Search Results for: Mickey Flynn

Mickey Flynn – Class of 1957

Twice named CIF Player of the Year, Mickey Flynn was Orange County’s first high school football superstar.

Averaging a spectacular 15 yards per carry, “The Galloping Ghost of La Palma Park” drew thousands of fans to stadiums all over Southern California to witness his dazzling runs, and he established a county rushing record that stood for nearly 20 years.

In addition to leading the Colonists to a CIF championship in football in 1956, Flynn also excelled in basketball and track and was president of the Colonist Club. For decades, Mickey Flynn has been a familiar face at Colonist football games and has been an unofficial ambassador for Anaheim High School, keeping alive blue and gold traditions.

Mickey Flynn – Class of 1957

Twice named CIF Player of the Year, Mickey Flynn was Orange County’s first high school football superstar. Averaging a spectacular 15 yards per carry, “The Galloping Ghost of La Palma Park” drew thousands of fans to stadiums all over Southern California to witness his dazzling runs, and he established a county rushing record that stood for nearly 20 years. In addition to leading the Colonists to a CIF championship in football in 1956, Flynn also excelled in basketball and track and was president of the Colonist Club. For decades, Mickey Flynn has been a familiar face at Colonist football games and has been an unofficial ambassador for Anaheim High School, keeping alive blue and gold traditions.

Milestones made for Colonist football in historic season finale

The 102nd and most unusual season in Colonist football annals came to an end on Friday, April 16 at Glover Stadium. But even more important than Anaheim’s resounding 51-12 win over Santa Ana Valley in the Orange League finale for both teams, senior running back Adam Luna and head coach Lanny Booher both reached impressive marks that put them among the all-time greats in team history.

Luna ended his Anaheim football playing career with one of the greatest nights ever played. Demonstrating his trademark speed and elusiveness, the outgoing senior tailback carried the ball 18 times for a whopping 341 yards, the second-highest single-game total in team history (behind only Reuben Droughns’ 373 yards vs. Arroyo in the First Round of the 1993 CIF-Southern Section playoffs).

Additionally, Luna (who finished with 936 yards in just five games), scored a team-record seven rushing touchdowns on runs of 10, 14, 54, and 14 yards in the first quarter (also a new team mark), a 58-yarder in the second quarter, another 58-yard run in the third quarter, and then a final 9-yard scamper early in fourth quarter. This broke the team single-game mark of six set by Matt Contreras in a 2007 victory over Katella. The seven scores gave Luna 20 rushing touchdowns for the season, the first Colonist back to do so since George Perdickez in 2006. Luna averaged 18.9 yards per carry in the game, evoking memories of Mickey Flynn, while his running style recalled other historic Anaheim running backs like Joel Ramirez and Joaquin Garcia who did not let their lack of size get in the way of dominating the field of play. With a career total of 1,350 rushing yards and 26 total TDs, there is no doubt that Adam Luna’s name now goes along with the very best who have ever played for Anaheim High School.

Watching from the sidelines as he has done for so many years, head coach Lanny Booher guided his team through the chaos and hardships of this season, which was turned upside down by the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic. Even when the prospects for having a season during the 2020-21 school year seemed grim, Booher kept his players focused and motivated. And when the danger abated and the season was allowed to commence, Anaheim was ready.

The Colonists’ rout of the Falcons gave Anaheim a 4-1 record to end the season and bettered the team’s overall win total for 2019 (when the Colony finished 3-7). The win over Santa Ana Valley was also the 85th career victory for Coach Lanny Booher, pushing him past Dick Glover, who won 84 games over 16 seasons during two stints from 1931 to 1942, and then again, from 1946 to 1949. Booher’s career win total now ranks as the second-most in team history behind only Clare Van Hoorebeke, who won 189 victories over 23 seasons from 1950 to 1972. Booher, an Anaheim High School graduate (Class of 1981), completed his 17th season as head coach, having led the team since 2004.

