Wednesday, November 18, 2020

Twins Bob (Linfield) & Bryan (L&C) Laycoe meet famous 'Singing Cowboy' Gene Autry in Boston


During his career as a professional ice hockey player, Hal Laycoe -- later to coach the Portland Buckaroos of the Western Hockey League -- played, 1950-1956, for the National Hockey League Boston Bruins. Their games were held in the Boston Garden. Other events held there included the Boston Garden Rodeo. At least one of those rodeos during Hal’s time in Boston featured Gene Autry, famous “Singing Cowboy” who starred in movie and TV westerns. In 1953-1954 Hal’s twin sons, Bob (later to attend/graduated from Linfield College and wrestle and play football for the Wildcats) and Bryan (later to attend/graduated from Lewis & Clark College and run track for the Pioneers) met Mr. Autry. The Laycoe brothers were about six or seven years old when this photo was taken.

The Laycoe twins, Bryan and Robert, were born Oct 9, 1947, in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.


Tuesday, November 17, 2020

Years later, Gene Forman still admired by those who coached (Roseburg N-R 11/11/2020)






Years later, Gene Forman still admired by those who coached

By Jon Mitchell, Roseburg, Oregon, News-Review Sept 11, 2020

(Photos by Jon Mitchell of Roseburg N-R and Linfield College Sports Info)

Gene Forman has some extra time on his hands these days.

The 76-year-old, who has been retired from teaching and coaching for the past several years, loves reading. He admits he’s lost count of all of the books he’s read, nor can he pinpoint a favorite author.

It’s enough of a pastime for the former football, basketball and track and field coach that he’s plotted out a place at his Keizer residence to jump into books for hours on end. It’s a table with a shade umbrella outside of Bonaventure at Keizer Station, an assisted-living facility that sits a deep post pattern from Interstate 5 and Keizer Station shopping center.

He joked with residents as they passed by on their afternoon walks as some of the staffers came by regularly to check on him. Forman, being the man he is, often tries to return the favor or, at the least, offer to.

“You’re going to be busy, right?” Forman said to a staffer, one of dozens adhering to the face-covering mandate Oregon Gov. Kate Brown implemented back in August to help curtail the spread of the new coronavirus. “Let me know if you need any help.”

Forman, who was the head football coach at Riddle and Days Creek for a combined 33 years (19 at Riddle, 14 at Days Creek) has been bound to a wheelchair for much of his life. He broke his neck in 1966 in an automobile accident while he was a football player at Linfield College in McMinnville.

The crash not only ended his playing career after he earned NAIA All-American honors in football, but it severed his prospects of playing football professionally. The 6-foot-4, 260-pound lineman was a three-time letterman and was getting looks from the NFL’s Dallas Cowboys, who Forman said held their preseason workouts at Linfield at the time.

He eventually regained some movement below the waist, giving him enough independence to drive a car and move around independently with minimal help. Forman said doctors, however, recommended he transition from a manual, folding wheelchair to a power wheelchair as early as 15 years ago — a move he said he’d rejected for some time since he always wanted to retain his upper-body strength.

That changed five years ago after Forman’s retirement and he and his wife, Jackie, purchased a house in Dallas west of Salem. Doctors had to amputate Forman’s left leg from the knee down after an infection was found on his foot, and Forman’s age and decreased mobility prompted his move to the assisted living facility in Keizer, where he could receive around-the-clock care and medical attention.

He might be delving into more books this fall and winter. Being close to sports, or at least paying attention to them, had been one of Forman’s primary sources of entertainment.

Kelly Bird, the sports information director at Linfield, said Forman attends nearly all the Wildcats’ home football games. Forman also attended the last state championship baseball games played at Volcanoes Stadium in 2019, but he wasn’t able to this year after the Oregon School Activities Association pulled the plug on prep sports due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Instead, he has countless amounts of former coaches, players and teachers who check in on him often. He also has favorite memories of players, coaches and games from when he was on the sideline — among them being when he guided Riddle to the 1981 Class A state championship football game. Another was in 1996 when he guided Days Creek to the eight-man football state title game, which came two years after the Wolves went 0-9 in his first season at the helm.

