Catching Up With: Jane Hilgendorf
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Steve Virgen
When Jane Hilgendorf punches the snooze button in the morning, it
no longer signifies a long day at the office. In the 10 minutes before
the alarm goes off again, she now doesn’t have to ponder the tasks of the
day.
Instead, Hilgendorf, the former Orange Coast College athletic director
and women’s volleyball coach, reflects on the opportunities and moments
that have made her stronger -- the memories that cause her to be
grateful.
“Always in the last nine minutes (before the alarm goes off again),”
says Hilgendorf, 59, who retired officially on Jan. 5. “I remind myself
how grateful I am for having had the opportunities that I’ve had. It’s
like a nine-minute reality, gratitude check. And that’s important for me
to do.”
Days of golf, yoga or improving in her hobby of photography have
replaced the 15-hour work days. She now has time to relax. She has the
opportunity to focus.
She can breathe again and display, in full effect, the secret to her
success: positive thinking. Hilgendorf is the ultimate optimist.
“Everyone asks the question,” she says. “Is the glass half empty or
half full? I’m one of those that has the glass half full and it’s usually
a full glass. This half empty stuff, I have no use for it. I don’t have a
worry in the world.”
Her worries began to disappear in the days leading up to her
retirement. She went to Australia and saw the action of the 2000
Olympics. She witnessed six days of volleyball competition and stood with
the multitudes to watch the track and field events.
As soon as she retired, she took to the golf course. Later, she began
to use her camera, then invested in a pair of walking shoes and,
sometimes, she’ll sit with a pen and write about the reasons for the
contentment in her life. There’s plenty to write when she thinks of the
friends she has made and the lasting impression she has left with so many
people, including her assistant coach Chuck Cutenese, who is now the head
coach of the men’s and women’s volleyball teams.
“She’s amazing,” Cutenese says. “For me, she’s been a mentor from the
start. I came on as an assistant in 1990 and later realized she was
grooming me to take over. She had a plan of preparing me to put me in
that position. That shows how much she cares for the program. She didn’t
want someone not knowing what to do from start.”
When Cutenese took over he was pressurized with maintaining OCC’s rich
volleyball tradition. But, Hilgendorf never added to the pressure. On the
contrary, she made the job a bit easier.
“She just stepped back and let me do all the work,” Cutenese says.
“She is by far the most positive person I know. And as a coach, I hope I
have the effect on the athletes the way Jane had the effect on them.”
Just as the process of passing the torch to Cutenese, Hilgendorf
carried over that mentality to her work as OCC’s athletic director.
She used her gift of mentoring as her main approach to taking on the
job as Athletic Director. She says she wanted to lead by example and such
is her legacy.
In 1970, OCC hired Hilgendorf as a physical education teacher, not a
coach. She began coaching the Pirates’ volleyball program the next year.
When she first started the team was co-ed. She then coached the women’s
team from 1973-91 as she compiled a 233-100 overall record and guided the
Pirates to three state championships in 1978, ’80 and ’82.
“I actually wasn’t hired to coach,” Hilgendorf says. “I was hired just
as a physical education teacher. (The teachers then) were generalists,
not specialists. Over the years, I taught archery, bowling, softball,
tennis, badminton, track and field, volleyball, fitness and
conditioning.”
Hilgendorf’s experience as a coach is a big cause for her gratefulness
today. She remembers the days of traveling in “rickety, old station
wagons,” with the co-ed volleyball teams.
She laughs when she thinks of the one time she used a swear word while
coaching.
“We were losing to a team we shouldn’t have been losing to,” she says.
“I called a timeout and said, ‘Serve the damn ball in the court.’ That
was the shortest timeout in the world. We won the match. That was the
only time I ever used a swear word.”
Hilgendorf also has fond memories of the “great kids” she coached and
mentored.
Her influence not only fortified the volleyball program, but brought
strength to the athletic administration. She offers simple explanation to
the arrival of OCC’s new facilities, including a weight room, sports
medicine rooms, resurfaced tennis courts, a rubberized track, a
retrofitted gymnasium, offices for coaches and locker rooms. She says,
she just asked the state for the money.
“It was worth a try,” she says.
So now she is able to relax. She misses her friends at OCC, but she
doesn’t miss the work, she says.
“I hate to say that, but I don’t,” she says.
Next month, she will “vacation” in Florida, enjoying seven days of
golf on five different courses while spending time at the PGA National
Golf Complex.
Yet, while Cutenese continues his coaching career at OCC, he knows
Hilgendorf will always be around for advice.
“I still call her and ask her questions,” Cutenese says. “She’s still
working according to my schedule.”
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