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In the era before
high school football
teams played for a
state title, Eric
Waldorf built a
reputation for being
one of Oregon’s
great coaches while
at Portland’s
Jefferson High.
Waldorf grew up in
Kennewick, Wash.,
and played halfback
at Washington State
from 1923 to ’25. He
coached the team at
Stayton, Wash., in
1927, before being
recruited to
Jefferson in 1928,
just a year after
the organization
that would become
the Oregon School
Activities
Association expanded
to sponsor a state
championship in its
second sport - track
and field.
Waldorf took over
a program that had
scored just 14
points and gone
winless the previous
season. Four years
later, the Democrats
went 10-0 and
outscored opponents
287-6, having given
up a score only to
Kelso, Wash., in a
preseason game. In
1932, the Demos went
10-0-1 and gave up
just 12 points. In
1933, Jefferson went
7-1-1, and gave up
just 14 points. In
those three seasons,
the Democrats were
19-1-1 against teams
from the Portland
Interscholastic
League, and allowed
just 19 points in
those games.
The 1931 team
featured halfback
Bobby Grayson, who
scored a record 117
points in seven
league games. He
later played at
Stanford University
and earned a spot in
the College Football
Hall of Fame.
Waldorf took a
season off from
Jefferson in 1939 to
coach the freshman
team at the
University of
Oregon, but returned
in 1940, the first
year the OSAA
sponsored a state
championship.
In the spring and
summer of 1942,
during the first
year of World War
II, Waldorf coached
the semi-pro Seattle
Shipbuilders to the
Northwest Region
title. He later took
the fall and winter
off from Jefferson
in 1944 to work for
the Red Cross.
The Demos reached
the state title game
in 1948, losing to
Grants Pass 6-0 in
the final. Waldorf,
nicknamed the “Gray
Fox” because of his
hair having turned
gray during his 20s,
retired to private
business following
the 1952 season. In
his 22 seasons as
coach at the school,
his teams won or
tied for the
Portland city
championship 10
times. He was
inducted to the
Oregon Sports Hall
of Fame in 1992.
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