Nate Branch, junior at Ravenswood H.S. in East Palo Alto, Calif., scored with seconds to play in fifth overtime in finals of northern California basketball championships, gave Ravenswood a 60-58 win in longest title game ever played in northern California.

Dave Newhouse sent me

(This deletes the name of the co-combatant, which Dave says is St.Elizabeth of Oakland. Nate Branch later played for Nebraska and the Harlem Globetrotters and was recently known to play organ at a local church.
From Jim Gallegher, 2008:
Crane, now retired and living in Auburn, installed Milky as a starting guard on his 1961-1962 Ravenswood varsity, one of the best high school teams in Peninsula history. He played in perhaps the greatest high school game ever played here.

The date was March 17, 1962. It was the championship game of the Peninsula Basketball Tournament at Stanford University. Ravenswood featured Johnson, Nate Branch, Milt Dickerson, Clifton Grandy and Art Crum.

The opponent was St. Elizabeth of Oakland, with center Kevin Hardy, 6 feet 5 inches tall and 270 pounds, and a sharpshooting forward named Pat Furlong.

There was no shot clock; both teams took turns holding the ball. The game was tied at 58 after four overtimes. Crane called for a play to Johnson at the head of the key with five seconds left. Branch, in the corner, couldn’t find Milky and launched a jump shot as time ran out.

The ball hit nothing but net. Ravenswood 60, St. Elizabeth 58. The packed stands of rickety Stanford Pavilion erupted.

Branch, best known among the Ravenswood alums, went on to the University of Nebraska, where he was All-Big Eight and enjoyed a decade with the Harlem Globetrotters. Milky and several of his teammates matriculated at CSM, where they were welcomed by Coach Avina.

“We had Milky, Dickerson, Crum and George Raybon from Ravenswood,” Avina recalled. “CSM’s new hilltop campus had just opened. It was a challenge for those guys to get here. They were known to jump a freight at the county line and ride up to San Mateo.”

The Ravenswood contingent made an immediate impact.

The Bulldogs captured the 1964 Modesto Tournament, a premiere early-season event matching 16 of the best community college teams throughout the West.

“It was a great thrill,” Avina recalled. “Milky was fantastic. He and Raybon were named to the all-tournament team.”

Johnson left school after the basketball season but returned for another year at San Mateo that earned him a bid from coach Rene Herrerias at UC Berkeley for the 1966-1967 campaign.

Milky’s contributions were modest.

A 10-point effort against UCLA — the national champions — was the high-water mark.

An early marriage and an infant with health problems compelled Milky to abandon Berkeley and enter the workforce. Beset with a chronic heart ailment, he died shortly before Christmas in 1991.

His older brother, Timroff, who also played basketball at Ravenswood, succumbed to diabetes in 1994.

Ravenswood High basketball may be a fading memory to its coterie of aging alumni, but to Milky’s teammate Branch, a 1991 county Hall of Fame inductee, the Johnson aura burns brightly.

“He was born to play the game,” Branch recalled recently. “He never practiced “… just played one pickup game after another. The smoothest I’ve ever seen.

“Small as he was, he would dunk during warm-ups, and the crowd would go crazy. But off the court, he’d go his own way. Later on, he had a family to take care of.”

Milky’s daughter, Sonja, of Fremont, and his mother, Dewell Johnson of Menlo Park, expect to attend the Hall of Fame ceremony.

By the way, I texted Hans Delannoy, Cubberley 1969 and my Gunn coach 1981 and he replied without much thought “Elizabeth with Kevin Hardy”.

Basketball legend and former Harlem Globetrotter, Nate Branch spoke to MC Sports youth about his time playing ball. The presentation took place at the East Palo Alto YMCA on December 14, 2017.

Branch, a star player at Ravenswood High School in East Palo Alto, went on to play for Nebraska University and launched to celebrity status with the Globetrotters. At the event, the kids watched clips featuring the Globetrotters, on the late 70’s early 80’s, high school basketball, TV drama series, “The White Shadow.”