Super Bowl Coaches to Join Golfers at AHS Alumni Association Golf Classic & Auction

In Classic Colonist style, New York Giants Super Bowl Coach Jim Fassel ’67 and his son, John, the LA Rams Special Teams Coach who recently made his Super Bowl debut, will be among participants at the 10th Annual ASHAA Golf Classic & Auction, Monday, Feb. 18, at Western Hills Country Club.

Jim Fassel ‘ 67 holds the NFL Golden Football sent to AHS for his contribution to Super Bowl history. His son, John, is Special Teams Coach for the LA Rams.

The tournament’s Hall-of-Fame lineup will include many other outstanding Colonist athletes like football legend Mickey Flynn ’57. AHS Coaches, many of whom are Anaheim alumni, are forming golf foursomes, and will be joined by Dan Miller, former athletic director and head basketball coach.

A day of sunshine is predicted for the President’s Day tournament that will raise funds for the AHSAA’s Spirit Scholarships and the Athletic Department’s facilities improvement campaign.

Along with a day of golf, the event includes a 2 p.m. lunch, awards, and an auction and opportunity drawing, both featuring an array of donated prizes. All are welcome to attend, with lunch tickets available for $30. To signup, click here or contact the AHSAA at anaheimalumni@yahoo.com.

A big thank you to the sponsors and donors who make this top fundraiser possible!

The AHS Alumni Association is pleased to welcome first-time GOLD sponsor Selman Chevrolet.

Thanks also to Pride Sponsor Al Rodriguez and his AHS Foursome; and Blue Sponsors Boydstun Realty & Property Management, owner Reon Boystun Howard ’74; Gerald Woodward ’59, Michael La Torre ’65.

Colonist cheers to our beverage sponsor Jerry Zomordian from Anaheim ARCO, as well as to Ron Davini ’65, an AHS Hall of Famer who has sponsored lunch for several years to feed our event volunteers.

Tee-signs will be displayed through course, thanks to sponsors such as Jeff Morris ’67 in member of his classmate Mark Uhlich ‘67.

Questions may be directed to anaheimalumni@yahoo.com or by calling AHSAA Events Director Debbie Vidana, 714-883-2389.

