JORDAN OTTERBEIN
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Richard Dunn
Whether it’s business, family or tennis, picking a good partner is
important, and, as former Corona del Mar High doubles standout Jordan
Otterbein has discovered, what goes around comes around.
Otterbein, a two-time CIF Southern Section doubles champion who
grew up admiring Rod Laver and later hitting with the Australian
left-hander at Newport Beach Tennis Club in the early 1970s,
appreciates his CIF titles more now than he did in 1975 and ‘76, when
he teamed with Jim Curley his sophomore and junior years to capture
the top prize.
“As sophomores, we didn’t know how the whole thing worked, but
everybody said how great it was,” said Otterbein, whose doubles team
upset the top-seeded squad from Dos Pueblos, John Sanford and Eric
Peterson, 4-6, 7-6, 6-2, after staving off a remarkable five match
points in the second set.
Otterbein and Curley, who also reached the 16s doubles finals that
year at the Ojai Valley Tennis Tournament, were no longer an unknown
quantity their junior years. The defending champions from CdM
defeated Bob Corneilson and Jim Slaught of San Marino, 7-5, 6-2, in
the 1976 CIF championship doubles match. They remain the only players
in Orange County history to win back-to-back CIF doubles titles with
the same partner. (Current CdM standout Garrett Snyder has won two
straight titles with two different partners.)
As a change of pace, Otterbein and Curley played with different
doubles partners their senior year in 1977 and both lost in the
semifinals. “I guess we probably should’ve stayed together,”
Otterbein said.
Under Coach Dennis Trout, Corona del Mar won CIF large-school
division team titles in Otterbein’s sophomore, junior and senior
years, the beginning of an unprecedented run of six straight CIF
championships for the Sea Kings (1975 through ‘80, a streak later
surpassed by Santa Barbara).
“We were just wiping people out,” said Otterbein, with played
doubles his senior year mostly with Kevin Forbes, now a teaching pro
at Newport Beach Tennis Club.
Growing up at Newport Beach Tennis Club, Otterbein was coached by
club pro Jim Ogle and also remembers Laver and Roy Emerson practicing
at the club, after the two stars moved to Newport Beach.
After high school, Otterbein would work tennis camps at the club,
and, on special occasions, get an opportunity to hit with his idols.
“Those are two of the greatest gentlemen in sports,” Otterbein said
of Laver and Emerson.
Otterbein earned a tennis scholarship to NCAA Division II Rollins
College in Winter Park, Fla., a small private school that was smaller
than Corona del Mar High.
But, after one year of playing No. 1 doubles, Otterbein returned
home. “It was just kind of far away,” he said, “and it was such a
small school, I didn’t enjoy it that much.”
Aside from a few local tournaments, like the Adoption Guild Tennis
Tournament, Otterbein stopped playing competitive tennis after
checking out of college.
Following a stint in acting school, Otterbein met his eventual
wife, Beth, and for the past 14 years has worked in the marketing and
advertising business.
“Everything that has become good or successful, however small the
success has been in my life, is because I’ve surrounded myself with
good partners, including, on a smaller scale, tennis partners,”
Otterbein said. “But the bigger, grander scale is having loving
parents (Keith and Jackie). I was brought up in a great home and a
loving atmosphere, and I’ve realized that not only have I had great
partners in sports, but also a great partner in my wife, and we’re
trying to do the same thing with our kids with a loving atmosphere.
Then I realized how much my parents enjoyed watching me play sports,
and now there’s another generation, and I see how much fun it is to
watch our kids.”
Otterbein, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of
Fame, and his wife of 18 years have four daughters: Madison, 17;
Paige, 13; Megan, 11; and Gracie, 6. They live in Newport Beach.
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