Being a professional athlete brings many opportunities, some good some bad, shares Branch. He traveled the world, met three presidents and had a TV career with the Globetrotters. But being an athlete took a toll on his body. In his talk, Branch imparts to the kids that he is thankful for his education which enabled him to support himself after retiring from basketball.

A key takeaway from Branch’s presentation is the importance of working hard toward your goals, and education is a part of that process. You can improve your life and be successful even if you come from a lower income community like East Palo Alto.

Nate Branch, Curley Neal, Meadow Lark Meadows, 1975

Nate Branch possibly made the most incredible shot in basketball history — a jumper from the corner at the end of the fifth overtime of a tournament championship game. Although it happened at the high school level, on the Stanford University campus in 1962, Branch’s perfect swish had a historical imprint in other ways. The game was between an all-black team and an all-white team located in California cities that were designated as murder capitals in America. The Seismic Sixties, the most transformative decade of the century, was just underway as Branch gave Ravenswood High of East Palo Alto, the black public school team with a White Shadow coach, a hard-fought, exhausting victory over St. Elizabeth High, a parochial school from Oakland. In 2018, author Dave Newhouse met with players and coaches from both teams to relive that game — the longest high school tournament championship basketball game up to that point — and the ramifications that followed. Both schools would shut down in name, the tournament would be discontinued, the gymnasium no longer is used for basketball, and the three newspapers that covered the tournament are no longer in operation. Thus players and coaches from that game, plus additional alumni who were interviewed, view that memorable evening from a lifetime’s perspective. East Palo Alto, in 1992, led the country in murders per capital. Oakland continually ranked in the top ten until both cities underwent gentrifications that reduced crime immeasurably. Both current mayors of the two municipalities were interviewed about the cultural change. Though a number of combined players have passed on, a long-overdue reunion of the players from that classic game took place fifty-five years afterward in 2017 at a church where Branch, the game’s hero, plays the organ and sings on Sunday mornings inside the East Palo Alto church where his father was the pastor. The Seismic Sixties are relived as well as the five-overtime game has moved on from a fierce rivalry to a friendly relationship.

This was Dave’s 15th book; there is also something about St. Mary’s Football at the Cotton Bowl.

photos of Globetrotters guesting on White Shadow:

A little off topic but Globetrotters 1956:

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Congrats on a great pre-season to 49ers strong safety candidate Marcell Harris #36 and his mother

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Marcell Harris Mom was very proud of her boy decked out in red and gold and decking people, last fall. He is close to earning this season the start at strong safety.

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Salma, at 53 VS ‘Selma’ (’65)

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Salma Hayek, the actress, posted to social media, a bathing suit photo regarding her 53rd birthday

 

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Not to be confused with ‘Selma’ a movie produced by Oprah Winfrey — cameo — a recent movie about Civil Rights activism in 1965 Alabama. Salma for her part starred in a movie about Frida.

b/w Zelmo Beaty basketball star who attended Praire View A & M a historically black university in Texas:

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Gunn – Dartmouth tennis player Emily Zhou is the top ladies player since Rebecca Dirksen

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Dartmouth tennis recruits from Los Angeles, New Jersey, Palo Alto and Bronxville

Gunn graduate and Dartmouth recruit Emily Zhou (Gunn 2019, Darmouth 2023) is the best ladies tennis prospect in two decades, since Rebecca Dirksen — two time CCS Champion for Gunn and Wearer of The Green All Time Great at Dartmouth (class of 2000) — three time all Ivy.

Good luck, Emily!

(She was the #75 player in the country, but competed mostly on the national tournament scene than for her school, where she won a physics prize. I met her, and her parents, at an alumni picnic)

Gunn is a historically strong program having produced

Five girls CCS singles championships, A total of 7 crowns.

And a total of 26 team, doubles or singles champions or finalists.