Anaheim Celebrates 50th Anniversary of 1967 CIF Championship

Football players, past and present, along with fans, friends and family, gathered on Friday, Oct. 6th, to celebrate the 50th anniverary of  Anaheim High’s  1967 CIF Championship and the 99th year of Anaheim High football.
After a tribute dinner in the Anaheim High Cafeteria, those gathered continued on to Glover Stadium for the varsity game against Katella. Team members from the 1967 Championship Team were presented with commemorative caps and tshirts and applauded during a half-time ceremony.
 Click here to see photos of the event and continue scrolling to read an article about the 1967 season, along with photos and newspaper articles that recorded this championship year.
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     Throughout its nearly 100 years of proud football history, Anaheim has won many games with many great players and many great coaches. But perhaps no Colonists team had a greater journey than the 1967 squad, which won an unprecedented CIF championship.
     The 12-1 campaign, capped off by a memorable triumph over Santa Ana at Anaheim Stadium, forever certified the Colonists under legendary head coach Clare Van Hoorebeke as the finest program of its era in the midst of its finest hour.
     The beloved “Van,” already Orange County’s all-time winningest head football coach by that time, was in his 18th season at Anaheim, winning or sharing 13 Sunset League crowns. The 1956 team with Mickey Flynn had earned a co-championship, but the Colonists had come up just short twice more in 1962 finals against Loyola, and in a crushing 35-14 loss against El Rancho in the 1966 championship game.
     Though ready to hit the field with an amazing array of talented players, the Colonists entered the 1967 season with much uncertainty. Rising star quarterback Chappy Looney, who had been expected to assume a starring role in the Anaheim offense, died unexpectedly the previous spring. Additionally, many doubted that ferocious senior fullback/linebacker Tom Fitzpatrick could recover from a torn ACL injury suffered during the 1966 playoffs.
     But Van and his esteemed coaching staff, led by veteran assistant Brant Cowser and highly motivated young coordinators Bill Miller on offense and Bob Salerno on defense. Wayne Atkins, John Balaam, and Marty Hicks rounded out the staff that had Anaheim ready to compete, and the Colonists opened up with shutout wins over Chaffey and Redlands in non-league play.
     However, Anaheim looked sluggish in a 9-7 win over Marina in its Sunset League opener. Then, the bottom fell out as the Colonists were humiliated in a 28-0 wipeout at the hands of Santa Ana, the worst loss of Van Hoorebeke’s coaching career.
     Seeking a spark on offense, Van Hoorebeke and Miller elevated sophomore George Fraser to the starting quarterback position, while Tom Fitzpatrick was cleared to play full time once again. The results were immediate, as Anaheim dominated its next five opponents by a combined score of 130 to 33. Though Santa Ana claimed the Sunset League title, Anaheim’s 8-1 record was good enough for an at-large berth in the 4-A playoffs.
     In the first round, Fraser ran for two touchdowns, while cornerback Dave Maas had a team-record four interceptions and end Kym Salness added two more picks to lift Anaheim past Long Beach Wilson 35-13. Rematching in the quarterfinal round against El Rancho, the Colonists dethroned the defending CIF 4-A Division champions in a solid 28-14 win. Halfback Walt Smith ran 20 times for 137 yards as Anaheim totaled nearly 400 yards in total offense against El Rancho’s formidable defense. Fitzpatrick, Fraser, and Maas all scored TDs to push Anaheim into the semifinals.
     At the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Anaheim faced off against undefeated Santa Barbara. The Channel League champion Dons appeared invincible, having scored nearly 500 points on offense with explosive quarterback Grady Hurst and punishing tailback Sam “Bam” Cunningham, while Santa Barbara’s defense boasted the “Four Teen Tons” led by Bob “Big Man” Pointer, who was arguably the biggest prep football player in history, tipping the scales at 447 points.
     The Colonists showed no fear, as Fraser threw for over 200 yards and three touchdowns. Fitzpatrick caught one TD pass and ran for two more scores as Anaheim carved up the enormous but slow-footed Dons defense for a 42-7 win.
     The Semifinal victory set up a rematch with Santa Ana at the Big A, where 26,383 fans filled the stadium for the 4-A title showdown. Following a scoreless first quarter, Anaheim’s running game went to work as halfback Eric Janes, Smith, and Fraser ran behind the blocking of Fitzpatrick, who then finished two scoring drives with touchdown runs in the second quarter and a 14-0 lead. Janes, who was the star of the game with 136 yards on 15 carries, added his own touchdown on a 33-yard scoring run in the third quarter. The Saints and vaunted flanker Isaac Curtis were held to a single score, while Fraser put the finishing touch with a touchdown pass to Rod Schorr in the final minutes of the 27-6 victory.

Fitzpatrick was named the CIF 4-A Division Player of the Year, while Fraser became the first and only sophomore player ever named to the All-CIF 4-A Division team, while linemen Wayne Bugbee and Larry Golden also earned All-CIF honors.

    Following the game, the jubilant Colonists gathered on the field and celebrated as CIF commissioner Bill Russell handed the championship trophy over to coach Van Hoorebeke, who took pride in his typical, understated way. “We didn’t necessarily have the greatest talent in the world this year, but there was no one with more desire. Yes, sir, they’re champions.”
ANAHEIM COLONISTS FOOTBALL – 1967
Head Coach – Clare Van Hoorebeke
Offensive Coordinator – Bill Miller
Defensive Coordinator – Bob Salerno
Assistant Staff – Wayne Atkins, John Balaam, Brant Cowser, Marty Hicks
Won 12, Lost 1
(6-1) 2nd Place Sunset League
CIF 4-A Division Champions
24    Chaffey         0    W
21    Redlands         0    W
9    Marina*         7    W
0    Santa Ana*        28    L
24    Huntington Beach*     0    W
39    Newport Harbor*     7    W
34    Santa Ana Valley*    13    W
6    Westminster*         0    W
27    Western*        13    W
35    LONG BEACH WILSON    13    W
28    EL RANCHO        14    W
42    SANTA BARBARA     7    W
27    SANTA ANA         6    W
ALL-CIF 4-A DIVISION
Tom Fitzpatrick, Back – Player of the Year
George Fraser, Back
Wayne Bugbee, Guard
Larry Golden, Guard
ALL-SUNSET LEAGUE
Wayne Bugbee OG – 1
Tom Fitzpatrick RB – 1
George Fraser QB – HM
Larry Golden DG – 1
Jim Johnson LB – 1
Marc Kemp DT – HM
Dave Maas DB – 1
Pat Mahoney C – HM
Richard Perez DE – 1
Rod Schorr DT – 1
Walt Smith RB – 2

