Feeling exactly like a fish out of water
As you get older, or in my case just plain old, scenes from your
youth keep popping up. The other day I was reading something that
triggered a memory of George Sergeant. He and his brothers pretty
much ran Huntington Park High School, which I attended. Fortunately
for my well-being, he took a liking to me, and instead of thrashing
me, as he did to all who offended him, he tolerated my presence with
equanimity -- most of the time.
One day we were walking along and saw a calliope. George said,
“Oh, look, a cally-ope.”
Without thinking, I said, “That’s cu-lie-oh-pee.”
George grabbed me by the front of my shirt. “Bob, that’s
cally-ope.”
I quickly came to my senses. “You’re right, George. That’s a
cally-ope.”
George may have run the school, but it was Fish Plosel who put us
on the map.
I have spent most of my life in the water. According to my mother,
I should have been born with scales instead of skin. My mother was
perhaps a tad short on affection but long on realism.
I have always been a water nut. Out of the water, I gasp, drool,
stumble, fall down. In the water, I am comfortable. I feel as sleek
and as graceful as a seal. Whether I am is debatable, but that’s the
way I feel.
And so it’s unsurprising that my pantheon of heroes are mostly
watermen.
This was true even as a youth. At Huntington Park High, my hero
was one Fish Plosel. And who, might you ask, was Fish Plosel? Well,
at the risk of overstatement, Fish was the greatest swimmer of all
time, capable of swimming circles around Johnny Weismuller.
In school, I was on the swim team. I was not great, not even very
good, but I was definitely enthusiastic. I was a dependable third in
my event, the medley. And then one day this kid walked onto our team.
He was from the Panama Canal Zone, where he learned to swim before he
could walk, but this wasn’t what made him remarkable. He had hands
like tennis racquets, and his feet looked like he was wearing swim
fins. He went through the water like a hungry shark after a meal.
Our team went from middle-of-the-pack to a champion with the
addition of Fish Plosel. He was a guaranteed first place in every
event he swam, even pulling the relays into first place.
A swimmer like that attracts notice, and soon the Los Angeles and
Hollywood Athletic Clubs, the big swim powerhouses of the day, were
angling to get him on their rosters. There was talk of the Olympics
and medals -- and then the school year ended, and so did the swim
career of Fish Plosel. He couldn’t have been less interested in all
the potential glory dangled in front of him. He wanted to go back to
his family, and that’s what he did.
We never heard of Fish Plosel again. Our swim team sank back into
mediocrity, and as far as I know, he finished his career racing ships
through the locks of the Panama Canal.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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