Hanson set to direct Artists
Mike Sciacca
Curt Hanson was already at it on Wednesday afternoon in Dugger
Gym, doing what he does best: teaching volleyball.
He was there, along with Shawn Patchell and other instructors,
directing several eager youngsters in the art of individual and team
skills and strength and jump conditioning drills at the school’s
Summer Volleyball Clinic.
Hanson, 45, is no stranger to the confines of old Dugger Gym.
During the past five years he has been an assistant coach to Patchell
in the Laguna Beach High boys’ and girls’ volleyball programs.
On July 24, he assumed a different title as he was appointed the
new head coach at a school steeped deep in volleyball tradition.
“I’m really excited for the opportunity,” he said. “It’s a great
opportunity but it’s a two-edged sword. I’m stepping into a
successful program that’s used to success.
Patchell steps down after six years at the school. He has accepted
a coaching position at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah.
“We’ve had some very positive feedback from the kids in our
program who really felt that Curt would be a great head coach,”
Laguna Beach High Athletic Director Mario Morales said. “He has good
rapport with the players and parents, and we feel he’s a great fit
for our program.”
This is Hanson’s first head coaching job at the high school level,
although he previously has coached at the community college level
with an earlier stint at Orange Coast College.
He also has served as an assistant coach in a Pirates program that
has won community state titles.
Hanson has seen plenty change with the sport of volleyball.
“I won’t say I was there at the beginning, but it was pretty
close. I’d say it was in the infancy stages,” he said.
Hanson prepped at Costa Mesa High School and, as a junior, he and
a fellow student started up the boys’ volleyball program at the
school, forming a six-player team that competed in 1974.
The following year, at the conclusion of his season, Hanson earned
a full scholarship to Cal State Long Beach.
“That was a pretty rare thing in those days,” he said. “I think Oz
Simmons, who played at Laguna Beach High, and myself, were the only
Orange County players to get scholarships that year.
Simmons went on to play at USC. He now is head coach at Dana
Hills, and could meet up with Hanson on the playing court.
Hanson earned a bachelor’s degree in physical education and later,
a masters in education, both from Cal State Long Beach.
He said he probably will do some substitute teaching at Laguna
Beach.
“I’m the type of coach who puts an emphasis on fundamentals,
playing the game well, and where practice is everything,” he said. “I
think you put the players out there on the court who deserve to play,
regardless of what grade they are in.”
Yet the numbers speak volumes as to where the Laguna Beach
volleyball programs have been: in boys’ volleyball alone, during the
last 30 years, the Artists have won five CIF Division I
championships, 20 league titles and nine Orange County Championship
titles, all records for any Orange County high school.
The boys’ program also is the only Southern Section program to
qualify for all 28 years the section has held postseason playoffs.
Hanson’s head coaching duties begin at the outset of September,
with his first game being a Sept. 14 showdown at Newport Harbor.
“I’m really looking forward to that. I guess you can say that my
first goal is to win that match,” he said.
“Really, this is an exciting time for me. It was an awesome
experience to coach with Shawn, who allowed me to just be me. This is
a great program full of great kids and parents. I am absolutely
looking forward to teaching these kids. That’s what I do best.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. He can be reached at 494-4321 or by e-mail at
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