TIM WETZEL
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Steve Virgen
When Tim Wetzel wakes up in the morning and takes a look at his farm,
he experiences a sense of pride.
He’s a long way from home, away from the beaches he grew up near.
Now, Wetzel, a Newport Harbor High product who applies his years of
volleyball experience to his everyday life, enjoys his farm in Idaho,
where he raises horses, as well as apples and plums.
“It’s a good feeling,” Wetzel said of looking over his land, that
covers roughly 100 acres. “It’s great to see all the growth. But when
it’s 100 degrees in the middle of July, you’re not thinking about
that. I miss the ocean. It’s a big difference.”
Because of volleyball, Wetzel has attained many attributes that
help him as a farmer, computer technician, husband and father.
“Volleyball has meant a lot,” said Wetzel, a volleyball standout
who graduated from Newport Harbor in 1975. “It taught me mental
toughness and you can carry that to every aspect in your life.
Hopefully, I can pass it on to my kids.”
For the past 12 years, Wetzel, his wife, Tamara, and their three
children, Jesse (20), Jake (11) and Kelsey (8), have been living on
the farm in Payette County, near a town called Weiser.
“I always wanted to own land and for the kids to have their place
to play,” Wetzel said. “I wanted to be able to set up my own
volleyball court. And I have been able to do all that.”
Wetzel has been able to accomplish a great deal of success in his
life, and volleyball has been one of the main reasons. Wetzel was a
four-year varsity performer at Newport Harbor, where he started as a
freshman.
Wetzel, who described himself as a spoiled brat when he was a
teenager, struggled in his junior year and shuttled between the
varsity and junior varsity throughout the season.
“I guess I was a rebel, you could say,” Wetzel said.
Wetzel, a 6-foot setter, did not go against the grain in his
senior year. He bounced back and earned first-team All-Sunset League
honors, as he helped lead the Sailors to the league championship.
“I always liked to play Huntington Beach, which had Rocky Ciarelli
[now the coach of the Oilers],” Wetzel said. “And also playing
against Corona del Mar. Those were the best matches.”
Wetzel played alongside Mike Blanchard, a Newport middle blocker
who went on to star at Pepperdine, where he led the Waves to an NCAA
title and was named MVP.
After playing for the Sailors, Wetzel went on to help lead Long
Beach City College to the state championship. This time, Ciarelli was
on his team, as well as Blanchard.
Before using his second year of eligibility, Wetzel traveled to
Europe and lived there for nine months. Then he went to Orange Coast
College and played under his father, Bob, the Pirates’ head coach.
Tim Wetzel did not make it through the season competing for his
father’s team. He quit because, at the time, he had differences with
the coach. The two have maintained a great relationship and continue
to stay in touch.
“He was right and I was wrong,” Tim Wetzel said of his time with
his father at OCC. “He’s a great guy. He’s just great.”
Wetzel finished out his college volleyball career, playing for the
University of Hawaii and Coach Dave Shoji. He was the starting setter
for two seasons for the then-Rainbows.
After college, Wetzel continued to compete in volleyball, playing
internationally, as well as on the beach, for 15 years. He also
worked as an official.
Wetzel also became involved with coaching. He worked as the head
coach at Newport Harbor and also at Costa Mesa. He assisted his
father and former OCC women’s volleyball coach Jane Hilgendorf for
four years in the late 1980s.
Wetzel works as a voice and data technician for a communications
company.
“I definitely took the road less traveled,” said Wetzel, the
latest honoree of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame.
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