Eunetta Pickett
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Bryce Alderton
They stand on opposite sides of the net, typically dressed in
white polo shirts and navy pants with hands behind their backs and
whistles in their mouths.
And while fans, players, coaches and anyone else watching a
volleyball match might often take it for granted that officials show
up to the contests, there is a method for dispersing referees and
keeping track of the gyms they travel to.
Welcome to the world of 64-year old Costa Mesa resident Eunetta
Pickett, a volleyball official and the woman who has assigned
officials to volleyball matches at Orange County high schools and
California colleges for 40 years.
She has a staff of about 80 officials she now sends to matches
involving 80 high schools, 50 colleges and universities such as
Fresno State, the University of the Pacific, Point Loma, Cal State
Fullerton, UC Irvine and Cal State Long Beach and 30 junior colleges.
She keeps track of what official is going to which match using a
computer program, but still has to call each referee and confirm he
or she can go to a certain match.
“It takes time, especially when I have to leave a message with
them but it works pretty good,” said Pickett, who spent 20 years
coordinating swimming and tennis programs for the City of Costa Mesa
in the 1960s and ‘70s and who worked for a wallpaper and painting
service for 20 years. “Before the computer it was a challenge,
keeping track of 50 to 60 schools at one time on a typewriter. If you
made a mistake you had to change the whole page,” she said.
Just last Wednesday Pickett had to finalize the officials staffing
the CIF volleyball matches for Thursday’s first round and had to do
it again Friday for the second round.
December, July and August are slow months in the volleyball world
for Pickett, who takes time off during these times, but the rest of
the year involves transitioning from girls and women’s volleyball in
the fall to boys and men’s volleyball in the spring.
Pickett has always played sports, competing in field hockey,
basketball, swimming, tennis and volleyball, and began officiating in
junior high and continued into her high school years spent at Dorsey
High in Los Angeles.
“When I got started we got $1 or so per game and we were happy,”
Pickett said laughing. “I (refereed) softball for 45 years and just
retired and I officiated basketball for 23 years. But it became hard
to keep up with three sports and three children.”
Schools and leagues hire Pickett to assign officials. She doesn’t
assign any officials for Big West of Pacific 10 Conference matches.
“Those conferences have commissioners and I don’t get paid the
same as them,” Pickett said with a chuckle.
Pickett, who played sports at Orange Coast College, recalls when
women’s volleyball started to blossom in the ‘60s and ‘70s and has
seen the rise of the men’s game.
“I started officiating intramurals before a lot of schools had
volleyball teams,” she said. “It’s amazing the progress in all sports
with the scholarships offered to girls now. When I started, a lot of
teams at the Division I level in college didn’t have teams besides
UCLA and USC. Long Beach and Cal State Fullerton were newer schools.
What an opportunity for the girls now. They start playing volleyball
on club teams at 9 or 10 years old rather than at college. Now the
girls are 6-foot tall and gorgeous and the best athletes.”
Pickett enjoys living and working in what she terms, “a
volleyball-rich area,” but said it’s a challenge sometimes to keep up
with the speed of the matches.
“College teams at the Division I level play a lot faster so the
challenge is keeping up with the speed of the game,” Pickett said. “I
don’t have to call a lot any more except occasionally at the
frosh-soph (and junior varsity) level.”
When not either standing at the net ready to make the next call or
contacting 80 officials to staff CIF matches, Pickett enjoys golfing,
tennis and spending time with her three children, Tod and Troy
Pickett and Teri Thrasher, and her nine grandchildren. She also used
to teach tennis at the Costa Mesa Tennis Center.
Thrasher won the national championship for synchronized swimming
at age 40, Pickett said.
“(Hank Lloyd, CMTC operator) has done a lot with that program and
it’s nice to see the courts full all the time,” Pickett said.
Pickett, who is single, wants to continue officiating and
scheduling referees for as long as she can.
“I’ll do it for as long as I enjoy it,” Pickett said. “It’s doing
a service for the schools and I know my officials and have a good
group doing it.”
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