Ron Dunn, who was at the beginning of a longtime stint as Days Creek’s athletic director, still remembers the conversation he had with members of the hiring committee in 1994 concerning talks of hiring Forman, whose final season at Riddle came in 1991.

“There was some concern over his approach (at Riddle),” Dunn said. “He’s pretty old school, and there was some talk about how he was too tough on kids and too strict.

“I chimed in at that point and asked, ‘Here’s what I need to know. Can the guy coach football?’” Dunn continued. “Everyone agreed that he could. Now, I can honestly say that’s probably one of the best coaching hires I ever made, and ... I think he changed the way he approached things when he came in. And there was a big difference. That first year he was there, that team didn’t play like an 0-9 team.”

Years later after he’d finished serving as a head coach, he showed he could make great teams even better — even state championship teams. Eli Wolfe, the former head football coach at Camas Valley, convinced Forman to come on as an assistant coach the year after the Hornets in 2011 won the first of two consecutive state titles.

“We always took an approach of flying to the ball, being aggressive and outhustling everyone on the field,” Wolfe said. “With Gene, it was more than that. He had a step-by-step approach. Step one, you do this. Step two, you do this.

“He helped improve the technique with our kids and helped them get to even another level.”

Yet even today, Forman can still maintain a humble persona while mixing some sarcasm in.

When asked if he misses coaching, Forman replied: “Yeah, a little. If there was one sport I could go back to coaching it would be basketball. That way you’re always in the gym and your wheels don’t get all muddy.”

When asked if he has any regrets: “Not at all. I’m sure all the parents of all of the kids we coached agreed with absolutely everything we did.”

It was his coaching, however, that inspired his college alma mater — he graduated from Linfield in 1967 — to create the Gene Forman Inspiration Award, which is given to a current or former student athlete who has demonstrated the ability to persevere in the face of extreme adversity.

In 2015, Forman was the first recipient of the award named for him. Regardless, he looks on with humility in spite of the stellar accomplishments many of his former students, and student-athletes, have had.

“It’s been nice to be able to stay in touch with so many people over time,” he said. “Some of them managed to be pretty successful, even if I was the one coaching them.”

 ::

Gene Foreman

Age: 76

Family: Jackie, wife of 30-plus years

High school: Toledo High School, Toledo, Washington

College: Linfield College, McMinnville

Current profession: Retired. Was the head football coach at Riddle and Days Creek high schools, where he was also a teacher.

High school highlights: Compiled 180-140 overall record in 33 years as a head football coach, including 19 years at Riddle (101-83) and 14 years at Days Creek (79-57). Led each team Led Riddle to 1981 Class A state championship game. Led Days Creek to 1996 state title game two seasons after Wolves finished 0-9. ... Also coached basketball at Riddle and served as head track and field coach at Days Creek, coaching multiple state champions. ... In 2015, he was honored by Linfield College when the institution began the Gene Forman Inspiration Award, which is given to a current or former student-athlete or coach who demonstrates profound perseverance in the face of adversity.

Current place of residence: Keizer, Oregon.


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POSTSCRIPT FROM WILDCATVILLE:

--Wildcatville guesses that the NFL Dallas Cowboys did not have preseason workouts at Linfield College in McMinnville.

It’s likely Cowboys’ Gil Brandt (Cowboys VP player personnel, 1960-1988, he ran the Dallas scouting department) or his representative came to Linfield during Wildcat football preseason and ran some Linfield players through workouts on Maxwell Field ... timed them, etc. Bet Linfield players Gene Forman, a tackle, was “worked out” and Ed Griffin, a fullback, too.

=Ed did not make the Cowboys team. An Associated Press story in the Tue. July 16, 1968, Oregonian reported that “Ed Griffin, ex-Linfield star, was among the 12 free agents cut from the squad Monday as the Dallas Cowboys stepped up training (on the California Lutheran College campus in Thousand Oaks, Calif.)”

