Man of many talents
Bryce Alderton
The death of Hall of Famer and Newport Harbor High product George
Yardley Thursday stirred memories of a man friends said put effort
into everything he did.
Yardley, 75, died early Thursday, 15 months after he was first
diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or Lou Gehrig’s
disease.
Ken Stuart, owner and general manager of the Palisades Tennis Club
in Newport Beach, knew Yardley for 35 years. The two often played
tennis and golf together.
“I feel like I was a part of his family,” said Stuart, who
received a call at 7:05 a.m. Thursday about the news. “It’s like I
lost my older brother.”
Buck Johns, former chairman of the annual Yardley golf tournament
that raised money for the Newport Harbor golf team, remembered the
first man to score 2,000 points in an NBA season as someone who was
“good at everything” and someone who “immersed himself in Newport
Harbor athletics.”
“He had a sharp wit and a sense of humor,” said Johns, who started
the Orange County Sports Hall of Fame with Yardley, who was inducted
into that shrine in 1981.
The two became friends in the 1970s.
“It was remarkable when you realize he was arguably, if not the
greatest, athlete to come out of our area and he had an electrical
engineering degree from Stanford, where he was an All-American in two
sports,” Johns said. “He was involved both with family and his
business. He was never in a hurry and that was one of the engaging
things about him. He made you feel like you were important.”
Yardley (Newport Class of ‘46) took the NBA by storm in his
seven-year career -- he was a six-time all-star and broke George
Mikan’s single-season scoring record with a 27.8 points-per-game
average in the 1957-’58 campaign. He retired at age 31 to provide for his family.
The 6-foot-5 forward walked away with a 19.2 points per game
scoring average and 8.9 rebounds per game for his professional career
spent primarily with the Fort Wayne, Ind., and eventually Detroit
Pistons.
Yardley was enshrined into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame in
Springfield, Mass., in 1996.
Stuart said Yardley was instrumental in recruiting tennis players
to join the former John Wayne Tennis Club -- now Palisades Tennis
Club -- in 1974. That year, the two sat down at the request of the
John Wayne Tennis Club’s former owner to brainstorm a list of the top
32 tennis players in Orange County.
Stuart, general manager, part owner and head tennis professional
at the club during that time, and Yardley, who sat on the club’s
board of directors, hosted a day of tennis and dinner for those 32
players.
Thirty-one signed up.
“He was one of the most respected people I’ve ever known,” Stuart
said.
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