Central Coast Section champions in girls’ tennis, since 1975:

1975 Barrie Bulmore finalist (3)

1977 Barrie Bulmore, champion

1977 Hilary Whiting and Stacey Savides, doubles champions

1978 Barrie Bulmore, champion(2)

1978 Gunn team champions

1980 Stephanie Savides and Kelly Rapp, doubles finalist

1980 Gunn team finalist

1982 Gunn team champions (2)

1983 Gunn team finalists (4)

1986 Serena Wu, champion

1986 Gunn team finalist (5)

1987 Caroline Stassen and Denise Aptekar, doubles champions

1987 Gunn team champions (3)

1988 Tammy Robertson, champion

1989 Tammy Robertson, finalist (2)

1990 Gunn team finalist (7)

1991 Beth Brady and Lindy Irvine,  doubles champions

1991 Gunn team champions *(division II )

1992 Vedica Jain, champion

1992 Gitanjali Jain, finalist

1992 Rebecca Dirksen, Barbara Chung, doubles champions

1992 Gunn team champions* (Division II)

1993 Rebecca Dirksen(2) and Kathry Sciffes, doubles finalist 

1993 Gunn team finalist * (Division II)

1994 Rebecca Dirksen champion

1995 Rebecca Dirksen, champion (2)

Gunn Cal star Barrie Bulmore (now Barrie Bulmore Ornstil):

Rebecca Dirksen of Palo Alto, Hanover and Chapel Hill


Like me, Stephanie Savides attended Fremont Hills, Terman and Gunn; unlike me, she was an All America and National Champion for Stanford


Vedica Jain, according to the search engines, is a CEO and Partner in New York area, for a search firm servicing financial sector:

Gita Jain, something to do with blood, sweat, tears, and money

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I kind of like the new Tool, especially for the hand-drums

Screen Shot 2019-09-02 at 10.02.03 AMmaybe John Santos — not John Stamos — Anna Conrad was confused –can quickly learn this for our show Friday, September 13, 2019 at Mitchell Park Community Center, unless I am confusing tablas with congas. I could ask him…

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Palantir deploys ‘smart squirrels’ to spy on neighbors in Downtown North

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That’s all we know

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I admit this post is bullwinkle

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We are taking our dog to Sausalito Fair in, like, 10 minutes but not before I quickly post about the Stanford tennis player and her father

in happier times, Ahn celebrates her win at the Open

Based on Yesterday’s Research and Revelation: Or, Kirstie Ahn Should Take a Gap Year
It’s no good when the evening of your greatest victory ever the news is about how your father thinks you should quit and become a corporate clone, or a mother. And it’s not obvious from her Tweets what she intends to do about it; she’s conflicted. I would say: take a gap year, no matter how it turns out today (or yesterday?) at the US Open, 3rd round.

pre-ramble:
Ahn qualified for the 2008 U.S. Open when she was 16. She wanted to turn professional and take the first-round prize money she earned — $18,500 that would have meant forfeiting college eligibility.

“As a 16-year-old, you’re like: ‘Oh my God, so much money. Let me take it!’” Ahn recalled. “My dad, deadpan face, was like, ‘You could win the U.S. Open this year, and you’re still not taking the money — you’re going to college.’

“I was like, ‘But if I won the U.S. Open, I could take the money and pay for college!’ He was like: ‘No, I don’t care. You’re not getting into Stanford without being on the tennis team.’ ”

Don Ahn would not budge. [Note: and Don Budge would not “ahn”]

“Just playing tennis without education is nothing,” he said. “You have to be an educated person to live a life in society.”

Kristie ended up at Stanford, becoming captain of the powerhouse women’s team there.

When she graduated, she made a deal with her father to pursue professional tennis. He agreed to provide financial support for three years.