Football Players from the 1956 CIF Championship Team Unite for 60th Anniversary Celebration

wp_000805Anaheim Colonists celebrated the 60th Anniversary of the historic 1956 CIF Championship game –  ranked #6 of the top 100 events in CIF’s last 100 years – by inviting former players back to the campus on Friday, Oct. 21, 2016.

The players were feted by the Varsity Football Team and fans who haven’t forgotten the celebrated game that ended in a 13-13 tie between Anaheim and Downey. Both teams were undefeated with record-setting runningbacks known as the touch-down twins, Mickey Flynn from Anaheim and Downey’s Randy Meadows.

Friday’s celebration started with players and others connected with “The Big Game” being interviewed by “The Last Hurrah” documentary filmmaker Paul Molina.

The film will illustrate how a game of such magnitude could not – and would not – ever happen again due to the changing economics and infrastructure of the southland that would transform the small towns of Anaheim and  Downey into entertainment and aerospace capitols. High school football would continue to be popular – but it would never again be king. (Click here for a preview of “The Last Hurrah” documentary.)wp_000771

The players who returned to the Anaheim High campus, and those who could not, are still kings in the eyes of the the Colony Community.

The anniversary celebration carried over to the cafeteria, where the Varsity Football Team, former players, family and friends, gathered for a meal, to watch the restored film of the 1956 game, and to hear a pep talk from legendary runningback Mickey Flynn, whose #25 is one of only four retired by Anaheim High.

wp_000812Haller of Famer Jim Fassel (’67) was also on hand to support the team. Fassel is a former NY Giants Super Bowl coach who has been a life-long Colonist supporter, like his father Bud Fassel (’38), AHS equipment manager and right-hand man to Coach Clare Van Hoorebeke.

After a group photo, the Varsity Team left to suit-up, and the alumni contingency toured the newly remodeled campus fitness center (what’s been known as the weight room) featuring equipment donated by Fassel from his two-time UFL champions Las Vegas Locomotives. Fassel served as head coach, president and general manager.

After a refreshment break, the group’s next stop was Glover Stadium for the game and half-time ceremony to honor the former players. Anaheim won the game 38-27 against Savanna. Escorted by student ambassadors, the crowd embraced the 1956 CIF Championship players with applause and adoration.

It was a perfect ending for a special day celebrating a game for the ages, the players who played it, and the fans who still talk about “The Big Game.”

A more indepth article about “The Big Game” is available via this link. Click here to view related photos from the 1957 yearbook.

Following are more photos from the day:

 

 

Opposing Teams of Historic 1956 CIF Championship Game Unite to Kick Start Documentary

Football program cover

Football program cover

It is considered the biggest high school football game in California history – the legendary 1956 CIF championship game between Anaheim and Downey High Schools. The game has never been matched in terms of local interest, young idols, and a record-setting crowd. Sixty years later, the game that ended in a tie between the two undefeated teams is still being celebrated by historians, football fans, and alumni from both high schools.

In anticipation of an Oct. 21-23 60th anniversary celebration of the game, both Anaheim and Downey are planning reunions and commemorations to honor players from the 1956 teams.

Both sides are also teaming up to help kick start a documentary film project, “A Last Hurrah.” The fundraising effort is to provide film maker Paul Molina with an initial production budget to record and edit interviews with players, including Anaheim’s star running back Mickey Flynn, as well as fans who attended the game.

