State University football team has some Linfield cardinal and purple


      Mike Riley, former Linfield assistant


      Jay Locey, former Linfield head and assistant coach

      Danny Langsdorf, Linfield grad and former Linfield player
      Ron Callan, Linfield grad


      This story was posted Nov. 22, 2009. If you are interested in it, see this Dec. 23, 2009,
      story in the McMinnville N-R: "The Man Behind the Numbers."


      When you look at the Oregon State University 2009 football team you, of course, see the OSU orange and black-clad Beavers. But, look closer and you can see some Linfield cardinal and purple, too.

      OSU head coach Mike Riley and assistant head coach Jay Locey are former Linfield assistant football coaches. In addition, Locey is a former Linfield head football coach.

      Oregon State assistant football coach Danny Langsdorf is a Linfield grad and former Linfield football player. His father, Ed Langsdorf, is a former Linfield head and assistant football coach.

      On the OSU sidelines during Beaver football games is Linfield grad Ron Callan, sideline reporter for the Oregon State football radio network. He's sports director of Portland's KPAM Radio.

      All photos taken by Wildcatville during the OSU at Washington State University football game on Nov. 21, 2009, except Langsdorf, from an Oregonian blog posted June 27, 2008.

      Wednesday, October 28, 2009

      Speaking of the pay telephone in Hay, Washington, etc.


      My two cents – Where does the Man of Steel go now?
      October 28, 2010by Joe SmillieWhitman County Gazette
      Colfax, Wash.

      Poor Superman, he would never have a chance today.

      A world in which every man, woman and child has a cell phone attached to their hip or slung in their pocket leaves no place for the man of steel.

      The pervasiveness of cell phones has rendered coin phone booths relics. That leaves Krypton’s favorite son stuck when latter-day Lex Luthors take their toll on poor civilians.

      The privacy of four green glass walls once provided the Man of Steel the perfect forum for discreetly metamorphosing from Clark Kent’s suit and tie to Superman’s tights and cape.

      Envision his troubles now.

      A grown man, tucked behind a back alley dumpster, pulling off his pants with one hand while covering the private regions of Krypton with a smart phone in the other hand is hardly the persona a superhero wants to put out.

      “Now with cell phones, people don’t use them as much,” said Dallas Filan, general manager of Pioneer Telephone at LaCrosse.

      Pioneer has five pay phones placed throughout west Whitman County, but Filan said use of those phones has steadily dropped over the past decade.

      Whitman County’s government last week approved a budget amendment that accounted for a drastic drop in revenue from the pay phone in the Public Service Building. Maribeth Becker, clerk for the county commissioners, said the county as recently as last year received more than $2,000 from the pay phone.

      Through September of this year, however, the pay phone had earned the county just over $10, bumping the estimate of this year’s proceeds down to $15.

      “It just stopped,” said Becker. “It costs us $55 a month to keep that phone there. If we’re only making 10, 15, dollars, what’s the point of having it there?”

      Revenue from the county’s classic style pay phone at the front entrance to the courthouse seems to be holding its own.

      Because of that drop, many phone companies, both global and local, have begun to shed their stock of pay phones, either abandoning them or taking them out altogether.

      Statistics from the Federal Communications Commission show the number of pay phones in the U.S. dropped from two million in 1997 to one million ten years later.

      Meanwhile, cell phone ownership jumped from 90.6 million in 2000 to 217.4 million in 2007.

      Shrinking usage no longer can support the costs of keeping up Mr. Clark Kent’s wardrobes.

      “It just got to be more trouble than it was worth,” said Donna Loomis of St. John Telephone.

      St. John Telephone had four pay phones located around its area until about a decade ago.

      Phone booths are quite the attractive target for ne’er-do-wells.

      Temptation to break glass panes with rocks, to wedge gum into coinslots or to use the booths as a makeshift rest stop made maintenance a hassle.

      That was the reason St. John Telephone pulled its pay phone from the school.

      Even the coin-op phone in front of St. John Telephone’s Front Street office was beset by savages before its removal late last century.

      Loomis said phone company repairmen were constantly fighting a battle to keep the heavy, armored cords in the phone. Regularly they would show up for work only to find the receiver completely disconnected from the base.

      So, the company replaced it with a normal chord, and never had to maintain it again.

      And if maintaining five telephone pitstops is a hassle, imagine the problem of keeping up thousands throughout the country.

      Verizon no longer installs traditional phone booths, preferring pedestal-style, pay phone kiosks that take up less space and are easier to maintain.

      The kiosks also meet national standards for accessibility by the disabled, said Verizon spokeswoman Sharon Shaffer.

      Designing larger phone booths wasn’t a reasonable alternative because of the space they would take up – whether on sidewalks or in retail locations, she said.

      Fortunately, enough relics of a wired past remain posted that a quick drive could afford the Man of Tomorrow the privacy to swap garb.

      Pioneer Telephones are spotted at Central Ferry, Dusty, Endicott and LaCrosse.

      Perhaps the most aesthetically appropriate phone booth for the Metropolis Marvel would be the antique red rotary dial phone booth posted outside the old Hay Hardware Store.

      Filan said Pioneer receives regular calls from antique afficionados about the Hay pay phone. (See photo.)
      “That Hay phone’s in high demand,” he said.

      Another nod to historical design standards would be Inland Telephone Company’s green receiver-shaped public phone posted along the highway near the city park at Colton.

      While it establishes the phone booth motif, the half shell would still leave the last Kryptonian without full privacy on the busy thoroughfare.

      Unfortunately, all those options mean a long flight from Metropolis for the man of steel – and a longer wait for us poor humans in need.