Being a Stanford grad doesn’t necessarily help; I recall meeting Stanford’s Sara Choy when she was at Terman, because she lived on my floor, 3 doors down, and Oak Creek ran her picture in its newsletter (We actually met in the laundry; her bag was bigger than she was). In an interview in a Stanford press lab, she said she played tennis so fervidly because her goal was to get in to Stanford. But she didn’t indicate why that was important to her. What about Stanford? What about the rest of her life and the brave new world beyong Palo Alto, Stanford, Perry Lane, Menlo Park, Oak Creek, the 650, the midPeninsula, the no-mans-land between baseline and net?

Any the Mom didn’t seem much help, besides being of the flaming stripe tiger varietal. I said “Good luck to your daughter? I played tennis for Terman, too” and she scanned me, more like The Terminator than a human, and walked away wordless. Ok, it was St. Francis versus Sacred Heart and, that she blew off Gunn — home of Emily Zhou, Barrie Bulmore, Cammie Mitchell, Stephanie Savides, Stacy Savides, Vedica Jain, Rebecca Dirksen and Ken Arnold, plus ironically, her SHP coach Jeff Arons — maybe she was actually picking up my vibe, my chip.

So what I noticed about Ahn, and I will link to the story and update at below if there is another result good or bad, is that according to her Stanford Sports bio, she went to Professional Childrens School in Manhattan, the oxymoron Oxford. The school, we soon glean, was founded 100 years prior for child actors on Broadway, and only recently started positioning itself as a school — better than home-schooling — for underage pro caliber athletes — although in this case it is a misnomer because Ahn, who was #2 mostly at Stanford — retained her eligibility.

Ahn has actually earned $500K on the pro circuit — which I admit is more than I have earned certainly since 2015 and maybe all time. But the story is that her parents said they would support her for only 3 years, and now, though apparently self-supporting, she has moved back in with the folks.

She could be partner someday, Dad says. Maybe she could be Kirsten Ahn someday.

Other famous Professional Childrens School products include Sarah Michelle Geller aka Buffy the Vampire Slayer; Ricki Lake aka Tracy Turnball who starred with Vinyl in John Water’s original Hairspray; I did not recognize any of the other athletes AND they fail to list Ahn.

Some viz:

Ricki Lake as Tracy Turnbull in Hairspray during her student days at Professional Childrens School, the alma mater and surrogate mother of tennis flash Kristie Ahn

I remember being shocked, surely shocked, at this photo of Professional Childrens School student Buffy the Vampire Slayer:

Tennis anyone?

I watched 3 min of this with sound office, looking for body language facial cues, and she seems normal enough, but there is something about young athletes, especially training under their parents’ watchful eye, from a young age, that I think thwarts excellence as it precipitates excellence in a narrow field. And I am flashing to the movie about the chess prodigy — Looking for Bobby Fisher – where the mom goes “My child is better at chess at age 10 than you will ever be at anything” which cuts both way. I agree: this is man-splaining.

outro: Big Sam Funky Nation big booty big bone:

edit to add, the next day:
Duffy was denied entrance to the Fair, hence we had no ‘bone.
We visited the Bay Model instead — snuck him in, I guess. But the good news, further, if you read Plastic Alto for its coverage of Earthwise Productions, the agent for Big Sam returned by call and we are discussing some of his other clients for The Mitch. We also, at a local diner or cafe met a guy who said he had a jazz label called Clarity. Always good to pick up tidbits about the biz. But for the grace of god.

and1: digressing even futher from either comment on athletics or comment on media to my primary directive which is either music, my music aka Earthwise or my self (Shields, 2010), I met Anna Conrad –tho at the time she had a more Jewish name — Anna Bernstein Conrad or something, tho she is German — becuause I did some show or was setting up a show or just re-visting Jonah Montranga (Far, oneline drawing) and he mentioned that he was on his way to play hotel cafe — maybe I saw him at Hotel Utah — with Anna as a package but they were told that they would split their show with John Mayer, who was doing a secret show, that would be annnounced shortly before his hit via Twitter, back when no one knew what Twitter was. (And for the record, I still am a refuse-nik, for most social media, beyond WordPress)
but Anna, who also reocords or posts under Anna River, has a cover, besides her little cocktease novelty thing — Bradley Cooper, John Stamos, Jason Sudeikis, all with hoes on their dicks — does a cover of Alvvays “Dream Tonite” which sent me to the original which has 1.5M views. I saw the entire set of Alvvays last night at Frost which I enjoyed. I’ll steel a line from the super-brain known as Kato-Rodriguez/ YoshiMiguel: they sound like Six Pence None the Richer meet Something More Indie. I sent the agent, who i Don’t know otherthan he works with Tom Windish — the best ears in the game — after half a song saying I liked but by the end it storted to bore me. Or bore on me.