“There is a sense of urgency,” says Molina. “It’s almost certain that these reunions will not be formally arranged ever again.”

A 5-minute promo video of the project may be viewed via the project’s GoFundMe campaign. When achieved, the $24,000 goal will allow completion of a work-in-progress by November in order to obtain finishing funds from foundations and organizations dedicated to historical and cultural preservation.

Molina graduated as a football star from Katella High School in Anaheim. He went on to UCLA’s School of Theater, Film, and Television, spending the past 25 years producing and writing documentaries and news programming for PBS, The Learning Channel, E! Entertainment, NBC affiliates, Netflix and others. Now he’s ready to film a project that is much more personal to him.

56-article-2“As a native southern California, I am very passionate about this dream project,” Molina said. “In today’s digital world, it’s difficult to appreciate the amount of hype this game generated 60 years ago, but the media buzz was unprecedented. Each team had a superstar in the backfield, Anaheim’s Mickey Flynn and Downey’s Randy Meadows. Each guy averaged over 16 yards per carry!”

The documentary will take viewers back to when Anaheim and Downey were still considered small towns that were truly represented by their high schools teams, each a football powerhouse with legendary coaches who would achieve hall of fame status: Anaheim’s Clare Van Hoorebeke and Downey’s Dick Hill. Businesses closed early, and opposing schools brought busloads of fans to watch the teams clash in the L.A. Memorial Coliseum.

But it’s also the aftermath of the gridiron match that proved a game of such magnitude could not – and would not – ever happen again.

“Although the game is what drives this story forward, this documentary is about much more – a social and cultural transformation of an entire region, when all eyes of the nation were on California,” says Molina.  “This documentary would appeal to all persons interested in American history in the 1950s.”

Molina is collaborating with Art Hansen, a CSUF professor emeritus who is writing a book entitled “The Golden Kingdom: Prep Football and Early Cold War Society and Culture in Southern California.”  The book, once published, will provide a social and cultural “context” to help readers fathom why the fortunes of high school football programs, as embodied and symbolized by the 1956 Anaheim Colonists and the Downey Vikings, assumed such potent significance, meaning, and value within early Cold War Southern California.

Molina adds: “The landscape of southern California was changing so rapidly that if we look back at that period from afar, perhaps we can also reflect on how we sometimes treat our heroes, and what that says about us,” he explained.  “Most importantly, this film will allow the men and women interviewed to tell their stories – which will make us all richer by reflecting upon their experiences, and ours.”

Click here to donate via the GoFundMe campaign.  Any amount is welcome, but incentives are being offered as follows:

$25 – A digital download of the finished documentary “A Last Hurrah.”

$50 – Digital downloads of “A Last Hurrah” and the 1956 Anaheim vs. Downey title game preserved by the OC Sports Hall of Fame and the Anaheim and Downey alumni associations.

$100 – Digital downloads of “A Last Hurrah,” the 1956 Anaheim vs. Downey title game, and the game program.

$250 – All of the above, plus a hard copy replica program signed by Mickey Flynn.

$500 – All of the above, plus an Anaheim High Mickey Flynn #25 jersey.

$1000 – All of the above, including a signed #25 Mickey Flynn jersey and a collectible OC Sports Hall of Fame book and poster featuring Anaheim High memorabilia from the 1956 game.

$5000 – All of the above, and screen credit as an executive producer

More information about the Anaheim celebration on Oct. 21 is available at www.anaheimcolonists.com. For those who wish to make a donation by check, donations may be mailed to the AHSAA, P.O. Box 389, Anaheim, CA, 92805. Please write “A Last Hurrah” on the check’s memo line. Questions may be directed to anaheimalumni@yahoo.com or to Paul Molina via paulgmolina@gmail.com.

AHSAA Unearths “Buried” Colonist Treasure

ALEX AND MICKEY AT OC HALL OF FAME GROUND BREAKING

Alex Maese (fourth from left) and Mickey Flynn (far right) were among the outstanding athletes who helped break ground at the Angel Stadium for the OC Sports Hall of Fame.

