JIM MCILWAIN
- Share via
Steve Virgen
Jim McIlwain’s title is vice president of administrative services for
Orange Coast College, but that does not describe the totality of a
man who has spent the past 39 years working for the Pirates.
At OCC, many people know him as friend, a loyal man whose
dedication has set a high standard at the community college in Costa
Mesa.
McIlwain, who is 67, could also be known as a pioneer.
He founded OCC’s exercise science laboratory program, which does
fitness testing, and he was also instrumental, to say the least, in
developing the school’s all-weather track facility. Now, he’s working
as an administrator.
He knows his time at OCC is winding down. As he looks back at his
time with the Pirates, administrative work has been but one chapter
of his OCC story.
“I never thought I would be in administration,” said McIlwain, who
has been working in his position since 1989. “The only reason I got
into education was to be a track coach. I was running track at
Anaheim High, then went on to Fullerton College and to UC Santa
Barbara. I went to the Army and I thought the only thing I wanted to
be was a track coach.”
McIlwain started his career as the head track and field coach at
El Rancho High in Pico Rivera in 1962. Then, in 1965, he signed on at
Coast as an assistant coach for track and field and cross country.
“I was the first assistant track coach at OCC,” he said. “I was
the assistant to Ernie Bullard. He left after one year and went to
Mesa Community College in Arizona. Then he went to San Jose State and
then to USC.”
When Bullard left, McIlwain became the head track coach, a
position he held through 1978. He also coached the cross country
program through 1979.
From there, McIlwain worked with the exercise science laboratory
program he started, until 1987, when he became the OCC athletic
director and dean of the physical education department. He was the
A.D. for two years before assuming his current position.
“My first year, when I came in with Ernie, we won the conference
championship. That was the first in the school’s history and that was
fun,” McIlwain said of his many highlights with the Pirates. “I’ve
had a couple of athletes who went on to be coaches. Charlie Appell
[now coaching track and field and cross country at Estancia], was on
that championship team. Jack Malloy, a coach at Diamond Bar, was
second in the state in the 800 [meters]. It was fun to work with
those people.”
McIlwain also said he took pride in helping start the women’s
programs at OCC back in the early 1970s.
“Mt. [San Antonio College] had the first [women’s track and field]
team and we said we couldn’t let them get ahead of us,” he said. “We
were the second college to have women and we were very proud of that.
To this day, our women’s programs have been strong and I think it has
been because we started out that way. We tried to set the tone. I’ve
been proud of that.”
Of his many career accomplishments and memories, he is, perhaps,
most pleased with his long-standing association with those who work
at OCC, as well as the students who pass through.
“The nicest thing is the focus on being a student-centered
institution,” he said. “We are very informal. We are not caught up
with protocol or rigidness. It is a very friendly place. I always
wanted to be here and wanted to help out without the pomp and
circumstance. We always seem to have the best interest of the
students in mind.”
McIwain, who lives in Mission Viejo with his wife, Ann, is the
latest honoree of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame. They have one
son, John, a daughter, Susan, and two grandchildren, Clay and Ty.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.