=“In 1954, 1955 and 1958, the NFL's New York (Football) Giants held their training camp at McCulloch Stadium in Salem, and in those six weeks each season became part of the community. The players spent their nights at Baxter Hall on the Willamette University campus and their days at the athletics fields in Bush's Pasture Park.”

=“The Dallas Cowboys, Pittsburgh Steelers and Cleveland Browns used Pacific University facilities (in Forest Grove) for (NFL) football training camps in the late 1950s to early 1960s.”





Monday, November 16, 2020

LAYCOE NAME HAS CERTAIN (HOCKEY) RING(S) TO IT!









LAYCOE
NAME HAS CERTAIN (HOCKEY) RING(S) TO IT!

The posting …

SPEAKING OF ICE HOCKEY, HAL and BOB LAYCOE

http://wildcatville.blogspot.com/2020/11/speaking-of-ice-hockey-hal-and-bob.html

… brought a response to Wildcatville from Bryan Laycoe, identical twin brother of Bob Laycoe.

Bryan said the 1960s were “very special for the Laycoes in Oregon.”

One example of its “specialness” was the Portland Buckaroos, coached by their father, Hal Laycoe. His team won the 1961 Lester Patrick Cup, symbolic of being champion of the Western Hockey League (WHL). The Bucks accomplished that feat in their first season, 1960-1961. And, they did it again winning the 1965 cup in the 19645-1965 season. (The Bucks won the 1971 Cup during the 1970-1971 season, but Hal was in the NHL by then.)

An online source says after Portland, Hal moved to the National Hockey League (NHL),coaching the Los Angeles Kings for part of one season and then moving on to the expansion Vancouver Canucks for two more seasons. He later coached the Dutch national team in the 1977 B Pool World Championships. …His final position in hockey was as a scout with the New York Islanders. He received (four) Stanley Cup rings from the Islanders, 1980 to 1984.

--Like Bob, Bryan graduated from Portland’s Cleveland High School. Unlike Bob (Linfield Class of 1968), Bryan graduated from Lewis & Clark College.

--Bob played football/wrestled at Linfield. Bryan ran track for L&C. Bob (retired coach and athletic administrator) and Suzanne Laycoe live in Kaleden in British Columbia’s South Okanagan.

--Bryan, a retired medical doctor (orthopedic surgeon, OHSU School of Medicine grad), and Diane Laycoe live in Ridgefield, Wash., near Vancouver, Wash.

PHOTOS:

-- Hal’s 1965 Lester Patrick Cup ring, Portland Buckaroos, Western Hockey League.

-- Hal’s 1980 Stanley Cup ring, New York Islanders, National Hockey League. Hal told family and friends it was a proud moment when Bill Torrey, Islander general manager, give him each of Hal’s four Stanley Cup rings.

--In 1981 in Vancouver, B.C., after a New York Islanders vs. Vancouver Canucks game Hal with Al Arbour, Islander coach, each wearing the 1980 Stanley Cup rings. Left to right in the photo, Bryan Laycoe, Jason Laycoe (son of Bryan), Al Arbour, David Laycoe (son of Bob), Bob Laycoe and Hal Laycoe.

-- Bob and Bryan’s sister, Rhonda Laycoe, was Rose Festival princess from Portland’s Cleveland High School in 1971. While she finished up at Cleveland, she and Marjorie Laycoe, her mother/Hal’s wife, lived in Portland. Hal was living in Vancouver, B.C., while he coached the Vancouver Canucks of the NHL. This photo of Rhonda and her dad, Hal, shows them skating in Vancouver.

#


Sunday, November 15, 2020

'FIERCE' GENE FORMAN, LINFIELDER (Eugene R-G story from 1975)

'FIERCE' GENE FORMAN, LINFIELDER

Linfield grad, former Linfield football player Gene Forman (Linfield College Class of 1967) went on to teach and coach football in Riddle, Oregon. He was raised in Toledo, Washington. 

At 6-foot-4 and 250 pounds, he was “fierce,”  says a Facebook posting. 

