
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
"Here Come the Wildcats"
"Here Come the Wildcats" ... the Linfield football team
runs out of Memorial Stadium onto Maxwell Field.
This video shot Oct. 11, 2008; Whitworth at Linfield
Northwest Conference game.
.
Linfield Football picture postcard is part of Wildcat football's Hawai`i (and Australia) connection

The late Bill Helbig grew up in Hawai`i, and returned there after graduating from Linfield in 1970. Later, he moved to McMinnville and lived at "Aloha Ranch." A friend of Linfield Athletics, one of his supportive efforts while in Hawai`i was a 5 3/4 x 8 1/4-inch picture postcard promoting Wildcat Football. The card was produced after Ad Rutschman-coached Linfield football teams won NAIA national championships in 1982 and 1984. Rutschman also led the Wildcats to a NAIA national title in 1986. Below is the front of the card. Beneath it is text from back of the card. When Rutschman was Linfield football coach and athletic director and his wife, Joan Rutschman, was the college's athletic office manager and football ticket manager. The Rutschmans often used the cards to correspond with recruits, alumni, friends and fans.
TEXT ON BACK OF POSTCARD
Linfield College Wildcats
McMinnville, Oregon
LINFIELD COLLEGE WILDCATS-There are few small college football programs in the county that can match the success of Linfield. The Wildcats, coached by Linfield alumnus Ad Rutschman, won NAIA Division II national championships in 1982 and 1984. Nine NAIA playoff appearances (1961, 1964, 1965, 1974, 1977, 1980, 1982, 1984) is matched by none. The Wildcats are the winningest team among NAIA Division II schools in the last ten years. Linfield had won 12 Northwest Conference titles in the last 16 seasons. Coach Rutschman has compiled a 130-32-3 record in 17 years at Linfield.
Photographs by Rusty Rae, Dean Koepfler and Tony Overman – Published for Linfield College by Bill Helbig – P.O. Box 2835, Honolulu, Hawaii 96803. Printed in Australia.
TEXT ON BACK OF POSTCARD
Linfield College Wildcats
McMinnville, Oregon
LINFIELD COLLEGE WILDCATS-There are few small college football programs in the county that can match the success of Linfield. The Wildcats, coached by Linfield alumnus Ad Rutschman, won NAIA Division II national championships in 1982 and 1984. Nine NAIA playoff appearances (1961, 1964, 1965, 1974, 1977, 1980, 1982, 1984) is matched by none. The Wildcats are the winningest team among NAIA Division II schools in the last ten years. Linfield had won 12 Northwest Conference titles in the last 16 seasons. Coach Rutschman has compiled a 130-32-3 record in 17 years at Linfield.
Photographs by Rusty Rae, Dean Koepfler and Tony Overman – Published for Linfield College by Bill Helbig – P.O. Box 2835, Honolulu, Hawaii 96803. Printed in Australia.
Tuesday, October 07, 2008
Shrine All-Stars on 1961 Wildcat team

Beating Whittier assures Camellia Bowl berth

1961: Street named for Coach Henry Lever
Lever Street sign on Linfield campus.
Photo taken in 2018.
==========================
Oct. 24, 1961==========================
McMinnville News-Register
Henry Lever
Gains Honor
Henry Lever, a former Lin-
Field college coaching great,
flew in from Chicago Friday
to be the honored guest of the
Wildcats’ 1961 homecoming
weekend.
Lever, who coached basket-
ball, baseball, football and track
at one time or another during
his 19-year tenure at Linfield
(1963-1949), was honored at
halftime of the Wildcat-Whit-
man homecoming game Satur-
day night.
College president Harry Dillin
introduced Lever as a truly fine
gentleman dedicated to the de-
velopment of young men.
President Dillin called for all
the former athletes who per-
formed under Lever during his
tenure at Linfield and these
ex-athletes filed out from the
stands onto the field to greet
their coach.
Then L.F. Ramsey, mayor
of McMinnville, told the crowd
that a street had been named in
honor of Lever. The street,
which runs parallel to the foot-
ball field, was formerly known
as Stadium Ave. It is now called
Lever Ave.
(Note from Wildcatville in 2008.
These days it is called Lever
Street.)
President Dillin added that a
plaque will be inset in the side-
walk across from Maxwell field
stadium in the near future.
Lever concluded the cere-
mony by thanking everyone for
making the night possible.
From Paul Durham’s “Dodging with Durham” sports column
Oct. 27, 1961
McMinnville News-Register
…Then, when the Wildcats came out for the second half and surrounded coach Henry Lever for the ceremony in which Mayor L.F. Ramsey announced the changing of the name of Stadium Ave., to Lever Ave., the game was held up long enough that the officials penalized Linfield 15 yards before kickoff…

