Hirst returns favor
Newport Harbor High boys basketball coach Larry Hirst doesn’t have
NBA riches or the kind of fame that allows him to give back
monetarily to the people and institutions that have helped shape the
success he enjoys as a teacher and coach with the Sailors.
But, for the last three seasons, he has had his own December
event, the Bill Reynolds Tournament. The tournament, completed
Saturday, has become a combination tribute to Reynolds -- Hirst’s
former college coach at what was then Southern California College
(now Vanguard University) - and reunion of several of Reynolds’
former players now coaching prep teams in the area.
Reynolds, who built a 353-185 record at SCC, as well as a gym full
of former players who revere him, was in the stands Friday to watch
Hirst’s Sailors defeat an Orange team coached by former SCC player
Andre Smith. Reynolds then returned to his coaching home, the cozy
Vanguard University Pit, to watch former SCC player Todd Dixon coach
his El Toro Chargers to a 57-44 victory over Hirst’s Tars in the
tournament championship game.
It might seem curious that the tournament’s final day was played
in the Pit, which feature less than half the seating available at
Newport Harbor. But Hirst said it just seemed like the right thing to
do.
“There are Division I schools and there are the junior colleges,
but I think it’s good to let kids see there’s a place in between,”
Hirst said of the Costa Mesa-based NAIA school. “If I can bring eight
teams through there and expose them to (Vanguard) ... Hey, it’s the
least I can do.”
*
Dozens of former football players at Newport Harbor and Corona del
Mar can now tell their future grandchildren they played against a
Heisman Trophy winner, after former Santa Margarita quarterback
Carson Palmer collected the coveted statue Saturday night.
The Palmer-led Eagles defeated Newport Harbor four times in his
two seasons as the varsity starter, including a 38-0 thrashing in the
1996 CIF Southern Section Division V title game and a 27-7 triumph in
the 1997 Division V semifinals.
In four games against the Sailors, Palmer completed 47 of 72
passes for 1,083 yards and nine touchdowns. He also rushed 20 times
for 71 yards and one TD. In two games against CdM, Palmer completed
16 of 21 for 344 yards and seven TDs and rushed once for 12 yards.
Special bravado will be allowed former Sailors Erik Runfola and
Brett Baker, both of whom interecepted Palmer passes, as well as
former Newport quarterback Josiah Fredricksen, whose 235 passing
yards bettered Palmer’s 190 in their Week 6 meeting in 1996.
Former CdM quarterback Mike McClellan also outproduced Palmer
head-to-head in ‘96, throwing for 367 yards to Palmer’s 150.
Additional chest pounding is expected from former Sailor defenders
Reed Johns, Danny Pulido, Brant Hill, Lucas Kerr and Pete Hogan, all
of whom sacked the esteemed signal caller.
*
The six degrees of separation regarding Palmer and John Huarte,
the only other Orange County product to claim the Heisman prize (in
1964 representing Notre Dame), involves Newport Harbor history
teacher and basketball public-address announcer Joe Robinson.
Robinson’s older brother played with Huarte at Mater Dei, while his
son, Gary, a 1999 Newport Harbor graduate who is now a senior at
Loyola Marymount, competed against Palmer on the basketball court as
a prep.
Gary Robinson was, in fact, a major hero in the Tars’ 50-47 upset
of the future Division II state champions, ranked No. 1 in Orange
County at the time.
After Palmer drilled a pair of three-pointers to bump the Eagles’
fourth-quarter lead to 43-34, Robinson hit a pair of three-pointers
down the stretch to lead the comeback, then netted two free throws in
the closing seconds to secure the three-point win in the Sailors’
gym.
*
Wrestlers from CdM, Costa Mesa, Estancia and Newport Harbor will
come together today for the inaugural Newport-Mesa District
Championships, organized by CdM Coach Gary Almquist and Newport
Harbor head man Dominic Bulone. Each school will contest a dual meet
with the other three at CdM High. Competition begins at 3 p.m.
The plan is to make it an annual event.
*
For the first time in Newport-Mesa history, three girls volleyball
players, representing three separate schools, have been named Most
Valuable Player in their respective leagues.
Newport Harbor senior Kristin McClune, Corona del Mar senior
Claire Allen and Costa Mesa senior Sharon Day, all middle blockers,
were awarded top individual honors by coaches from the Sea View,
Pacific Coast and Golden West leagues, respectively.
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