In addition to playing football, he also was a baseball pitcher. Driving back to Linfield from a ball game in Portland in August, 1965, he fell asleep. His car, a VW “Bug” rolled and he became a paraplegic

Gene Forman doesn’t want to be an inspiration … he wants to be a coach. Eugene Register-Guard story by Blaine Newnham. Photos by Brian Lanker. Sun., Nov. 2, 1975. Story starts on page 1C and jumps to pages 2C and 3C.

https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=4pF9x-cDGsoC&dat=19751102&printsec=frontpage&hl=en

https://www.facebook.com/1584717861805234/photos/a.2753727954904213/2753733881570287/?type=3






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






 

 

SPEAKING OF ICE HOCKEY, HAL and BOB LAYCOE




SPEAKING OF ICE HOCKEY, HAL and BOB LAYCOE

First ever ice hockey match Tim Marsh (Linfield College Class of 1970) attended was as a Linfield student (1966-1970) in a group of Linfield students, men and women, watching the new Portland Buckaroos in Memorial Coliseum. Noise. Cow bells. Shots. Checking. (Says an online source: “Checking occurs when a defensive player crashes into the opponent who's handling the puck, leading with the hip or shoulder, and resulting in a violent collision.”)

And, yes, coach of the Buckaroos was Hal Laycoe, father of Linfielder Bob Laycoe (Linfield College Class of 1968), who played football and wrestled for the Linfield Wildcats.

Here’s photos of Hal Laycoe (wearing suit), Bob Laycoe (wearing polo shirt) and a new, but “vintage,” Buck sweatshirt.

Based on source: In 1960, Portland was granted a franchise in the minor league Western Hockey League/WHL for its newly built 10,500 seat Memorial Coliseum.” Playing in the “Glass Palace” (Coliseum nickname) were the Portland Buckaroos. The Bucks were composed mostly of players and coaches from the New Westminster (British Columbia, Canada) Royals, including its head coach Hal Laycoe. The Buckaroos went on to beat the Seattle Totems in the league championship and win the Lester Patrick Cup in its first season of existence. That 1960-1961 Buckaroos team was inducted into the Oregon Sports Hall of Fame in 1990.

Thursday, November 12, 2020

'Fortitude plays pivotal role during Linfield football regular season finales' by Rusty Rae in N-R 11/13/2020


Fortitude plays pivotal role during Linfield regular season finales

Coaches Rutschman, Smith reflect on memorable conference games

One in a special series of stories – ‘Linfield Football Remembrance of Games Past’ by Rusty Rae, McMinnville N-R/News-Register

N-R Friday, Nov, 13, 2020, print edition

Mental toughness – the glue that sustains championship teams. Nowhere is team fortitude more important than when the winds of November blow rain through practice sessions, disrupting dreams of December and the playoffs.

Linfield head football coach Joseph Smith believes the final week of practice for the final conference contest represents some of the toughest mental challenges for players.

“Having something to play for at the end of the season is the first challenge. We’ve always had a very good chance to make the playoffs, but when you don’t have hope, it’s difficult to stay sharp and motivated,” said Smith.

The switch to standard time becomes another challenge. Practices playout under the lights. Smith adds, “It’s cold, dark, raining — staying focused on our practice routine requires mental toughness and is a tremendous character builder.”

Even champions falter at times. Linfield’s 1983 squad, defending head coach Ad Rutschman’s first national title in football found a rough road towards the end of the season. The ‘Cats dropped the season opener against Southern Oregon, 38-29. Rebounding from that setback the Wildcats began a six-game win streak, including their 30-27 victory over arch-rival Pacific Lutheran on the Lutes’ home field in Puyallup, Washington.

Although ranked as high as seventh in the NAIA national poll, the Wildcats incurred a calamitous 26-21 loss to winless Willamette, on a muddy McCullough Field in Salem. Even with the loss Linfield still had a chance at the playoffs. All they needed was a win in their final game of the season. Tying the Lutes in the conference standings presumably earned the bid to the playoffs based on the win over PLU, with whom they would have been tied for the conference title.