A series of happy coincidences has led to the recovery of a treasure trove of Colonist memorabilia, including items belonging to legendary Anaheim High football coach Clare Van Hoorebeke. These highly prized relics will be displayed for the first time in nearly 20 years at the Feb. 15 AHSAA 7th Annual Golf Classic, Dinner and Auction at Western Hills Country Club.

The memorabilia was last viewed by the public at the 7,000-square-foot Orange County Sports Hall of Fame housed at Angel Stadium. The Hall of Fame was forced to close when the Angels were bought by Disney, and the entire contents of the museum – cases, fixtures, boxes of sports memorabilia and more – were being stored at a location near Anaheim High School. [Read more…]

Colonists Connect at 2015 Membership Mixer

Cynthia and Mickey

Cynthia Roybal holds up her ’73 yearbook showing a photo of herself and a historic photo of AHS football great Mickey Flynn ’57.

The Anaheim High School Alumni Association 2015 Membership Drive Mixer was held Monday, June 15, at alumni-owned M3Live restaurant and event center in Anaheim. The event featured entertainment, hors d’oeuvres, entry into an opportunity drawing for special prizes, a silent auction, memorabilia display and a no-host bar.

The mixer kicked off the Association’s seventh year of supporting today’s Colonists. Thanks to alumni generosity and community support, the AHSAA has donated nearly $100,000 to Anaheim High and its students.

Thanks to M3Live owner Musa Madain from AHS Class of 1984, who helped sponsored the event and to all who donated great prizes for the opportunity drawing and silent auction.

Hall of Fame Athletes Among Golfers at Feb. 17 Golf Classic

AHSAA Golf Classic Tees Off for 5th Year

Several Hall of Fame athletes will be among players in the 5th Annual Anaheim High School Alumni Association Golf Classic slated for Monday, Feb. 17 at Western Hills Country Club.

Jim Fassel - Class of 1967

Jim Fassel – Class of 1967

The day will include AHS football legend Mickey Flynn from Class of ‘57 driving the course to serve beverages to golfers ranging from former N.Y. Giants Super Bowl coach Jim Fassel from Class of ’67 to Loy Petersen, a ’63 grad who played pro basketball with the Chicago Bulls.

Petersen and his award-winning coach, Don Liebhart, a Class of ’45 Anaheim High grad, will be inducted into the school’s Hall of Fame during the dinner portion of the event.

Other former pro athletes playing or participating include:

clint stark - St. Louis Cardinals 2Clint Stark ’59, a pitcher with the St. Louis Cardinals; Ron Davini ’65, College World Series MVP and Chicago White Sox; and Dick Baney ’65, who played for the Cincinnati Reds and was the World Series pitcher who beat the Dodgers at Dodger Stadium to win the pennant for the Reds.  Baney is donating some of his personal Cincinnati baseball possessions.

Also golfing is Jeff Severson, who was a defensive back with the Washington Redskins & L.A. Rams.

Golf Chairman Phil Anton ’63 and a former player with the Dallas Cowboys, announced that the stakes just got hotter thanks to Paul Schulte of Miller Toyota of Anaheim. Golfers lucky (or skilled) enough to make a hole-in-one will win a brand new vehicle, among other gifts provided by the dealership.Miller Toyota of Anaheim

Many other auction items have been donated by area businesses, as well as Anaheim alumni. At last count, there was an impressive assortment of live and silent auction items ranging from suite tickets for the Ducks and Angels, admission to nearly ever major Southern California attraction, hotel stays, restaurant gift certificates and much more.

Anton stressed that the event is open to golfers and non-golfers. With a shot-gun start, scramble format, and the availability of Mulligans, all stand a chance to win contests and prizes.

Cost to golf, including cart, range balls, lunch, dinner, goodie bag and other prizes, is $150. Dinner only is $35. Forms may be downloaded from www.anaheimcolonists.com. Reservations may also be e-mailed to anaheimalumni@yahoo.com. Contact Anton at 714/815-9562 for more information on sponsorship opportunities.