Encina High School Alumni
THE PARTY IS ON!.................
The first ANNUAL homecoming party is officially under way. We have a time and a place and
a football game. What more do we need? As of you as possible (dress is casual as you want
to be but if you have a letter jacket or sweater, please bring it!)
Call Those GRADS (NO MATTER WHAT YEAR) You want to see again.. (group hug not included)
BE THERE
Date: Friday, October 30, 1998
ENCINA APACHES err... BULLDOGS - VS - RIVER CITY ???
NO HOST
Tailgate Party Begins at 5:30pm @ the PALOMINO ROOM, 3405 El Camino Ave.
The Games start at 5:30 and 7:30 at EL CAMINO STADIUM
Those interested in seeing the game, watching the queen get crowned, can go to the game
and if there are some of us who would rather remain at the Tailgate can do so.
The Post Party Back to the Palomino Room, of course.
For more information, contact Rett Smart ([email protected]
or 510-444-5219)
Here's is Rett Smart's report on the First Annual Encina Homecoming party:
Attendees:
Fred Borowski '73 and his friend Susie
Michael Brown '69
Eric Carlson '73
Lorna Cline '73
Mike Fahn '73
Larry Fahn '72
Mike Greene '72
Kelly Horine '88
Michele (Horton) Noller '88 w/ husband (also class of '88)
Ms Sandy Hunt (Civics Teacher through '72)
Elliott Mandel '73
Rodney Vienna '75
We had cocktails and dinner at the Palomino Room. We then went to El Camino High to watch
the game. The stands were less than half full for the Homecoming Game! Larry Fahn and I
donned our LETTER JACKETS and were given the proper respect at the gate but alas, no
discount. Next year I will be bringing my ENCINA ID CARD from my freshman year and hope
for any discount other than a senior discount.
FLASH - Eric Dahlin was taking tickets at the gate! Well worth the price of admission to
see Eric again. We arrived in the first quarter of the varsity game and it was already
14-0 in favor of the River City Raiders. The place looked EXACTLY the same as it did in
the 70s.
Michele noted that the class of 88 was the last year of the Apaches.
Larry Fahn remembered his days in the announcers booth and gave us a brief play by play
for old times sake.
I recalled some of the epic battles we had forged on the field in '73 to an 0-9-1 record
(we tied Del Campo in our homecoming game).
The home team was getting pounded pretty hard by half time and with a bench that consisted
of five guys, the Bulldogs could not afford an injury to a key player.
We were interviewed by a teacher who was taping for Encina TV. We may be played to the
masses as either role models or what not to be when you grow up. We hope the former but
lean towards the latter.
Our being there seemed to bring a real sense of homecoming to those stoic parents and
students in the stands...... which was good since there was no marching band, drill team,
or songleaders (the mascot did have a pretty good bulldog costume) to get the crowd going.
They did have cheerleaders who really had their work cut out for them.
The queen and king of homecoming were crowned at the half. A student did a great aca pella
version of the Encina Alma Matter (I think, Larry Fahn, being '72 class president, knew
the majority of the words) . I guess they did not have the funds to have a band or a tape
of the song. Her version was quite good and brought a little mist to the eyes.
Third quarter - I THREATENED TO SUIT UP if things didn't improve but the Raiders were
unstoppable.
By the middle of the fourth quarter we were losing 42 - 0 and the alums had seen enough.
The handwriting was etched on the side of Dahlin's ceramics room fence.
We all adjourned to our cars with a hint of a tear in our eye and vowed that next year our
numbers would increase ten fold filling the stands with grads from all classes.
If you want the sensation of teleportation to your high school days, sit in the stands @
El Camino. I highly recommend the experience. We had a lot of fun. Make plans to be there
next year as we are making this an annual event.
HOMECOMING '99 - Be There
Rett Smart '73
Deborah Young (mother of Ann and Eliza Young) reports:
There were three additional alumni in the stands. Two were working the snack bar up
until the varsity game: Ann Young '98, Tori Stafford '98, and Eliza Young '98 who came
after work.
Thanks to all those alumni who did come! Normally the stands are almost bare! It is
embarrassing as a parent of a current student, when alumni usually outnumber the parents
or current student population!
The elected King was Julio Morillo, Queen was Tselotey "Viva" Asmelash. I
don't remember any of the princesses because I was rushing around getting flowers to the
senior football players to present to their mothers.
Although, the game was a slaughter, and the junior float wasn't in the parade because of
vandals, the half time parade went well. The senior class won the float contest, as it
should be! There were about six live bulldogs representing our mascot at the beginning of
the parade. Last year King and Queen were present to pass the wand and crown.
The band program has been been on hold for the last two years.