But the Wildcats faltered on their home turf in the last game of the season, playing the Pirates to a 7-7 draw and erasing its opportunity to reach the playoffs. The Lutes wound up making a deep title run, losing the championship game, 25-21.

Notes Rutschman, “Sometimes success leads to complacency — we won the title in ’82, but stumbled in ’83. Won the national championship in ’84, but fell short the following year and then won the national championship again in 1986.”

During Rutschman’s tenure there were no lights at the field. At times, in order to finish a practice he’d relocate the team to a section of grass near Davis Street where there was a street light they could practice under.

At the time, Linfield’s grass field turned into a mud bog through the season’s play and practice. Some practice sessions became beyond difficult; Rutschman moved the practice sessions to the south end of the track.

“I don’t know if any of those things had any affect, but the synthetic turf and lights we have today are a difference-maker,” he said.

Times have changed at Linfield with addition of artificial turf and lights. However, some elements of practice remain, like the intrinsic bitterness of the last game of the conference season erasing any hopes of a playoff bid.

A pair of games against Western Washington in 1989 and 1990 is telling.

In 1989, Linfield fell to Western Washington University on the ‘Cats’ home field, 27-24. The following season, Linfield made the lengthy trip to Bellingham topping the Vikings, 27-21. However, in both cases, it marked the end of playing days for seniors as Linfield failed to make the playoffs.

Notes Smith, “It takes guys a bit of time to come down off the mountain top after their playing days are complete. They’ve spent four years perfecting their craft and when the last game is finished, win or lose – it’s a total change in identity for many.”

As a coach, Smith has experienced the flip side of the coin as well, though the final conference game of the 2014 season forever painted in the joy of cardinal red and purple and the black angst of despair.

Linfield, highly ranked early in the season, but was stung by the upset bug two weeks earlier. It dropped a 31-28 decision to Willamette University. Pacific University, which had reestablished its football program in 2010, played the ‘Cats to a near standstill the previous season, losing 28-22 in a contest not decided until the last two minutes as Linfield ran out the clock.

Played at the Catdome, Pacific entered the contest on a six-game win streak, knowing a win would knock Linfield from its perch as top ‘Cat of the Northwest conference. The Boxers, in their fifth year, and now with seasoned players with four years in the program, believed they were ready to take Linfield down a peg or two.

A win for Pacific would have given the Boxers the automatic Northwest Conference berth to the NCAA Division III playoffs, leaving the ‘Cats hoping for an at-large berth.

Recalls Smith, “We began the year as a top five team, but with the loss to Willamette had dropped out of the top 10 – but we were still a top five team.

“Pacific came into the game talking a lot of smack, and I think even the mayor of Forest Grove got into the act. It only served to motivate us that much more,” he said.

The Boxers brought their full complement of players from Forest Grove. Now in their fifth year of playing football (after a 19-year hiatus from the game), they’d be able to topple Linfield. Sometimes expectations exceed reality; at other times you’re stuck with reality and the Boxers received a sudden dose it, falling behind 21-0 in the first 12-minutes of the game, 31-0 at the half as Linfield lowered the boom in a 59-0 blowout victory. Though the two teams shared the conference title, Linfield earned the automatic bid to the playoffs based on the victory.

Linfield’s defense devoured the Boxers’ offense, giving the ‘Cat offense short fields most of the first half.

Quarterback Sam Riddle, who ran for 99 yards on the day, scored twice on short runs in the first 10 minutes of the game. Running back Spencer Payne, from McMinnville High School, rumbled in from 14 yards out at the 3:19 mark of the first. Payne would continue slicing through the Pacific defense for 107 yards.

Riddle recalls, “There was no love lost between the two teams. I scored early in the first quarter and was met by the Pacific safety; let’s just say polite words were not shared.”

Payne, who is back in McMinnville after playing in the German Football League 2, said Pacific had produced a hype video predicting a win for the Boxers and the unseating of Linfield. “We thought it was funny and just served to motivate us that much more.

