Mustangs nearly back at full strength
- Share via
Rick Devereux
When it rains it pours.
At least that’s the case for the Costa Mesa High athletics
program.
At a press conference Wednesday Principal Fred Navarro and
Assistant Principal Kirk Bauermeister announced the hiring of Tom
Baldwin as head football coach, Paul Serio as head wrestling coach
and Nicole Price as boys and girls track and field coach. The final
rounds of interviews for the head baseball coach position were
conducted Wednesday. The boys athletic director position remains
vacant.
The wave of coaching hirings comes 2 1/2 weeks after it was
revealed that former boys athletic director and head football coach
Dave Perkins was fired, the latest in a shake-up of coaching spots
for the Mustangs where Doug Deats resigned as the baseball coach,
Glenn Mitchell stepped down as track coach and Bob Serven resigned as
basketball coach.
Navarro said that while all of the coaches were announced on one
day, the actual process of hiring each one was not that easy.
“This was not just one day of work,” he said. “There is lots of
paperwork involved.”
Baldwin and Price both assume head-coaching roles after being
longtime assistants at Costa Mesa in their respective sports. Serio,
who will also teach seventh-grade health along with ninth- and
10th-grade biology at the school, is embarking in a program that has
had a roller-coaster-like history.
The wrestling program folded last year after beating Estancia and
Corona del Mar the year before. Navarro said there was a trend at the
school of having a couple of good years followed by a couple of bad
seasons once star wrestlers graduated.
“I’m walking in cold,” Serio said. “I think it will be a three- to
five-year process [to become competitive]. It will take some
patience.”
Serio has been involved with Corona del Mar wrestling for over
eight years and has spent the past six years as referee.
Price has been an assistant the past three years for the track and
girls soccer teams. She also teaches at the school.
The fact that all of the new coaches -- Baldwin teaches economics
-- are on campus was a big factor in Navarro’s decision.
“[On-campus coaches] are what everybody’s goal is,” Navarro said.
“They see a different side of the kids. If you don’t have on-campus
coaches, you lose something.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.