But his most recent honor, having a street named in this city will go down in history as remind people in years of the contributions of himself and his worldly goods that coach Lever made to Linfield and its students during his 19 years on the staff, is without a doubt the greatest and the most lasting.
During his years of struggle to develop a winning athletic tradition at the college, fighting a lack of athletes, interest, equipment, facilities, money and everything else that is needed to make such a program grow, coach Lever brought about development far greater than he realized … He is so humble in his approach to admitting that he contributed much to the development of the college and its athletic program that, even now, he sincerely feels the honors such as the one which came his way last weekend are not deserved.
But people who worked with him on the campus here, and the hundreds of young men who played on his teams, as well as those individuals who served the city in various capacities at the same time he did as a stellar member of the Methodist Church and a solid worker in the Kiwanis Club, know that no one deserves recognition that does Coach Lever.
When someone begins talking about the great things Mr. Lever did, about the fine team he had, and about the successes some of “his boys” have achieved in many walks of life since their years at Linfield, Coach Lever begins to kid himself about the tough times, the losses, the mistakes he made, and the things he should have done better.
So Coach Lever will always be the same great person. He’s been gone from campus for more than 12 years now but his successors are striving to contribute just a small bit of the high ideals, ethics, desire to excel but always according to the rules, which he not only preached but lives.
Coach Lever must be well into his seventies now but he still looks almost as young as he did when he first hit the Linfield campus back in 1930. He has the secret to the fountain of youth.
And he still has a youthful approach to athletics. He could still take over a college football team and bring it in a winner. He’s kept up with the game and is about as up-to-date on it has a man can be.
Kids are still his big love… This next summer, for example, he plans to coach at Peewee baseball team in his hometown, Madras. And don’t bet against his boys, They’ll know the fundamentals of the game from A to Izzard and battle all opponents every inch of the way.
But why not? They'll be playing under a great coach who has always used coaching sports as a means of make fine men out of boys… What greater thing can you say about him?
- Joe Dancer, who served from 1960-1986 as McMinnville City manager, told Wildcatville the McMinnville City Council changed the name of Stadium Avenue to Lever Avenue in 1961. What is now called "Lever Street" borders the college's athletic complex, football field and baseball diamond. The name change came at the urging of Linfield President Harry Dillin, said Dancer.
A Linfield here, there, every where
Saturday, October 04, 2008
Campus streets have football connections

LEVER STREET
Lever Street intersects with Linfield Avenue. It is bisected by Brumback Street.
In 1961, during halftime of the Linfield homecoming football game (Linfield beat NW Conference opponent Whitman, 52-0) on Maxwell Field, what had been Stadium Avenue -- which runs behind Linfield's Memorial Stadium -- was named in honor of Henry Lever. He was athletic director and coached basketball, baseball, football and track at one time or another during a 19-year (1930-1949) tenure at the college. As part of the halftime ceremony, McMinnville Mayor L.F. Ramsey announced the name change. According to an article in the Oct. 24, 1961, McMinnville News-Register, Linfield President Harry Dillin told the crowd Lever was a truly fine gentleman dedicated to the development of young men. Article says Lever "flew in from Chicago" for homecoming festivities. In addition the article says, "Dillin added that a plaque will be inset in the sidewalk across from Maxwell field stadium in the near future."
BRUMBACK STREET
Brumback Street intersects with Renshaw Avenue.
Brumback Street intersects with Renshaw Avenue.
On one end of the street is the Linfield Softball Field, which is across the street from Renshaw Hall, now home of the college's Mass Communications Department. Player/coach A.M. (Arthur M.) Brumback organized Linfield's first football team in 1896. He coached for five seasons before being appointed college president in 1903, a position he held for two years (1903-1905). Brumback taught natural sciences at the college. According to one write-up, "Brumback had a passion for sport, playing center on and coaching the college’s first football team. While enormously popular with students" he was not successful in dealing with Linfield's financial crisis. He left Linfield in 1905, to take a position at his alma mater, Denison College, in Ohio. At Denison, he was that college's first chemistry professor.
Friday, October 03, 2008
Flu reason Ad Rutschman first coached Linfield football from pressbox