“We were firing on all cylinders that day in all phases of the game. We, as a team, were used to playing with a target on our backs. We knew what we had to do and there was no way we were going to let the conference title slip out of our hands,” he said.

But the joy of decisive victory, a shared conference title and an automatic bid to the playoffs quickly turned to soul-crushing sorrow as the team learned teammate Parker Moore was stabbed to death Saturday evening at the local 7-Eleven.

“There was no joy that day. We went from euphoria of a great win to abject despondency and despair,” said Smith of the death of Moore.

Payne, who lived across the hall from Moore, said, “Parker was a close friend. He brought so much energy and motivation not only on the football field but to the whole campus. We don’t have enough Parkers on Earth these days.”

Riddle added, “I’ll never forget the phone call I received that night telling me what had happened to Parker. Sunday morning in the ICE Auditorium was just surreal. Our heads were down – we couldn’t look each other in the eye.”

Even today Riddle keeps the memory of his good friend alive, he says, by the way he lives, and by the way he treats his friends and business associates and in a more personal way, too.

“With Parker’s parents’ blessings, we named our daughter born this March, Parker Marie Riddle,” he said.

Sometimes, it seems, football is inconsequential. But the character built in the winds of November last a lifetime.

__

Correction: Last week, in a moment of total mental oversight, I swapped names between a motor-racing friend of mine from Ohio, Dave Little, and the Linfield quarterback, Dave White, at the helm of the ‘Cats for the Hawaii game.

It was Dave White who guided Linfield to that 8-1 record in 1970. White was an all-conference QB that glorious season. The following year, he was the glue that held the ‘Cats together through a rocky season in which they won four of their last five games, including a 24-14 final season victory over PLU to keep the streak alive. Sorry about that, Dave!



 

Sunday, November 08, 2020

Linfielder Al Wills is new head football coach at St. Louis High School in Honolulu.


AL WILLS, LINFIELD ATHLETICS HALL OF FAME MEMBER, Class of 1953, enshrined in 2004.

“Al Wills, who attended Linfield and served as line coach for the Wildcat football team two years after graduating has taken the head football coaching job at St. Louis High School in Honolulu. Wills already held the job as athletic director, so next year will hold down both positions.”… Information attributed to Paul Durham, Linfield athletic director, in “Northwest Round-Up” column by Clayton Hannon in March 28, 1960, Oregon Journal/March 29, 1960, Oregonian.

Link to his Hall of Fame bio:

https://golinfieldwildcats.com/honors/linfield-athletics-hall-of-fame/al-wills/67

Read more about Al Wills here:

https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/183321709/albert-a_-wills


'Sharon Shepherd, probably the greatest woman athlete to ever attend Linfield ...'

 

SHARON SHEPHERD, LINFIELD ATHLETICS HALL OF FAME MEMBER – Class of 1960, enshrined in 2001.

“Sharon Shepherd, probably the greatest woman athlete to ever attend Linfield, is working out daily as she gets ready for the Olympic games this summer. Sharon is doing weight lifting to help develop her shot putting. Sharon was on the United States track team which met the Russians in 1958 and 1959 and also represented the U.S. at the Pan American games last summer.”… Information attributed to Paul Durham, Linfield athletic director, in “Northwest Round-Up” column by Clayton Hannon in March 28, 1960, Oregon Journal/March 29, 1960, Oregonian.

Link to her Hall of Fame bio:

https://golinfieldwildcats.com/honors/linfield-athletics-hall-of-fame/sharon-shepherd/29

Photo of Sharon Shepherd from Salem Oregon Statesman, Oct. 18, 1958


Thursday, November 05, 2020

PAINFUL losses drive football 'Cats to future wins

PAINFUL losses drive ‘Cats to future wins

 Part of special News-Register series: Remembrance of Games Past

 By Rusty Rae, McMinnville N-R/News-Register, Fri., Nov. 6, 2020

 (Note: For clarity, Wildcatville made a couple minor edits to the text.)

 There are losses, as the coaches say, you must flush out of your mind, and simply move on. Some, however, stick like a hangover from a weekend beach party, purged solely after an appropriate period of suffering, though never totally obliterated.

