Hall of Fame: Bobby Hall (Corona del Mar)
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Richard Dunn
For an offensive lineman, Bobby Hall found plenty of glory in
football’s trenches.
As part of the winningest class in Corona del Mar High football
history, Hall started on the line when the Sea Kings won back-to-back CIF
Southern Section Division VI championships in 1988 and ’89.
Prior to his varsity seasons, Hall and his teammates enjoyed
undefeated campaigns on the freshman and sophomore levels, going 18-0 in
two years, before finishing their four-year CdM careers with a 41-3-2
record.
A first-team All-Sea View League offensive lineman his senior year,
Hall was invited to Tustin’s year-end awards banquet as part of an
All-Opponent Team the Tillers celebrated that night.
“I thought it was really cool,” Hall said, “to be invited to their
banquet and be introduced.”
Hall, who later became a star at Orange Coast College and grazed the
cover of the Pirates’ 1991 media guide, was no doubt part of a special
generation at CdM that comes along only once in awhile, a group of
athletes who seem to win every year on every level.
In addition to Danny O’Neil (the quarterback who later transferred to
Mater Dei and became co-MVP of the 1995 Rose Bowl game for Oregon),
Corona del Mar featured players like Jerrott Willard, John Katovsich,
Todd Katovsich, Jeff Jackson, Brian Lucas, Warren Johnson and Weston
Johnson.
“We played together since we were about 10 years old,” Hall said. “Our
class (of 1990) had a lot of good athletes, and that alumni basketball
tournament’s fun. We’ve won it a bunch of times, and we seem to always be
in the finals.”
Hall, referring to the annual Jack Errion Memorial Classic in the
summer, remembers two distinctly different football teams when the Sea
Kings won back-to-back CIF titles.
After dominating the 1988 campaign with a 12-0-2 mark and winning
their first CIF title, the Sea Kings struggled to make the playoffs the
following year. Then, as a wild card, they repeated as Division VI
champions with a 21-10 victory over La Quinta.
“No one anticipated us being there again,” said Hall, whose ’89 squad
lost to Newport Harbor, 8-7, in the regular-season finale as the
defending CIF champions had to cross their fingers all weekend in hopes
of landing a berth as a wild card.
“Once we got in, we were fired up, and everyone believed we were a
better team than our (7-3) record,” added Hall, whose Dave
Holland-coached Sea Kings won four straight in the postseason to record
the only back-to-back CIF football titles in Newport-Mesa District
history.
Hall, who also played basketball and baseball at CdM his junior year,
beefed up to 6-foot-3, 270 pounds at Orange Coast, where the winning
continued.
“When I do reflect back, I was pretty lucky to be surrounded by a lot
of good athletes, because (winning) doesn’t happen to a lot of athletes,”
he said. “They’re on losing team after losing team. I was lucky to be on
winning teams.”
As a freshman at OCC, Hall was a first-team All-Mission Conference
Central Division selection at offensive guard as the Pirates finished 8-3
and played in the 1990 Orange County Bowl, the school’s first bowl
appearance in 15 years.
The following year, Hall repeated his first-team all-conference
laurels, while adding honorable mention JC All-American status, as the
6-4 Bucs played in the K-Swiss Classic at Los Angeles Harbor College.
In six years, Hall’s teams went 55-10-2, after his OCC squads combined
for a two-year 14-7 mark.
His gridiron career continued at USC, but it ended after one redshirt
season. The Trojans that year were stunned by unranked Fresno State,
24-7, in the 1992 Freedom Bowl at Anaheim Stadium.
Hall, who grew up in Newport Beach and played Newport-Mesa Junior
All-American, is the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of
Fame.
Hall, who has trimmed down to a svelte 210 pounds, lives in Newport
and is a sales big wig for Quest software. He’s planning to get married
to Courtney Danehy on May 25, 2002.
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