JANE HILGENDORF
Richard Dunn
These days, Jane Hilgendorf only clocks in at the golf course,
while playing greenskeeper at her home garden in Corona del Mar.
Ah, yes. Retired. The good life. The stage many hope one day to
embrace. It officially began for Hilgendorf on Jan. 5, 2001, when she
waved goodbye as Orange Coast College’s Athletic Director, ending
almost 31 years of service to the Costa Mesa community college.
“I loved every single moment at that job at that college,” said
Hilgendorf, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of
Fame.
Hilgendorf, a former high school drill team instructor whose first
job was cleaning test tubes in a laboratory for her father as a
child, arrived at OCC in the fall of 1970 as a physical education
teacher, not as a coach. But soon, Hilgendorf was in charge of the
school’s coed volleyball team, which traveled the Southland in a
rickety station wagon and played under, well, a different set of
rules. Among other things, only men were allowed to spike balls over
the net.
From 1971 to ‘73, Hilgendorf coached the Pirates’ coed team, then
took over the women’s program in ’73 and lasted through 1991, when
she stepped down as coach with a 233-100 career record and three
state championships (1978, ’80 and ‘82).
“I still get e-mails and notes from players through the years who
have been real close,” Hilgendorf said. “We had so much fun on those
teams, especially the teams from the 1970s and the first half of the
‘80s. It was fun and team-oriented. If you didn’t have fun, it was
your own fault. In those days, we had no tall players -- only short,
quick ones who really liked playing with each other. That was the
type of player we had. No one felt they were the star, because it was
always so team-oriented and everyone was always so supportive of each
other.”
Hilgendorf remembers once when former OCC standout Lori Adams, one
of those quick, 5-foot-6 players she had in abundance, took a rocket
off her face, then simply turned around and smiled.
“That was the kind of attitude those kids had,” Hilgendorf said of
the golden era of the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, when OCC won three
state titles in five years.
Hilgendorf, who entered OCC’s athletic administration after the
‘91 volleyball season, served as athletic director for three years,
before retiring to the fairways. The rules chairperson for the ladies
club at Newport Beach Country Club, Hilgendorf tees it up three or
four times a week with various groups of regular partners, including
the Friday morning Dawn Patrol, when players arrive at 6:30 a.m.
Having recently taken up water color painting, Hilgendorf said she
had “never done anything in the art world” and was actually following
her mother’s footsteps. “My mom had taken up oil painting when she
turned 70,” said Hilgendorf, who signed up for a water color class at
Saddleback College, where no one would know her and, perhaps, a
teacher would be more objective.
Hilgendorf, who made her own Christmas cards last year, has also
enjoyed photography, writing and gardening, as well as golf.
“She is by far the most positive person I know,” said OCC women’s
volleyball coach Chuck Cutenese, who replaced Hilgendorf as coach.
Born in Milwaukee, Wis., and raised in nearby Wauwautosa,
Hilgendorf moved with her family to Pasadena when she was 7. A
graduate of Pasadena High, Pasadena City College and UC Santa Barbara
with a bachelor’s degree in physical education, Hilgendorf earned her
master’s degree in P.E. at UCLA. She spent seven years at Arcadia
High, where her main focus was head drill team instructor, before
landing at OCC.
A former longtime health education teacher, Hilgendorf still
writes a weekly health column for the OCC newsletter under the
heading: “Hilgendorf’s Healthful Hints.”
She’s also the executive director of the Lutheran Good Samaritan
Society, a nonprofit organization.
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