 Even today, 50 years later, the bitter taste of the 19-17 loss to the University of Hawaii still hangs thick in retired head coach Ad Rutschman’s throat. The game ruined a perfect season and erased a chance for Rutschman to take what he characterizes as one of his best teams to the national playoffs.

 Picture this: UH was on its way to Division I status. Linfield entered the contest in Honolulu after sailing through the Northwest Conference. Rutschman and the coaching staff devised a clever strategy to negate the Rainbow’s vaunted offense.

 Linfield’s offense featured a pair of horses in the backfield, Jim Massey, who would later play in the National Football League, and Dennis Davidson, a battering ram fullback. The ‘Cats backfield included Dave White at QB, and a pair of sure-handed receivers in Bob Murphy and Sonny Jepson.

 Rutschman’s particular agony over this loss concerns the home cooking officials infused, costing the Wildcats at least one score, while also seemingly giving the UH team a 12th man on the field.

 Although the litany of official transgressions has long faded into history books, Rutschman says, “This one really stung because I feel we played well and deserved to win. When I watched the game film, we should have won by a 14-7 score. “I don’t like to put the blame on officials until I’ve coached the perfect game. They’re human and they make mistakes and that’s part of the game at times,” he said

 However, the officiating scenario in Hawaii in those days involved one crew of striped shirts working every game. In 1970 Rutschman recalled the Rainbows played 11 games, nine at home on the Island.

 If an official needed those paydays, he didn’t dare make decisive calls against the home team and expect to officiating the following season.

 To say the game was upsetting to Rutschman is understatement to the nth degree. The officiating highjinks were distressed to the normally composed head coach who regularly preached the advantage of keeping one’s poise. Rutschman lost it in the locker room … — if just for a moment.

 Remembers QB Dave White, “Coach Rutschman was as steamed as I have ever seen him. When we returned to the dressing room after the game, there was a pop can on the table — a can of Coke I think.

 Rutsch took out his frustration on the can with a karate shop and the can kind of took off like a rocket. That’s when I thought it would be a good idea to put my helmet back on.”

 White added, “One of the reasons we didn’t make the playoffs that year was, I think, purely financial. There were three or four other one-loss nationally ranked teams and they were all back east, much closer to each other. It was just a pragmatic decision based on what would cost the association the least amount of money,” he said.

 As bitter as this loss was to the staff and team, it didn’t result in any great shake-up in coaching philosophy. Rutschman recalls, fondly, the opportunity to play in Hawaii gave him a chance to recruit the Island state heavily. As more Hawaiian players joined the Wildcat squad, the team became a favorite for local fans.

 One year in fact, Linfield counted more Hawaiian players than the Rainbows, who by now were searching stateside for talent to move to the NCAA DI division. As few years later, UH, an underdog by more than 40 points, defeated the University of Washington in Seattle, 10-7.

 There have also been losses motivated both to coaches and players alike. Back in 2001, the ‘Cats were coming off one of their worst losses, a 29-0 thumping by Southern Oregon in Ashland. The following week they matched up with then arch-rival Pacific Lutheran in McMinnville.

 Two years earlier, the Lutes had won the NCAA DIII national title, and the Linfield-Lute game always brought out the best in both teams. PLU led late in the game, 24-20.

 But the ‘Cats were driving. They appeared headed for the winning touchdown with a few minutes left. QB Blake Kluse flipped a pass into the flats near the 10-yard line. The PLU defensive back jumped the route and sprinted 90-yards for the score. Linfield fell for the second consecutive week, by a 31-20 margin.

 Head coach Joseph Smith, then an assistant coach, remembers, “It was a devastating loss on a number of levels. It put us in a poor position to make the playoffs and obviously it was an emotionally difficult game for us to overcome.

 “But it was also motivating in many ways. We had our backs to the wall and the team came together and resolved to finish the season strong,” Smith said.

 Linfield subsequently ran off a string of six victories and ended in a tie for the league championship with two others. In the three-way tie, the NCAA chose the other two Northwest Conference squads for the playoffs, and the ‘Cats were the odd-man out.

