Voice of Sea Kings passes away
Deirdre Newman
Doug Orr personified the heart and soul of an athlete who did not let
his physical limitations deter him from pursuing his passion.
Orr, 50, a lifelong Corona del Mar resident who graduated from the
high school in 1970, died of heart failure on Wednesday.
Orr had been the voice of the Sea Kings for the past four years. His
unwavering commitment to the school will be missed, said Jerry Jelnick,
athletic director.
“His interest was a love of the school and the athletic teams and all
the coaches and players,” Jelnick said. “Whenever he showed up, he just
fit in with everyone. Everyone always enjoyed seeing him.”
Orr, who was described by his sister Diane as a “warmhearted, sweet
spirit”, was one of the first 50 babies born at Hoag Hospital in 1952.
His interest in sports seemed inevitable considering that his two
older brothers, Dave and Daniel, would drag him to their practices. When
Doug didn’t display the same physical ability, he compensated with sheer
determination.
While he received low grades in physical education in junior high
school, he would show up in the gym everyday and offer to clean the
students’ shoes and socks, Dave Orr said.
At Corona del Mar High School, he discovered an adaptive physical
education class for those who couldn’t compete at the same level as the
other students. The class was taught by football coach Dave Holland, who
was quickly impressed by Doug’s resolve, his brother said.
“Coach Holland would just say, ‘This is the type of kid I want and
gave him an ‘A’ in P.E. It just turned his life around,” Dave Orr said.
After a few years, Holland was so taken with Orr that he invited him
to be on the football team. He only made one appearance -- in the final
game of his senior year -- but he made an important contribution, Dave
Orr recounted.
“In the last few seconds, it was one of those classic plays where the
quarterback went to throw a pass. Doug was 6-feet-4 and he reached up to
block it and got a hand on it. Whether we won or lost, I don’t know,” he
said.
For his passion and perseverance, Doug Orr was honored with an award
created especially for him -- the Athletic Director’s Award.
“It was probably the crowning moment of his life and so deserved and
everybody stood up and gave him a standing ovation,” Dave Orr said.
Orr eventually transformed his love for sports and his loyalty to
Corona del Mar into an announcing gig for several Sea Kings sports.
“It seemed like he just got better every year,” Jelnick said. “It
seemed like he would just listen to what other people did and add
something new.”
He even took it upon himself to write a letter to the son of a friend
who didn’t get a chance to play in one of the school’s football games he
was announcing, telling him not to give up, his brother said.
Orr is survived by brothers Daniel, 53, Dave, 51, sister Diane Carson,
45, and half-brother Jaime Panyaqua.
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