It’s well-known that during most of his career as Linfield’s football coach, Ad Rutschman, coached from the pressbox rather than from the sidelines. The first game in which he coached from the “box” was Saturday, Sept. 27, 1969, at Lewis and Clark. Linfield won the game, 14-0.
Article below mentions Rutch being bed-ridden with the flu. Rather than staying home and listening to the game on the radio, he traveled to the game and coached from the pressbox at L&C's Griswold Stadium.
McMinnville News-Register
Sept 27, 1969
Rutschman Likely To Miss
Linfield - L-C Game
By CHUCK HUMBLE
Linfield Sports information
"Head coach Ad Rutschman may be Linfield's only serious causality for
Saturday's Northwest Conference opening tilt with Lewis and Clark.
Rutschman has been bed-ridden all week with a case of the flu which
has made him a very doubtful starter.
"While Rutschman still continues to organize practices from his bed,
assistant coaches Ted Henry and John Knight have spearheaded
on-the-field workouts..."
Article below mentions Rutch being bed-ridden with the flu. Rather than staying home and listening to the game on the radio, he traveled to the game and coached from the pressbox at L&C's Griswold Stadium.
McMinnville News-Register
Sept 27, 1969
Rutschman Likely To Miss
Linfield - L-C Game
By CHUCK HUMBLE
Linfield Sports information
"Head coach Ad Rutschman may be Linfield's only serious causality for
Saturday's Northwest Conference opening tilt with Lewis and Clark.
Rutschman has been bed-ridden all week with a case of the flu which
has made him a very doubtful starter.
"While Rutschman still continues to organize practices from his bed,
assistant coaches Ted Henry and John Knight have spearheaded
on-the-field workouts..."
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
Oregonian sports "Pasero says" column, by George Pasero, about Linfield's Dec. 11, 1982, national football championship win includes text about Rutshman coaching from the pressbox. The text includes:
Ad typically downplays his role as the all-seeing eye above the arena.
“Aw, I’m just getting too old to jump around on the sidelines,” he laughs.
No one believes him for a minute. He’s been “upstairs about 12 years now,” he says.
Wednesday, October 01, 2008
What if the The Streak started in 1960, not 1956?