I left The National after about 10 songs. I live 2 miles from Frost and am in the music biz so I go to every Frost show. So far I would say Lionel Richie was the best (JRAD, the National).

Ahighlight for me is that a lady my generation liked by Yo La Tengo shirt,and shot my photograph –and I remembered to suck in my tummy — and then I tried to trade it to her for her The National T but then we settled on me selling it to her for a bargain price — not to dis YLT, far from it. She was a rabid fan so ithought the shrit belonged to her. I picked it up at The Fillmore a couple years ago – being certainly the only fan to catch the Giants -Mets night game and then zipping over to catch the last 3 songs. Yo La Tengo being named for the Mets in their early pathetic days when Chico Escuela collides with Frank Howard or Frank Thomas (not the Big Hurt guy, a white guy) and then claimed it was because the shortstop called him off in Spanish).

Besides my own onsales, I have: Jenny Lewis, Jay Som, maybe Cake Ben Folds in LA, Mixtaape or something. Willie Nelson if he gets better.
My shows: John Santos, Sun Kil Moon, Molly Tuttle, Scott Amendola Trevor Dunn Philip Greenlief, Tom Harrell. Plus a couple offers and holds. Who knows.
I saw a guy with an APE hat and wondered if he was their protesting the rigged bidding that Greg Perloff described to a reporter n The Metro.

and and: As i write this on a Labor Day late morning, I am screening Boogie Nights lazily in the background but I stopped the film when Snif N the Tears “Drivers Seat” came. It reminded me that in Richardson Hall at Dartmouth College, someone on the floor below would play this song constantly very loud, and it annoyed the rest of us, directly above. Also, my friend A_ said that at Stanford a few years before, all the kids would simultaneously play “My Sharona” at midnight in his dorm. These were turntables.

There was a guy named David Dawley who I quoted in the Dartmouth as saying that his dog Sniff could pick stocks in a bull market as well as President of the College David T. McLaughlin. And did I mention that I met a tennis recruit from Gunn named Emily Zhou but pronounced “Cho” and her parents. She is #75 recruit in the country but did not play for Gunn. I said I was briefly an assistant coach at Gunn for the same guy.

Paul Roberts not Todd Parker

I’m watching a German and an Argentinian on tv right now but will try to catch a bit of Ahn’s match as well: Good luck!

Maybe what ties this together is me, Mark Leland, Nick Sturiale and Andy Zenoff as delinquent juniors drinking suicides and cranking Van Halan and Montrose and using our tennis racquets as air-guitars.
The history of air guitar indeed might include tennis racquet as a preliminary phase:
Proust, 1891:

marcel proust, paul roberts,

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Orange Gulenists in Palo Alto

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The Turkish cafe in Palo Alto that came to fame as a hangout for and or investment by soccer great Hakan Sukur, has opened a juice stand on the sidewalk.

The man who invented the orange and egg soda coincidentally was named Freed.

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Bull of Bospherus was actually invited to open a bull hoagie stand in Seoul. Meanwhile Kal or Cal from Egypt 40 years ago this month opened a gelato stand next to Jim from Palestine’s New York bagel stand made from buffalo milk.

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Fat jogger chick, Travolta on the spectrum, Oyelowo horror and Jewish doc coming to big screens

This gallery contains 3 photos.

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NFL needs to go to a running clock

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