
Les Eathorne and Mark Bergsma on the bench for an East High basketball game, date unknown.
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF EATHORNE:
A Conversation with Les, Part 2
By Terry Mosher
Editor, Sports Paper
At almost the exact day Congress approved
the Lend Lease Act that moved the United States further along toward the war in
Europe, Les Eathorne was playing on the Bremerton High School team that was
capturing the 1941 State basketball championship with a 30-29 victory over St.
John’s.
Eathorne was a junior that year and it
wasn’t until the next year that he would be captain and a starter on the
Wildcat team that would lose to Hoquiam 36-34 in the state title contest. It
would be the second championship for the Elmer Huhta coached-Grizzles in four
years and denied coach Ken Wills back-to-back titles for his Wildcats. (Huhta
resigned after this season to take the position as head freshman football coach
at the University of Washington).
Bremerton would have to wait until 1973 and
74 to get those back-to-back state titles. By then, Eathorne had gone from high
school player to military service, to college player, married, and had returned
to be the coach of the East Bremerton team that won those back-to-back state
titles.
Eventually Eathorne would win 502 games as
basketball coach, be inducted into the Kitsap County Sports Hall of Fame, the
Washington State Basketball Coaches Association Hall of Fame, be honored as one
of the best coaches to come out of West Sound area, getting a spot in that
lofty status right beside his mentor, Ken Wills, and earn one of the best
honors of his life in 1976 when he was recognized in Milwaukee, Wis. as the
national high school athletic director of the year.
Now it’s Eathorne’s stepson, Casey
Lindberg, who is coaching Bremerton boy’s basketball, while he sits on the
opposite side from the team bench at home games, watching, analyzing, and
softly cheering.
Following is a conversation with Eathorne,
part 2:
TSP: When first did you
realize maybe basketball would take you places you didn’t expect to go, such as
college, coaching?
LE: The first time I knew is
when my mother started letting me do things I wasn’t able to do before, like go
on Sundays to shoot baskets at Jack Madsen’s at the end of Elizabeth Street. He
had a basket there he didn’t use much, and I had an old ball, and I just played
there. My mother never got mad at me if I was late coming in. I didn’t realize
it at the time, but (Ken) Wills had told her that if I played well and did what
I was told, they might be able to get me a college scholarship, and that
changed everything with my mother. I had free reign as far as doing things with
basketball, as long as I was where I was supposed to be. First time I ever
played (competitively) was with the Presbyterian Church in a church league. The
next year I played for the Lutheran Church; they had better uniforms and
prettier girls. Then I found out the Methodist Church across from the Admiral
(Theater) had a gymnasium inside their church, so I would go there to play.
Basketball was natural for me. Nothing encourages you more then when you go to
a tournament and find out you are better than most kids there. I wasn’t tough
enough to like the contact or playing in the mud in football. In football, you
have to get the mud out of your jock and everywhere else. I just didn’t like
that. I did turn out for football in high school. Harold Shidler was the coach.
He was one of the better coaches Bremerton ever had. Very much a
disciplinarian. His only claim to fame is he kicked a field goal for the
University of Washington against Oregon. It hit the goal post and bounced
through (in 1924, when Shidler played, Washington lost to Oregon 7-3).
TSP: What were some of the
highlights of your high school career?
LE: When you start out as a
sophomore and team goes to the state tournament at the University of Washington
and, God almighty, you get out on the floor and look up, geez that is thrilling
for anybody. I was enamored by it. The hardest thing was to beat out the kids
from Bremerton. We had so many players. If you were playing half the game, or
anything like that, you were doing well. We had about 30 players. Roger Wiley,
who got a full scholarship to the University of Oregon. He was about 6-foot-8
and a half. Bob Engstrom, Barry Neon, Al Kean. Wes Wager, he was a professor
for many years at the University of Washington, Ray Volz, Art McCarty, Ed
Devaney, his dad was part-owner of the Bremerton Cruisers baseball team; that’s
how we got jobs selling peanuts at Roosevelt Field, Al Maul, who went to
Washington State mainly as a baseball player (Maul led the WSU freshman
basketball team in scoring his first year there). Frank Wright, about
six-foot-three, played at Northwestern. He could dunk it, but you couldn’t do
that then. When we had open gym, the kids would flood in. Some of our best
games were played right there in that gym at the high school between 4th and
5th streets during open gym.
