PAT CALLAGHAN
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Steve Virgen
For five years after graduating from UCLA, Pat Callaghan felt out of
place.
He has always loved soccer. Yet, after college, he was involved in
an entirely different arena.
Callaghan, who starred in soccer at Corona del Mar High in the
late 1980s, was a salesman right out of college. And, he was not
happy.
“It just wasn’t rewarding,” Callaghan said. “I didn’t like what I
was doing. I didn’t feel like I was giving back.”
Callaghan wanted to give back to his roots. He grew up in Newport
Beach and played for the local AYSO team coached by his father,
Richard.
Callaghan also played soccer at Corona del Mar and enjoyed his
best season as a senior when he was named MVP of the Sea View League.
He then went on to Orange Coast College, where he helped lead the
Pirates to the state championship in the fall of 1989.
When he wanted to come back and get involved with soccer once
again, Callaghan went to OCC. He spoke with head coach Laird Hayes
and asked him how he was able to gain the position he held.
Hayes, who remains the OCC coach and is a Daily Pilot Sports Hall
of Famer, asked Callaghan to join his staff as a volunteer in 1999.
“I loved it,” Callaghan said. “It was fun. I just felt like it was
right, being out there coaching. I regained that passion and that
desire to be on the field. I felt my career was cut short as a player
[because of a quadriceps tear in 1990]. I still had a hunger to be
out there in the game.”
In 2000, things started to fall into place for Callaghan. As a
glorified assistant coach, he helped guide OCC to an improbable
appearance in the four-team state playoffs.
Hayes basically managed the team, while Callaghan, and fellow
assistant Kevin Smith, did the hands-on coaching.
Also, in 2000, Callaghan was hired as the boys soccer coach at
CdM. Being back with the Sea Kings definitely pleased Callaghan and
fueled his coaching passion even more.
Callaghan made a name for himself at Corona del Mar in the late
‘80s, and it wasn’t just in soccer.
He also competed in track and field and was a key contributor for
Coach Dave Holland’s football team in the fall of 1988. Callaghan
played as an outside linebacker and also was the kicker for the Sea
Kings, who went 12-0-2 and won the CIF Southern Section Division VI
title.
“I enjoyed being on the football team,” Callaghan said. “I injured
my knee my junior season and didn’t play that much soccer. So when I
was a senior, I decided I wanted to play everything.”
When the soccer season came, Callaghan made sure to make his
senior year matter. He scored 15 goals and led the Sea Kings to the
CIF playoffs.
He was left disappointed because in the final game of the regular
season, Callaghan drew a red card for trying to break up a tussle. He
separated the two players and one of them, a Tustin player, flopped,
which led to a red card for Callaghan.
Callaghan had to sit out the first-round CIF playoff loss to
eventual division champion La Canada.
It was deja vu this season for Callaghan, who saw one of his
players sit out the first-round playoff game. This time, however, the
Sea Kings emerged with the victory.
Leading CdM to the 2004 CIF Division II semifinals was definitely
rewarding.
“I love coaching,” Callaghan said. “I love being the head coach at
Corona del Mar. I talked to a number of people who took the job
before and they said it’s tough to be successful there. But I haven’t
had any regrets. I feel like I can relate to the students. It’s a
great experience. I would love to do it for the rest of my life.”
The 33-year-old Newport Beach resident, who is the latest Daily
Pilot Sports Hall of Fame honoree, also coaches as an assistant at
Irvine Valley. He works there with head coach Martin McGrogan, for
whom Callaghan played at Corona del Mar.
Callaghan has also been interested in becoming a community college
head coach, though he would not mind staying at Corona del Mar. After
all, that’s where he feels he is giving back.
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