Boys basketball: Orris steps down at Corona del Mar
Barry Faulkner
CORONA DEL MAR - Paul Orris, who 15 seasons ago became what he
termed “the custodian” of the Corona del Mar High boys basketball
program, said Monday he will hand the keys to someone else.
Orris, 53, submitted his resignation to school administrators after a
31-year CdM coaching career, including 16 seasons guiding the freshman
team. He will continue to teach math at the school. He said he will take
at least one season off from basketball, but did not rule out a possible
return, perhaps to coach the CdM freshman team.
“I still enjoy working with the kids, but there is a list of things
that have kind of accumulated,” Orris said of his reasons for stepping
down. “The 12-months-a-year proposition that all sports have gravitated
into, especially basketball, requires coaches to go from the regular
season to spring, to summer, to fall. Philosophically, I just have some
problems with that. And it’s more than just coaching. It’s running a
program, scheduling, cleaning the gym and a variety of things that have
just become too much.”
Orris, the Newport-Mesa District career victories leader, was 229-199
in 15 varsity seasons, including CIF Southern Section Division IV-AA
championships in 1992-93 and 1994-95. His teams won three league titles
and were section runners-up in their division three times. He was 29-10
in Southern Section playoff games, including 12 trips to the postseason.
His teams advanced past the first round in all but one of those playoff
runs and he competed in the state playoffs six times, winning three
games. Only four of his teams had a losing record and four of his squads
won at least 20 games, topped by a 24-7 mark in his first varsity season.
He also coached the South in the Orange County All-Star Game in 1995.
His final team finished 12-17, including a trip to the CIF Division
III-AA quarterfinals. Despite the losing record, however, many believe
Orris did his finest coaching in years. The Sea Kings won 6 of 17
preleague games, but won their first three Pacific Coast League contests.
The second round of league was highlighted by a dramatic 84-82 victory at
PCL co-champion University Feb. 6. Before that game, Orris, much to the
surprise of rival coaches, decided to abandon his trademark structured
offensive approach to run with the up-tempo Trojans.
“I think someone needs to come in with a new outlook and a new energy
and focus,” said Orris, who declined comment on a possible successor.
Orris’ varsity assistant the last few seasons has been Gordon McNeill,
who teaches at CdM. Orris said he did not know whether McNeill, who
starred at UC San Diego as a player and later played professionally in
Australia, would have an interest in the position.
Orris said he will miss the competition, but, with retirement
approaching, he needs to develop other interests.
“I still really enjoy basketball. I still like watching the game and
seeing different strategies and I’ll still do that. But, right now, I
just think I need to take a step back.
“I don’t have a whole lot of hobbies. Maybe other basketball coaches
do, but I don’t know how you can. I’m looking at retirement in another 10
years and, from that standpoint, it’s a little scary looking at what I’d
do when I didn’t have basketball. There’s a tutorial math program after
school I’ll probably get involved with. I do a lot of gardening at home,
but there’s only so much of that to be done. I used to do a lot of
singing in choirs and I may get back into that.”
Orris always credited much of his basketball philosophy -- including
hard-nosed man-to-man defense and a structured offensive system built on
unselfishness and good shot selection -- to former CdM head coaches Tandy
Gillis and the late Jack Errion.
“When I fulfilled Errion’s wish to succeed him, I sure didn’t want to
be the guy to screw up the winning tradition we had at CdM,” Orris said.
In recent years, when the Sea Kings went away from exclusively playing
man-to-man defense, Orris chose to call his zone configuration a “matchup
man-to-man,” citing deference to Errion’s dim view of playing zone.
When asked to reflect on his coaching tenure, Orris, always one to
maintain perspective, didn’t focus on the championships.
“Certainly, you remember the championships, but I remember some
individual moments of competition. My second year here, I took a freshman
group that had never won a basketball game in junior high. We lost our
first four, then we won one and I remember a kid coming up to me after
that first win and telling me that was the first time he’d won playing
organized basketball. And, I remember other moments, when guys stepped up
and made big plays.”
Orris said he will remember his final varsity team fondly, as well.
“I was really pleased about how far the guys came, from being very
inexperienced to achieving throughout the year. Even that last game (a
60-54 loss to No.2-seeded San Dimas) was a great reflection of the kind
of basketball I’ve always expected at CdM. They competed and left it all
on the floor.
“Sometimes, you come away from a victory feeling bad, but that loss
was one Gordon and I really felt good about.”
Don Martin, pricipal at CdM until recently taking a position at the
district office, said Orris will be missed.
“The thing that stands out for me is his professionalism,” Martin
said. “He was a stable influence for kids on the court and in the
classroom. I think he helped kids focus on the team, rather than
individual glory and the performance of his kids on the court reflected
that.
“In seven years of watching CdM basketball, I very seldom remember
Paul’s teams losing to someone they should have beaten. And they won a
few people didn’t expect them to. I’d say there was maybe one time that
his team didn’t look totally prepared and ready and that’s a pretty high
compliment.”
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