The Sacramento Bee wrote:
Prep Focus: Has defense become a lost art? Not at Oak Ridge
By Joe Davidson
Bee Staff Writer
(Published Nov. 1, 1998)
A good number of teams have no idea how to play defense this high school football season.
Get a load of all the clubs that surrender 50 points seemingly by the week. Has the area
ever seen so many 60-point outbursts, so many 300-yard rushers and so many beleaguered
defensive coordinators who stagger home on game nights as if they went a full 12
heavyweight rounds?
But in El Dorado Hills, Oak Ridge players get downright grumpy when the team allows more
than five first downs -- in a game. A 100-yard rusher? It's reason enough for the
linebackers to rip the sinks right out of the walls and skip the homecoming dance. So far,
the basins are in good order; not one runner has come close to the 100-yard plateau.
Eight weeks in, and No. 5 Oak Ridge has allowed all of 38 points, the fewest of any team
in the Sac-Joaquin Section. Ten area teams allowed more than that on Friday alone,
including No. 3 Grant, a program known for its defense in recent years until this month.
This is how personal Oak Ridge takes scoring: No opponent has even been able to convert an
extra point. All three attempts were blocked.
"We're having one of those years where we're just playing great defense," Oak
Ridge coach Mark Watson said.
Friday's Sierra Valley Conference contest against Galt was reduced to a Trojans
defensive-highlight show yet again. The championship hung in the balance only through the
national anthem, after which the Trojans put on the clamps and coasted 35-0. Oak Ridge
broke down blocking schemes in a heartbeat and held Warriors runners and receivers to
minimal gains.
With its second SVC title in three years all but sealed, Oak Ridge looms as one of the
section favorites in the Division II race with West of Tracy, Roseville, Placer and
Vanden, among others.
"They have an excellent defense, an amazing, experienced and quick group that plays
so well together," Galt coach Tom Veatch said. "I mean, we've got a good team
and we tried everything on them and we couldn't move. We average 365 yards of offense, and
they held us to below 80. Our backs had about a half-step to go, and they ate us up alive.
They're a buzz saw."
The defensive front is mobile and muscle-bound with Mark Matus, Mike O'Banks and Garrett
Adler. The linebacking corps, among the best anywhere, consists of leading tackler Scott
McMahon, Dom Bosch, Brendan Mallery and Tyler Ecker. The secondary is Brandon Belland,
Mark Kansier, Austin Lackey, Jordan Barnes and Nate Magin, whose older brother Joe owns
the school single-season rushing mark of 1,799 yards set in '96.
The defensive coordinator, Jack Harnden, is a veteran of the area coaching ranks. Harden
was the first coach at Oak Ridge in 1982 and now is perfectly content ruining opposing
offenses as an assistant. Interestingly, Watson found out about the head-coaching position
at Oak Ridge through his father-in-law, Ray Warner, who went to a Rotary Club meeting in
1989. Harnden was the guest speaker, and Warner struck up a conversation, found out about
the opening and called Watson, an assistant coach at Long Beach State.
Watson has had a handful of playoff teams, won his 100th career game earlier this season
and could be on the cusp of his finest squad ever. His staff is sprinkled with Oak Ridge
alumni, including Casey Taylor, Aaron and Brian Marlette and Chris Jones. "I've
always liked the high school game, and I was looking forward to a return to this
level," Watson said. "Maybe it's fate that I got this job. I've enjoyed it. I
like the freshness of the teenagers, the purity of this level. And we've been blessed with
some great players."
Et cetera
In a strange twist, we could be looking at McClatchy vs. Woodland two weeks in a row. The
teams face off in the regular-season finale at Hughes Stadium, a nonleague game to fill
out the schedule.
They could also meet the following week in the first round of the Division I playoffs,
a first since the postseason tournament started in 1976.
"That would be pretty bizarre," McClatchy coach Rob Feickert said. "I mean,
what do you do? Cancel that last game? Try to beat them and expose all of your offensive
secrets? Play second-string guys to hide what you do and get smashed? This could be
weird."
The records continue to fall in Colfax. Alec Greco recently caught his 100th career pass.
Friday, Scott Kelley scored on a school-record, 96-yard run in a 55-6 rout of Marysville.
Justin Rawlins' next score will put him in the record books with 25 career touchdowns,
matching Tim Norris from the late '60s.
And there's River City. The Raiders play host to Colfax on Friday seeking their
first Golden Empire League title this decade. Few teams sport the 1-2 offensive punch of
River City with tailback Malfred Shaw, quarterback Brady Tacdol and receiver Malcolm
Floyd, who combined for five touchdowns Friday in a 52-0 romp over Encina that improved
the Raiders' GEL mark to 5-0.
Last updated: 5/28/17
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