 Smith added, “The team was disappointed, obviously, but it led to the team adopting the slogan for the following year, ‘Leave no doubt’. We didn’t want to put our future in the hands of a committee.”

 Indeed, over the next four years, Linfield went 44-3, making deep runs in the DIII playoffs, including the national championship in 2004.

 Two years later, in his first season as head coach for the Wildcats, Smith watched as the ‘Cats lost a 17-13 tussle to Whitworth in McMinnville, finishing with a 6-3 record. The next season, the Pirates won again, a 10-7 victory in the Pine Bowl in Spokane.

 “The loss in McMinnville was particularly frustrating. We held Whitworth to 86-yards of total offense — our defense crushed them and somehow we lost the game,” Smith remembers the pain of the event evident in his tone.

 The reason for those defeats: turnovers. “We had five in the ‘06 game and four or five in the ‘07 game. Those turnovers either stopped drivers for us or allowed them easy scores,” Smith said.

 At the time, Linfield’s turnover ratio ranked as one of the poorest in the nation. It forced Smith, who came to head coaching from the defensive, to move to overseeing the offense.

 “Ball security became the number one emphasis and we worked daily on proper technique for carrying the football. We moved from the low point in 2007 to a top five or 10 team in ball security in 2008,” Smith said.

 Though Linfield would go 6-3 in Smith’s third season as head coach, 2009 saw the ‘Cats become the dominate team in the Northwest Conference regularly playing deep into the DIII playoffs.

 However, there were always lessons to learn; one painful loss in particular was the 31-28 defeat at by Willamette in the ‘Cat Dome the first day of November 2014.

 “Willamette was not a very good team that year and we were a top five squad. I’m not sure if we'd become a bit complacent — we'd been dominant in earlier games, oftentimes had games in hand by halftime,” he said.

 The game turned into a nail-biter as the Bearcat’s tailback tormented Linfield’s defense all afternoon.

 Late in the contest the ‘Cats were driving for the winning score. Linfield ran a short curl route over the middle, normally a relatively safe play.

 However, the receiver didn’t come back for the ball and the Willamette back snatched it … from the ‘Cat receiver, giving the Bearcats the upset victory.

 “It became a teaching moment for us — regardless of the scenario, the receiver must come back to the ball,” Smith said.

 Linfield finished the conference schedule on a tear, pounding Pacific University 59-0 in the last NWC game of the season, when the Boxers thought they had a chance to topple Linfield from its title perch.

 However, the loss to Willamette resulted in ‘Cats playing on the road for most of the playoffs, ultimately losing in the semi-finals to eventual national champion University of Wisconsin Whitewater, 20-14, in Wisconsin.

 “The playoff run was particularly gratifying but I think the humiliating loss to Willamette helped drive us to make the deep run into the playoffs.

 “If you’re not learning from your failures, you'll never get better,” Smith added. Indeed, since 2009, Linfield’s record is 71-2 in conference play and 109-17 overall.

 In the age-old formula for success you learn from your failures. Over the door of the Linfield locker room the question remains: “Am I a better player today than I was yesterday.”

 Photo cutline -- Grim faces tell the story of a disappointing loss at Whitworth’s Pine Bowl in a 2007 as Linfield head coach Joseph Smith addresses the team. Combined with a narrow loss to the Pirates in 2006 at the ‘Cat Dome, the ‘07 defeat pushed Smith to focus on the offensive side of the ball and the Wildcats dominated the Northwest Conference for the following decade. (Photo by Rusty Rae/News-Register.)

 Photo cutline -- Linfield QB Dave White was a part of one of Ad Rutschman’s best teams, missing a chance to play in the NAIA national championship tournament after a controversial loss to University of Hawaii in 1970. (Photo courtesy Linfield Sports Information)





Linfield baseball, lacrosse combo make for fun fall season ender

McMinnville N-R/News-Register, Fri., Nov. 6, 2020.

Photos by Rusty Rae, N-R

(For a larger, easier to read version, click on the image.)