TSP: You guys won a state
championship and lost a close one. Describe those seasons.
LE: I wasn’t a starter in 1941. If
we needed an outside shot or ball handling against a zone, yes I started. But
if we just ran up and down the floor to beat somebody, I didn’t start. Senior
year I was captain and starter, and I ran the floorshow. But it took a long
time and a lot of work to get there in basketball in Bremerton. In 1941, the
big star was Al Maul. He was just an athlete. A very fine first baseman who
(eventually) played with the Bluejackets and stuff like that. He was about 6-3 and
could jump, but he didn’t have the fundamentals of the game. He was a player,
and a good-looking guy, too. We had Engstrom, Harold Worland. He could run. Not
a great jumper. But he could get up and own the floor like nobody else. Just
had blinding speed. Devaney was a player. There are so many to remember. Ray
Volz went to the University of Washington. He lived in Seattle and came back
and forth on the ferry so he could play at Bremerton. Roger Wiley. Frank Wright
was a very talented player. Good size. Good speed. (Art) McCarty. We just had a
lot of kids who could play the game. Most teams didn’t have that. In 1942
Hoquiam beat us (in the state championship game). They had a kid, Rich (Dick)
Wittren, who won it for them. How many times do you tell your players don’t
stop until you hear the whistle? We had them going into the last minute or so.
We thought we had them. This Wittren shot from the side, and at the (Hec
Edmundson) Pavilion they had these gridders that came down. The ball hit one of
those gridders and came back to the floor. I thought McCarty was going to pick
it up. McCarty thought I was going to pick it up. Wittren picks it up, goes
right in and makes the layin, and beats us (according to news account in the
Bremerton Searchlight, a guy named Walt Haney scored the winning basket off a
rebound, apparently off Wittren’s missed shot). In 1941, we smothered St.
John’s. They had about 100 kids in school and we swamped them .... by two
points (laughs). They had these Leifers. They were pretty good. (Irv Leifer and
brother Bob were on that St. John’s team. The 1952 state program describes Irv
Leifer’s efforts in that title game as maybe the best one-man tournament
performance ever. He and his brother both scored 10 points. St. John’s merged
with Pine City High School in 1941. Irv Leifer would go on to set scoring
records at Eastern Washington and would go on to win four state high school
championships as coach at Renton, 1953, 60, 66 and 67. His 66 Renton team beat
Port Angeles for the title). And very well coached. Wills put Wiley into the
game late and we got a couple layins over the top. But they were very well
coached and just played a beautiful game. But we won state. And it was sure fun
to do it.
TSP: How did the scholarship to the
University of Washington Happen?
LE: Well, we went to the state
tournament when I was a sophomore, won it as a junior and as a senior should
have won it. I made the all-state tournament team, we won the Cross-State
League, and people were looking for guards. I was listed at 6-1, but was about
6-0. I could shoot the two-handed long shot from wherever you needed it. And
the reason I had the two-handed shot was because I wanted to beat my coach, Ken
Wills. I don’t know if I ever beat him. I had a two-handed set-shot, both feet
on the floor. I shoot it now and people would die from hysteria. By the time I
coached at Camas (1950), if you shot a two-handed set-shot, people died
laughing at you. So I forgot how to teach it. They recruited by mail a lot back
then. I heard from (Howard) Hobson at the University of Oregon, (Amory) Slats
Gill at Oregon State, got letters from Southern California, and all those
people. I put them in a scrapbook and let them sit there. The whole difference
at the time was the war. The war (World War II) was on, my dad was not well,
and my mother wanted me to stay close to home so she could see me play. All of
a sudden, Hec Edmondson was at the front door and he charms my mother. All of a
sudden, I went there (to the UW). Hec Edmondson was a very nice, dignified man.
