Giving kids a sports chance
SHE IS
Helping famous athletes teach children to stay in school, off
drugs and out of gangs.
THE PLACE TO BE
As director of the Newport Sports Museum, Kellie Newcombe spends
her days overseeing the museum, organizing tours and scheduling the
Athlete-Outreach program, through which big-name athletes talk to
children about important issues.
Originally started as a personal collection, the museum -- at 100
Newport Center Drive -- houses one of the largest collections of
game-worn sports memorabilia in existence with more than 10,000
pieces, including baseballs signed by every World Series winning team
since 1940, Wayne Gretzky’s jersey and a pair of Shaquille O’Neal’s
shoes. Tour groups or individuals can visit the museum for free,
while groups of 30 or more from schools, summer camps, clubs,
shelters and other various organizations can request an athlete
speaker.
“We deal with a lot of underprivileged kids as well as private
schools, public schools and at this time of year a lot of summer
camps,” Newcombe said.
Many of the athletes she enlists to speak with children are
professionals like former NFL player Marcus Allen, hockey player
Chris Chelios and Dodger Eric Karros,. A number are also from local
colleges.
HOME GROWN TALENT
A California native, Newcombe attended Newport Harbor High School
and went to college on a softball scholarship. It was while she was
working in the college athletic department that she fell in love with
working with kids and athletes. She discovered the museum while
attending college at UCI for marketing and asked the museum’s
founder, John Hamilton, for a job.
The memories that stick out most in her mind are the smiling faces
of the children as they meet their favorite athletes, and some of the
cute questions they ask, said Newcombe. Two young girls found
themselves speechless when Shawn Green asked for their names so he
could sign an autograph, and another boy once asked, “Does your mommy
wash your uniform?”
Her own personal favorite moments came when she met the legendary
UCLA basketball coach John Wooden, and the time that baseball great
Brooks Robinson gave her tickets to see Cal Ripken’s last game.
FUTURE PLANS
Newcombe’s aspirations are to see the museum continue to expand
and help many more children while helping the organization works
through the expansion process. One day she sees herself working as a
collegiate administrator in an athletic department. But for someone
who is quite content in her job she expects that day to be long off.
-- Story by Todd W. Karella, photo by Sean Hiller
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