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Page 22 text:
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vi VARSITY BASKETBALL nan . , BASKETBALL SQUA ae BASEBALL TEAM. fo
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Page 21 text:
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4 j te Wp | CUGENIA- SUSAN -DOROTHY | ae JOHN'S ASSISTANTS. GE NEVIEVE THREE GUESSES
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Page 23 text:
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ah A A TS BASKETBALL Second place holders, but with a five that was every bit as good as the title win- ners, Richmond High basketball players climaxed a splendid A. C. A. L. season by capturing their annual Alumni game from a team that was heads and shoulders over them in experience and pre-game favorites. The basketball schedule was highly successful in all branches, but far happier because the locals gave Berkeley High their first defeat in three years of league competition. The Richmond B’s were a sorry disappointment to their ardent admirers, for they finished in last place when they had a squad that was of much higher calibre. In the curtain raiser of the A. C. A. L., the locals encountered the Alameda Hornets, who lived up to expectations by ending in last place, on the home pavilion. Coach Phil Hempler’s outfit ran up a gigantic lead, so large that Hempler used the reserves throughout most of the second period. At half time the R. U. H. S. five led 15-9. Scarsella, Moitoza, and Passone rang up several buckets to push the locals to a 22-9 third quarter advantage. In the fourth session, the cohorts of Carl Young came to life and mounted the score until at the final gun it read, Richmond 32, Alameda 22. Large crowds from both schools attended the contests. Rivals from Berkeley High met the locals on the home court in the second league game. The Yellowjackets had previously defeated the Piedmont aggregation in impressive manner. Richmond again started this game by tallying first. Through- out the half the lead see-sawed back and fourth with a 13-13 deadlock at the rest intermission. Passone and Moitoza led the home team assault. The locals led by five points at one time in the third quarter, but were caught and nosed out at the final whistle, 29-25. Poor guarding cost the Blue and Red this important fray. Piedmont proved to be the straw that broke the camel’s back when they eked out a 27-25 victory on the Hill City floor. The game, which entered the extra period stage, found an inferior Highlander team taking advantage of the poorest exhibition of guarding put on by an Oiler five in many seasons. During the initial half, the local guards acted as forwards and, consequently, permitted the Purple and White to forge into. an 18-9 advantage. The Hemplerites came back with vengeance in the third and fourth cantos, not only to catch the Piedmonters, but to obtain a one marker lead with 45 seconds to go. Here a foul occurred and the “Binks” Rawling’s cager made it good to knot the count. In the extra period, Kash, center, netted a spec- tacular attempt to give the Clansmen a 27-25 win. At this juncture of the schedule, a Richmond winning streak was started; here- after the locals went undefeated the rest of the year. Alameda was the opponent in the second round of the league. The Hornets, led by their all-A. C. A. L. stars, Herman Pete and Bill Reid, were vastly improved, but not to the degree where they could take the Oilers. Hempler’s team put up a sorry exhibition and was forced into an extra period, after trailing the greater portion of the fracas. Scarsella, who went wild in this contest, tallied twice in the additional five minutes to capture the triumph for the locals. Critics of the Bay region were all talking of the poor lamb, the Blue and Red, being led to its slaughter by the Berkeley five. This sad outlook did not handicap the Hemplerites in the least; rather it proved to be the stimulus to goad them on to greater conquests. Hardly had Jack Eadie’s boys sunk the first point than the Blue and Red swarmed all over the Cardinal and Gold. At half time, though, the Yellow- jackets, through fine offensive work at the last moment, edged into the fore. After Hempler explained his attack for the last half, the Oilers took the floor and pro- ceeded to sink everything in sight. The huge Richmond crowd was jubilant as the locals opened the final period, leading 20-13. The B. H. S. contingent realized it would be their first beating in years, so they put on all they had. It was far from enough. The scintillating Richmondites took all the highly favored Berkeleyans had to offer and could have asked for more. At the conclusion of the skirmish, the gathering of local enthusiasts smothered the victorious cagers, congratulating all. “Smilin” Phil Hempler beamed with joy for the decisive 26-16 triumph repaid him ina small way for his faith and pride in his basketeers. The defeat was the only one incurred by the pennant winning Yellowjackets.
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