Catching Up With: Chris Quinn
Bryce Alderton
Growing up in a single-parent family in Corona del Mar, Chris Quinn
said he looked to his coaches as father figures.
“I always looked to coaches like Paul Orris and Bill Workman, who
sacrificed a lot of time from their families to develop young men, and
it’s something I respect,” said Quinn, now the varsity boys basketball
coach St. Monica High in Santa Monica. “When I was in high school, I knew
I was a coach on the floor.”
Quinn played two seasons of football at Orange Coast College under
Workman (1993-94). OCC finished 8-3 in ‘93, winning the Simple Green
Orange County Bowl. 26-15, over Antelope Valley College. It was the
Pirates’ first bowl win in Workman’s first eight seasons at the helm.
Quinn, who played tight end, caught one pass for 3 yards in the bowl
win and looks back with fond memories on that season.
“Coach Workman did a great job preparing us,” Quinn said. “Freshman
year was a great learning experience.”
Quinn has similar praise for Orris, who coached Quinn and the rest of
the Sea Kings to the CIF Southern Section Division IV-AA basketball
championship in 1993, Quinn’s senior year. He scored a team-high 14
points in the Sea Kings’ 47-46 title-game win over St. Bernard.
“(Orris’) teams are so prepared,” Quinn said. “I try to prepare my
teams on what’s to be expected. Some of his defensive philosophies I will
always take with me as well. You kind of watch from a distance to see how
(coaches interact) with the kids, how good leaders lead their practices.”
After graduating from UCLA in 1998 with a bachelor’s degree in
communications, Quinn coached at Santa Monica High for four years, then
was an assistant for one year at St. Monica, before stepping into the
head coaching role for the first time last season.
The Mariners finished behind Verbum Dei in the Camino Real League and
defeated Carpinteria in the first round of the CIF Division IV-AA
Playoffs. But they lost in the second round to El Segundo.
With two returning all-league starters, Quinn looks forward to his
second season.
“It was a fun learning experience,” Quinn said of his first year as
head coach. “I’m looking forward to the second year. I enjoy teaching.
Coaches at the high school level are teachers.”
Coaching a basketball team offers Quinn both challenges and enjoyment.
“In basketball, you don’t have 30 seconds to think about a play (as in
football),” Quinn said. “A lot is reaction on the floor to certain
defenses and offenses. In the end, your friend or your teammates will
help you out, and that’s what I enjoy. I want to develop the kids I have
in our program to work hard for each other. Then they’ll reap the
benefits.”
One difference Quinn notes between players he has coached and ones he
played with in high school is athleticism.
“In the LA market, these kids think they’re the next Kobe Bryant,”
Quinn said. “But these kids are much better athletes than we were growing
up,” Quinn said.
The behind-the-scenes work that goes into running a basketball program
caught Quinn a bit off guard when he took over as head coach a year ago.
“You always think, as a player, that programs are self-sufficient,”
Quinn said. “I never knew what was in and around the background, things
like fund raising. I never knew the head coach took care of these things,
but these things you learn about rapidly.”
Quinn, 27, lives in Santa Monica and will bring his team to Newport
Beach for the George Yardley basketball tournament, July 5-7, at Newport
Harbor High.
He still plays basketball when he gets the chance.
“That’s one of the cool things about coaching,” Quinn said. “You can
go in with a couple of buddies and play pickup games at night in the
gym.”
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