A closer look -- UCI loses a top motivator
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Deirdre Newman
UCI CAMPUS -- Dan Guerrero came to the university as its athletic
director with great expectations. He leaves, to take the same position at
UCLA, with the athletic department transformed into a cadre of
high-caliber teams with championship potential.
Not bad for a guy who came to UC Irvine when it was “rock bottom,” as
he describes it.
“The morale was at an all-time low in the department and among the
boosters because they essentially saw the ship sinking,” Guerrero said.
In the past 9 1/2 years, Guerrero has that ship going full speed
ahead. His two main legacies have been resurrecting baseball and
revitalizing the basketball program.
Guerrero came to UCI because of his experience and faith in the
University of California system, which he deems “the finest education in
the world.” He graduated from UCLA in 1974 and was recently inducted into
the school’s baseball hall of fame.
During his first week on campus, he received an autographed baseball
from the 1973 UCI National Champion team. The ball served as a constant
incentive to bring baseball back, Guerrero said.
But before that could happen, Guerrero knew he would have to nurture
the existing programs to ensure they had what it took to compete for a
championship.
After nine years -- voila -- baseball rose like a phoenix from the
ashes, with a new baseball stadium to boot.
Its successful comeback is raising eyebrows across the country,
Guerrero said.
“The exciting thing is that this late in the season we are still in
position for a postseason birth,” Guerrero said. “It’s truly a
phenomenon.”
The basketball program also experienced a renaissance, starting when
Guerrero made a coaching change. He hired Pat Douglas, who was his rival
at Cal State Bakersfield when Guerrero was at Cal State Dominguez Hills.
“We saw results immediately -- not necessarily in wins-losses, because
the cupboard was relatively bare with student athletes that could perform
at this level,” Guerrero said. “He immediately established a frame of
reference that future recruits could use.”
The wins followed.
For the past three years, UCI has been one of only a few teams on the
West Coast to average more than 20 wins a year. The team has also earned
the Big West Conference Championships for the last two years.
The tremendous support for the basketball program from the community
has helped, Guerrero said. Students have even passed two referendums to
tax themselves to help with funding.
The team also engenders a sense of delirium around campus as evidenced
in a spirit group known as the CIA -- or Completely Insane Anteaters --
that serve as a sixth man at home games.
Guerrero will be trading the insanity of UCI athletics for the
intensity of UCLA sports, which often compete under a national
microscope.
Guerrero, who will start as the chief Bruin in July, said he was drawn
back to the campus because of the challenges it presents as an athletic
powerhouse.
“UCLA is looked upon as one of the finest athletic programs in the
country,” Guerrero said. “When you’re an institution that’s being chased,
there are inherent challenges in the forefront.”
Namely, maintaining a program of excellence without compromising
integrity, Guerrero said.
For that lofty goal, Guerrero is well-suited, said Manuel Gomez, UCI’s
vice chancellor for student affairs.
“I think Guerrero is one of those individuals that sets the standard
of ethical behavior and a high level of integrity,” Gomez said. “He is
emulated by those individuals that he comes into contact with, not just
the coaches, but all the students.”
* Deirdre Newman covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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