As N-R staff looked through information in past issues of the newspaper and compared game scores to those in the Linfield football media guide, it questioned a score from the 1959 season.
The media guide showed Linfield winning the game, 14-0, over the College of Idaho. But, the N-R has Linfield and the C of I playing (in Caldwell, Idaho) to a 14-14 tie. Indeed, the Sunday Oregonian of Oct. 11, 1959, said C of I "marched 93 yards in 10 plays in the final two minutes" for the tie.
Because the game ended in a tie and not a win, Linfield's win-loss-tie record during the 1959 season was correctly 4-3-2, not 5-3-1, as listed in the 2005 media guide.
So? Linfield's streak of winning football seasons started in 1956. If there had been one more loss during the 1959 season, the Wildcats would have been 3-4-2 and, consequently, the streak would have started with the 7 win-2 loss 1960 football season, not the 1956 season.
The 2005 season would have been when Linfield clinched 45 years of winning seasons. And, if the Linfield Streak started in 1960, the 50 year mark would have been 2010, not 2005.
Photo taken Sept. 2008 of a Melrose Hall radiator has nothing to do with The Streak, but maybe the radiator was around when The Streak started?
Coach Hal Smith’s perfect meal
Go on a Linfield athletic team road trip with Coach Hal Smith and you might have noticed his penchant for frequently (always?) ordering the same meal, a cheeseburger and a chocolate milk shake.
He believed it was the perfect meal because all the food groups were represented.
His son, Mike Smith, Reno, Nev., told Wildcatville, “You are correct in that he said it had all the required food groups and was therefore a perfectly healthy meal.
"Unfortunately, that’s all I can remember about it, but I know it was one of his favorite meals. Of course, I didn’t mind eating them either.”
POSTSCRIPTS:
=Keith Shriver, a Linfield Athletics Hall of Famer as an
outstanding sprinter for Wildcat men’s track & field confirmed Coach Smith’s
cheeseburger endorsement.
=Prior to the 1968 Northwest Conference men’s cross-country
championship on Sat. Nov. 2, 1968, at Pier Park in Portland, Oregon, Coach
Smith encouraged one of his team’s top two runners to “satisfy yourself.”
Hal Smith photo from Tom Rohlffs Archives. Photo of cheeseburger and chocolate shake taken Sept. 27, 2008, at Alf's Ice Cream & Burgers in McMinnville.
Where have you gone, Ooney Gagen?


Ooney Gagen ("Ooo-Nee Gay-gen")
If you are a Linfield Wildcat fan of a certain vintage, you may well know Ooney, who played for both Linfield and McMinnville High teams.
It's a guess, but plausible, that Ooney was a creation of Paul Durham (1913-2007), when he was sports editor of the McMinnville News-Register.
At the same time Durham was athletic director, coaching and teaching at Linfield, he was also "sports editing." His duties included writing a sports column, "Dodging with Durham."
Across the sports editor's desk would come photos shot at sporting events. Some of the photos, especially from basketball, would show a player whose face was obscured by a basketball which had been thrown, tossed or passed in front of the camera. These were action photos. The ball in front of the camera lens (and, thus, in the photo obscuring player's face) was unintentional. What to do with a photo like this? Some would have tossed the photo. Not sports editor Durham.
The player with the obscured face became Ooney Gagen. Or, a set-up photo showing someone with an obscured face was Ooney.
With this story see a photo (football helmet on backwards) of Ooney from a sports page in the Jan. 23, 1957, issue of the News-Register. The other photo, from the Feb. 10, 1965, N-R, is not of Ooney, but could well have been.
The Way (Linfield football scoreboard) It Was

Clipping from Aug. 18, 1961, McMinnville, Ore., News-Register
NEW PAINT JOB -- Charlie Sheckler and Darlene Kroll take out of from their summer jobs at Linfield College to look over the new paint job on the Maxwell Field scoreboard. Sheckler both designed the painted the attractive sign. HE and Miss Kroll are both graduates of McMinnville High School. (N-R Photo by John Buchner.)
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Wednesday, September 24, 2008
Wildcat Frank Molek loves Carver County
This video is a testimonial from Frank Molek, former Linfield student body president, Wildcat baseball player and Ted Wilson's brother-in-law.
In it, Frank indicates he loves Carver County (Minnesota), its small-town charm, big city accessibility. The University of Minnesota Landscape Arboretum is located in Chaska (Carver County), Minn. Frank is arboretum senior development officer.
He was a member of Linfied's first national championship team. The 1966 baseball Wildcats coached by Roy Helser won the NAIA World Series.
For more information on Carver County, visit http://whyilovelivingincarvercounty.com/category/why-i-love-living-in-carver-county
In it, Frank indicates he loves Carver County (Minnesota), its small-town charm, big city accessibility. The University of Minnesota Landscape Arboretum is located in Chaska (Carver County), Minn. Frank is arboretum senior development officer.
He was a member of Linfied's first national championship team. The 1966 baseball Wildcats coached by Roy Helser won the NAIA World Series.
For more information on Carver County, visit http://whyilovelivingincarvercounty.com/category/why-i-love-living-in-carver-county