Coasters: Meyers is the man
Steve Virgen
Remember Mark Meyers?
He was the Orange Coast College men’s basketball player who provided
inspiration for his teammates while dealing with diabetes last year.
This year, a new chapter to Meyers’ story results in even more
inspiration.
Meyers, the 6-foot-7 center, averaged a measly three points per game
last season as a freshman. This season, Meyers has become the focal point
of the Pirates’ offense, while still battling through the rigors of
diabetes. He is averaging 13.3 points per game during Orange Empire
Conference play, yet the Pirates are 3-6 in conference.
Meyers uses an insulin pump, a surgically inserted device that has
taken the place of injections he took four times a day for most of his
life. Amid the inconveniences and sluggishness that come from the
diabetes, Meyers is the one bringing life to a team searching for its
identity under first-year coach Steve Spencer.
“What he goes through is unbelievable,” Spencer said. “For him to
overcome all that is a real testament to his hard work. He has a great
attitude. He goes through all the adversity and he just rolls through it.
He’s an upbeat, positive person. It’s hard though because (the diabetes)
doesn’t allow him to make the type of progress he would like to make. I’m
still really pleased with him because he’s such a good guy. He works hard
and wants to be good.”
Meyers always knew he could contribute to the Pirates, but this year
his actions are speaking louder than his words. Who could blame anyone
for not believing Meyers last year? He had come from Mater Dei High,
where he never played varsity and never gained significant playing time
as a junior varsity player. On the court with the Monarchs, Meyers was
more like the keep-away-from guy. But that never lessened his love for
the game. On the contrary, those trials motivated him.
During his senior year, Meyers took to the playground and recreation
ball to refine his game. He then went to OCC. And after a year of near
absence, he is making a name for himself among the Pirates and in the
OEC. Best of all, Meyers is having fun.
“I love our team,” said Meyers, who scored 13 points and grabbed nine
rebounds in the Pirates’ 71-69 win over Irvine Valley Wednesday. “This is
my biggest role ever and this is the best time I’ve had. I’m just
embracing it.”
Leave it to Meyers to define the art of Carpe Diem.
Spencer’s coaching assistant Brad Wright left Orange Coast last month
as he took the head coaching job at L.A. Pierce College. Spencer said he
wishes the best for Wright, a 7-footer who played in the NBA, and he
expects the Pirates to play L.A. Pierce, “somewhere down the road.” OCC
will fill the position after the season ends.
Orange Coast football is also going through some coaching changes.
Sean Ponder, the Pirates’ offensive coordinator who also coached the
running backs, has taken the job as head coach of an arena football team
in Kansas, OCC Coach Mike Taylor said.
Rick Zumwalt, the defensive line coach, has left to work for the
Huntington Beach Police Department.
Daryl Clemons, former coach of Narbonne High, will work with the
Pirates’ running backs, among them, All-Mission Conference returner Niles
Mittasch.
Scott Orloff, former Dana Hills High head coach, will be the defensive
line coach and could eventually work as Taylor’s defensive assistant.
The OCC football coaching staff will coach the Orange County Lawmen
football team made up of local police and fire department members from
cities including Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. The team started
practicing at OCC Saturday and Taylor said the Lawmen will travel to New
York to play against New York City’s finest April 27. The game will be
dedicated to the Sept. 11 tragedy.
OCC quarterbacks coach Phil Cooper, a probation officer, played on the
Lawmen as a quarterback.
Robbie Pate, the kicker for the Pirates in the fall, earned J.C.
Grid-Wire Academic All-American honors as a sophomore. Pate, who sang the
national anthem at OCC home games, also received a scholarship by the
National Football Foundation and the College Football Hall of Fame. The
organization’s Orange County chapter awarded Pate as the community
college recipient and he will attend a banquet in March along with the
other honorees.
Linebacker Brandon Thornton is expecting to play for Wingate
University in North Carolina, while receiver Josh Furlong is expecting a
preferred walk-on status at the University of Montana and safety L.D.
Matthews has signed with Southwest Missouri Baptist College, an NCAA
Division II program.
The OCC softball team has compiled a 4-2 record before hosting a
doubleheader against Rio Hondo Prep Saturday at 10 a.m. and noon. The
Pirtes went 4-1 in the College of the Desert Tournament, defeating San
Diego City, 6-4, East L.A., 7-0 and Mt. San Jacinto, 8-0 Feb. 1. Jim
Bollinger’s Pirates also defeated Victor Valley, 16-6, before losing to
San Diego City, 5-3. Freshmen Katie Hoffman and Jessica Lee smacked a
home run each.
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