He sat down and said, “This is what I can offer your son. We would like him
there.” He just sat there and smiled. Kids back then did what their parents
said. I never did exactly what I wanted; I did whatever my parents wanted. It
was a different time. There were no cars, no running around. I played
basketball. Nobody in my family had a college education, so my mother was
determined I would get one. I don’t know what the hell good it did me. I should
have gone in the shipyard and got a pension. I probably would have been away
ahead money-wise working in the shipyard. But I wouldn’t have been happy. I
remember walking down the street when I heard on the radio that the Japanese
had bombed Pearl Harbor. You ask kids now where Pearl Harbor is and they don’t
know. But back then you knew where Pearl Harbor was. I immediately knew what
had happened. But what can you do? I just kept going. Gym was open at the high
school (between 4th and 5th in Bremerton), so I played. I went to the U-Dub in
1942. Went almost a complete year. Then I got drafted in 1943. Was in the
service from 1943-45. Never shot at. Christ, I would have died of heart
failure. I was in the paratroops infantry, the 517th. I got hurt in the
paratroops, sprained an ankle a couple times. So they sent me to field
artillery in Oklahoma. I didn’t like that, so took Air Corps exam. Passed that
and went to Denver, Colorado. Was going to be a bombardier. Went to Lubbock,
Texas. They washed everybody out. Casualties in day-light bombing (over Europe)
had not come up to expectations; they hadn’t killed enough of these guys, so I
went back to Denver, Colorado and became an Air Armor, loading B-17s and
training as a machine gunner. I had an uncle who lived in Denver, so it was
nice to go to somebody’s house and eat on Monday’s with a pass-out. Then I got
rheumatic fever and that ended everything. I came back to Fort Lewis. I had a
heart murmur, swelling in my knees. They cut my pants off. Wills came down and
looked at me. He called Dr. Schutt, who was in charge of the Naval Hospital (in
Bremerton). They rushed me to the hospital. They thought I was a marine. Don’t
know how things got fouled up. So I stayed in the hospital almost 7 1/2 months
until they found out I wasn’t a marine. Once they found out I was actually in
the Air Force, they transferred me back to Fort Lewis. The foul-up probably
saved my life. Some snafus can save your life.
TSP: How was your career at the UW?
LE: First of all, I had a heart
murmur and kind of a pension. They told me my sophomore year I could only play
12 minutes. Each year the time escalated as I got in better shape. This guy,
Myers, who I really admired, said I couldn’t play (because of his heart
murmur). I told him, “Then I’m not going to school here. I came here to play
basketball, and then be a coach, and if I can’t play my future isn’t very good.
I’ll just get the hell out of here and go to the Navy Yard if I have to.” He
thought it over and said, “Okay, but I’m going to the ballgames and watch you.”
He set the time limits to how much I could play. When we played at Oregon and
Oregon State, I played more because he wasn’t there watching me. I don’t think
I ever scored in double figures. Nobody did, except Sammy White (who was named
to the UW All-Century Team for baseball; White caught in the major leagues with
the Boston Red Sox). (Jack) Nichols was an All-American who came from Everett.
He was a dentist in Seattle. He was about 6-8 or 6-9, very muscular, very
intelligent. And White was a charmer, and a showboat. He could play the game.
Bill Vanceburg was just a big horse out of Ballard. He just could rebound. Shot
outside a little. Tough. Not a great player. I got a degree in health and
physical education with a minor in English, then a master’s degree in motivation
at Central Washington.
Next
Month: Part III, Eathorne goes to work, into coaching.