|
The Last Mitey Mites

|
The home crowd had ben screaming for the second-string quarterback all day. In fact, they had been screaming "We want..." since the season's second game. Now "We want" strolled out to the huddle. Visiting Waldwick had a commanding lead with less than 90 seconds to go but the crowd rose to its feet as the Mites set up on the line of scrimmage. "We want" took the snap and rolled left. No one open. He scrambled back to the center of the field. Now both sets of coaches were yelling. Still no one open. He reversed fields again as half the Warriors converged on him. The cheerleaders had come alive. The band was playing. "We want" dodged several tacklers, looked downfield and rolled away again. There were still several ticks on the clock... Rumor had it that Hackensack's players kicked in money each week, with the entire pot going to the Comet who knocked the opponents' designated best player out of the game. Sure enough, the big Bergenfield end acknowledged as one of the Mites' three top players was on his way to Hackensack Hospital early in the second quarter with a compound fracture of the thumb. Still, the two teams went to the lockerroom in a scoreless halftime tie. The Mites' lockerroom looked like a MASH unit: the tough-as-nails junior defensive back was through for the day and most everyone else who had seen action was also banged up. The Mites' effort, in fact, had been so sensational that the head coach was too choked up to speak. Knowing an opportunity when he saw one, the line coach pushed his way to the center of the room and launched his own Gipper speech... We didn't know it then--it wasn't announced till the following
summer--but the Class of 1966 was to be the last of the Mitey Mites. Although
we did come away with the first two outright Northern New Jersey Interscholastoc
League championships (wrestling and baseball) since BHS moved up from the
Bergen County Scholastic League in 1962, the return of Bergenfield to football
glory was still years away.
Sure, Mitey Mite football had gone rapidly downhill since the
undefeated Richie Pierson/George Grube juggernaut in '59. Things hit rock
bottom with the initial NNJIL campaign (0-9) in '62. Since then, the Mites
had managed just two wins and three ties in the following 17 games. But
the Class of '66 had posted impressive winning records on the freshman,
sophomore and junior varsity levels, including beating Waldwick's varsity
on a bright October Saturday afternoon in '64.
Two-a-days in the blistering early September heat produced the
first desertions from our crusade. (Among them, one of the big two-way
tackles. He had gotten into theNYC music scene and had pretty much "ferried
'cross the Mersey" and out of the program by the time school started.)
Things began to come apart late in the season opener against
archrival Dumont. (The S-S SLB still doesn't understand why the season's
biggest game was scheduled for opening day, while an insignificant non-NNJIL
tilt against Waldwick was set for late October.) The Huskies led, 18-13,
in the fourth quarter when an apparent Mite TD pass was controversially
overturned for stepping out of bounds. If the Mite receiver was out-of-bounds,
it didn't so appear on the grainy gamefilm. What was apparent on that film
was a Dumont defender racing some 90 yards with an intercepted screen pass
on the next play for the icing score. There are some who still question
whether the senior QB should have called that screen--given that both teams
apparently heard the play literally yelled in from the Mite sideline--but
when the final gun sounded,
Having geared EVERY single snap of defensive preseason
practices to stopping Dumont's single wing attack, our D's familiarity--or
lack of same--with Ridgewood's Delaware wing T offense was amply demonstrated
by the 27 points the Maroons rolled up. It was also becoming apparent that
the celebrated double wing offense installed in preseason contained several
design flaws. Chief among them: the need for bigger offensive linemen than
we had available to handle the huge NNJIL D-lines while the intricate plays
developed; and the lack of backfield blocking schemes inherent in the spread
formation. These flaws limited Bergenfield to one late TD in a dismal 27-7
homefield defeat.
The circus really got going the following week in Hackensack,
ironically also perhaps the team's finest moment. Despite the loss of the
designated best player/end and that tough junior DB, the Mites pushed over
a late score to close to 7-6. Then the wheels came off:
After that day, most anything was liable to--and did--happen.
Fair Lawn was the '65 NNJIL power with a running back, Bruce Jankowski,
who later made the cover of Sports Illustrated while playing for Ohio State.
(He also enjoyed a four- or five-year career with the Kansas City Chiefs.)
We were struggling to hold onto a 6-6 tie with about 40 seconds to go before
halftime when Jankowski took a pitchout and ran some 20 yards to the end
zone. The kickoff was fumbled and recovered by the Cutters deep in Bergenfield
territory and Jankowski punched it in again before halftime. Then, he took
the opening kickoff of the second half 60 yards to paydirt, scoring three
times in less than 60 seconds and turning a tie into a 27-6 Fair Lawn rout
before the BHS band had returned to their seats...
The best was yet to come, however. "We want" and his fans
had been lobbying impatiently to replace the "very, very good bad guy."
He got his chance against Waldwick--and damned if he didn't look like Fran
Tarkington as he scrambled away from one Warrior defender after another.
He rolled left; he rolled right; he looked downfield and then tucked the
ball back in. Coaches were going crazy; the officials were out of breath,
as were the cheerleaders! The band had broken spontaneously into the fight
song! Bedlam reigned in Bergenfield! And then the gun sounded...and "We
want" casually dropped the ball on the ground and walked off the field...
The designated end made an heroic return to the team in time for the Teaneck game in late November (no mean feat if you've ever seen a compound fracture). So the coaching staff dusted off the ol' end-around play. Unfortunately, they forgot to call it until midway through the fourth quarter of a Highwaymen rout, after the battered senior line had been replaced by wide-eyed juniors making their varsity debuts. Not only was the designated end nailed behind the line of scrimmage, but he was cleated in the chin, producing an instant dimple...Not that many disagreed that the new look was a marked improvement for the facial features of the man some had liken to a character in a Medieval poem then part of senior English classes..but still, it was a short, nasty senior season for the designated end... Then there was Thanksgiving Day...
In retrospect, it is hard to believe , all things considered, that we actually won one game, 21-7 over Cliffside Park. Antiquated equipment--leather helmets in 1965!...heavy, old-style pads instead of lightway ones...heavy uniforms suitable for late November but certainly not early September...high-cut cleats--the head coach HATED low cuts...no opponents' gamefilms nor widely-distributed scouting reports (if the opponents were actually scouted!)...that ridiculous schedule...just three varsity coaches (even in '65 not enough to compete in the NNJIL!)...no weight training or other form of organized off-season conditioning...an overall undersized senior group with little backup from underclassmen. And the S-S SLB, for one, would do it all again in a microsecond. (The author salutes two members of the 1965 Mitey
Mites:
|
. . .
Address
Book | Reflections
| links
| Photo Gallery
| Doo Wops | homepage
| Business and Personal
Web Hosting
Bergenfield Education Foundation
| Band Room
| Friends of Music
| Class of 1967 | Calendar
of Events| BHS
logowear
add
your name to address book | change
your address or e-mail | view
alumni addresses
find
alumni by state | view
bulletin board | sign
the bulletin board | search
by state .
read
news and stories about bergenfield | view
memorials | add
a memorial |
Faculty, Staff & Friends Address Book | Faculty, Staff & Friends Registration
. . .
| St. John's
K-8 school | Bill
Eaton Memorial Golf | Bergenfield
Museum | BHS Drama Club
|
Bergenfield Education Foundation
| | BHS Chearleaders
| BHS Band Room
| Alumni Association
. . .
...
Space and funding for the BHS Web site has been donated by
JED products,
promotional products,
restaurant supply,
Custom Embroidery, Screen printing, T-shirts, Jackets, caps, sports uniforms, promotional supplies.......
links