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Steve Virgen
Commission on Athletics Constitution -- Bylaw 1.9.1
In a multi-college district, a student attending one college may
participate in a sport offered by another college in the same district
provided the student is enrolled in the course for that sport at the
college of participation.
Greg Stewart, a former track star at Costa Mesa High, is enrolled in
12 units at Orange Coast College. Last semester, he completed 16 units
and he says he attends OCC because it has his interior design major. Yet,
for his athletic needs, Stewart finds what he wants at Golden West.
Stewart is a Pirate in the classroom and a Rustler on the track.
He’s a sprinter for the Golden West men’s track and field team. That’s
OK with the bylaws, but where’s the loyalty?
This rule is bogus, especially for coaches, OCC’s mentors in this
situation.
The Rustlers actually have two OCC students on their track and field
team, including pole vaulter Logan Odden, who reunited with his former
Marina High coach, Kevin Magula, recently hired at Golden West.
The commission on athletes created the bylaw because a multi-college
district would prove beneficial for the student, said T. Mark Johnson,
Commissioner of the Orange Empire Conference.
“The rule was put in there because different colleges have different
sports and classes that others don’t,” said Johnson, who has been
affiliated with California community college administration for the past
42 years. “This was a multi-college district problem. All of us worked
hard to get this rule in.”
In regard to recruiting, Rustlers track and field head coach Matt
Simpson is taking full advantage of the COA rule. In Stewart, Simpson
found a sprinting gem, capable of developing into one of the top
sprinters in the state. But he found Stewart at OCC’s campus,
figuratively speaking of course.
Did Simpson approach Stewart or Odden before they might have planned
to compete for the Pirates?
“There’s no such thing as planning to compete for a (community)
college,” Simpson said. “There are no letters of intent. It just so
happens he ended up at our place.”
And that’s what OCC coaches don’t like. Fred Hokanson, now the
school’s Interim Athletic Director, coached the Coast track team and
attempted to recruit Stewart after his career at Costa Mesa High. Also,
Hokanson and current Pirates track coach Gordie Fitzel say Odden’s
brother, Arthur, was a star for OCC in his days as a track athlete. The
OCC coaches were expecting Logan Odden to follow in his brother’s
footsteps and join their team. But, Simpson and his staff had other
plans.
“If it were the other way, they would be upset at us,” Hokanson said.
“Some Golden West coach approached our athletes when they were at our
school and that’s what upsets me.”
Stewart said he never planned to compete for the Pirates. He said he
didn’t tell anyone he would ever compete for OCC.
He wanted to take advantage of the COA rule, on which he has no clear
opinion.
“I want to say yes, but then I want to say no,” Stewart said when
asked if he thought the rule was fair. “Yes, because it gives the student
a chance to expand his talent. No, because if I was a coach I wouldn’t
like it. But, it’s more up to the athlete. It’s his choice on what he
wants to do.”
Said Fitzel, “Personally, I don’t think it’s fair. Heck, I don’t make
the rules. If there are loopholes in the rule, some coaches are going to
take advantage. It’s not illegal.”
Fitzel and Stewart met again on Feb. 9 when OCC and Golden West
competed in a five-team meet won by the Pirates.
Logan Odden won the pole vault with a 15-6 clearance.
And the Coast coaches also saw Stewart, the OCC student, in a Rustler
uniform. He won the 100 meters in 10.9.
“I really don’t think they liked that too much,” said Stewart, a
freshman.
Yet, it appears the coaches’ emotions really didn’t matter to Stewart.
He’s looking out for No. 1.
Stewart said he chose Golden West because he would be challenged.
“Everyone at OCC would be running at the same pace as I did in high
school,” Stewart said. “They are faster at Golden West.”
Stewart runs on the 4 X 100 relay team which is ranked No. 4 in
Southern California. Despite nagging left hamstring tightness, Stewart
also excels in the 100 and 200.
But, it’s all legal.
The rules allow Stewart to compete for the Rustlers, so there really
is no bad guy in this story. There is no controversy, Fitzel said.
“It’s just something that happens,” the OCC track coach said. “We just
got out-recruited by Matt Simpson. They did a good job in getting him. It
was a shock when we heard (Stewart) wouldn’t run for us. We had arranged
for him to come to our school ... at the last minute he ended up going to
Golden West.”
Said Simpson, “We don’t make the rules. We follow the rules. We’re
recruiting several athletes who attend Orange Coast College (for the next
track season) ... the ones who attend OCC just because they live over
there.”
Since the rules allow this, there is really only one way to settle all
this. On the track, where someone will say, “scoreboard,” and none of
this recruiting etiquette or COA bylaws will matter.
OCC won the first team round and the squads will meet again April 27
and 28 when the Orange Empire Conference preliminaries and finals take
place. But, Stewart and Logan Odden can also point to the scoreboard if
they wrap up OEC individual titles, which could prove they made the right
and justifiable decision to compete with the Rustlers.
Before Stewart competes in the OEC meet, he will rest. His last meet
was Saturday and Stewart now wants his hamstring to heal so he’ll be
ready for the conference meet.
Said Simpson, “We’re going to rest him and let him loose in the
conference finals.”
Don’t let him get too loose, Matt. Stewart could end up at Saddleback
or he may even end up competing for the school he actually attends.
When asked if there was a possibility he would ever compete for Orange
Coast in the future, Stewart didn’t say no.
“I really don’t know,” he said.
In order for Stewart to compete at OCC next year, he would more than
likely have to take a semester off to establish his athletic transfer to
Coast, Johnson said.
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