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Click on Tournament for Bracket & Game Stories

 

 

 

CPTNim1Success for Capitan in New Mexico state tournments goes way back. Way, way back. More recently, it’s been in volleyball where the Tigers have made a mark.

Check it out in the Roll Call of State Championships…

 

Volleyball
2002…A five-game championship in Class 2A goes to Capitan, which beats back Laguna-Acoma for the title

1988…Ten years since the last one, Tigers reclaim Class 1A crown by beating back Floyd in four games

1978…Led by coach Bill McVeigh, Capitan beats Maxwell in a two-game sweep to bring back the 1A first-place trophy

Football
1953…New Mexico institutes an official playoff tournament in football for the first time and Capitan leaves no doubt in Class C as Tigers finish 11-0 year with a 19-12 victory over Navajo Mission

Boys Basketball
1943…Only one classification in the state and Capitan proves its best at basketball by nipping Navajo Mission 15-13 in the championship game

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And now, a word from our Sponsor…

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“Ole!” greets drive-through customers from the speaker box.
If that’s the case, it can only be one business: Taco Box.
From frijole burritos to Spanish fries to pig-in-a-panchos, and quite nearly everything in-between, the restaurant has been serving up its eclectic menu for 40 years.
According to owner Tom Martin, the number one seller is the simple-and-tasty frijole burrito while tacos, chalupas and cheese sticks follow closely in popularity.
A popular side item are Spanish fries, a Taco Box-invented title for another potato-based munchie (any guesses?). Martin says his restaurant has only occasionally ventured into making regular french fries and the attempts have ultimately always been futile with the Taco Box customer base.
“I always joke that I don’t make french fries so I can help keep McDonald’s in business,” Martin says.
Other items also remain popular to an extent even though not officially on the menu board anymore – a testament to the loyalty of the typical Taco Box consumer.
The Mexi-Burger was on the menu back in the early 1980s and still gets ordered today. By those in the know, at any rate.
“There’s probably at least a dozen different items over the years like that,” Martin says. “We took it off, just because of space, but we still make ‘em. We probably sell as many as we did when they were on the menu.”
Martin lists breakfast tacos, frijole tacos, guacamole tacos as other such “underground” items. And that’s not to mention the vast array of drink combinations, utilizing the different soft drinks and flavorings, that have actually never been listed on the big board at Taco Box.
Martin, raised in Cleveland and a graduate from Cornell University in New York, ventured west after college and tried his hand with the Taco Box brand. He took over Taco Box on June 1, 1970.
Remembering his first foray into Mexican food, Martin has an oft-repeated story with some variation or another.
“I never had a taco until I was 21. I remember having a mild green chile taco and I thought I was going to die,” Martin recalls.
After having a tastebud-adjustment and following countless tacos served to his customers at Taco Box, it’s safe to say one thing about the guy who originally thought he’d be in the Land of Enchantment  for “a couple of years.”
Well Tom, you’re a New Mexican now.