NBA and Newport Harbor star Yardley dies
Roger Carlson
George Harry Yardley III, a Newport Harbor High grad who went on to
become an NBA Hall of Fame star, died Thursday morning at his Newport
Beach home with all of his family members at his bedside. He would
have been 76 in early November.
The gregarious Yardley, who stood 6 feet 5 and never did anything
without flair, succumbed to a battle with Lou Gehrig’s disease.
“Up to just a couple of nights ago, he was having a good time,”
said his daughter, Anne Yardley. “But his legs went out on him on
Tuesday, and he died this morning. It’s a blessing.”
Private burial services will be held at noon Thursday at the
Pacific View Mortuary and Cemetery, where he will join his wife,
Diana, who passed away in 1999. Memorial services will follow, but
family members have requested that they be contacted for further
details.
Yardley was diagnosed with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis early in
2003, and he spent the balance of his life fighting the fatal
disease, named after the immortal New York Yankee, with determination
in mind and spirit.
His final contribution was accomplished by raising and donating
more than $100,000 to the ALS Assn. at the Ludwig Institute at UC San
Diego and the Orange County Chapter of the ALS Assn.
“Even though we all knew it was coming, it’s still a shock,” said
John Hall of San Clemente, a retired Los Angeles Times and Orange
County Register sports writer. “He was such a vibrant human being
with all of his athletic skills, as well as a good friend and a good
person.”
Yardley’s career in the NBA lasted just seven years, and he was
named an All-Star six times as he dominated on and off the floor with
his spectacular play and constant up-beat nature.
He left the game at the young age of 31 for two reasons.
First, he wanted to come home. He promised his wife that they
would settle in California once the children reached school age.
Second, even though an All-Star, he was convinced he could make a
better living for his family as a businessman, thanks to an
engineering education at Stanford, where he was a walk-on basketball
player for the Indians aside from his studies.
Among his records as a three-time All-American was a single-season
scoring record for the Stanford Indians, and he was the first to ever
score as many as 2,000 points in a single season in the NBA, breaking
the mark of the fabled George Mikan of the Minneapolis Lakers.
His pro career was with the Fort Wayne and Detroit Pistons, as
well as the Syracuse Nationals, where he walked away from the game
having averaged 20.2 points per game in his final season.
The pro game’s original “Bird,” his lifetime pro marks were 19.2
points and 8.9 rebounds a game.
Before his run in the NBA, he starred for the Stewart Chevrolet
entry on the AAU level, where his coach, Hank Luisetti, labeled him
as “The greatest basketball player in the game.”
Despite all of his success in the NBA and his eventual induction
into the Hall of Fame, he was always the same happy kid who never
backed away from a challenge, doted endlessly on his family, and,
seemingly, always succeeded athletically, especially on the tennis
courts and golf courses.
His tennis ability was always underplayed.
One of the key figures in Yardley’s sports-related activities over
the past 25 years was Linda Isle’s Paul Salata, who was instrumental
in the promotion of his ascent to the Naismith Hall of Fame in 1996.
“I think basketball might have been his least impressive sport,”
Salata said. “He was really something.”
Former Costa Mesa Herald sports editor and Daily Pilot columnist
Don Cantrell recalled that at the Balboa Bay Club in exhibition play,
Yardley met and defeated world-renowned tennis star Pancho Gonzalez
on five occasions.
Before his induction into the Naismith Hall of Fame, Yardley was
the centerpiece of a dedication ceremony at Newport Harbor High, and
he went out of his way to insist the award from his high school meant
more to him than his anticipated induction on the national stage.
He was also honored with induction into the Bay Area and Michigan
sports hall of fames, relative to endeavors at Stanford and with the
Stewart Chevrolet AAU basketball teams, as well as with the Detroit
Pistons.
“Harbor High meant an awful lot to him,” said Cantrell, who also
recalled his infectious smile.
“He got that from his mother, Dorothy,” Cantrell said. “She was
one of the finest ladies I’ve ever known. She could charm anyone.”
Yardley’s demeanor and commentary were often outrageous by today’s
standards, but his remarks were always with a light heart and never
mean-spirited.
“Sometimes he had a cranky and crotchety demeanor,” Salata said,
“but it was all fake. He was a real pussycat.”
He was often in the middle of local charities and was by any
standard considered a community treasure.
“It’s hard to put into words,” Newport Beach businessman Buck
Johns said. “George was a true renaissance man. It’s kind of hard to
get your arms around a guy like George. Everything he touched was
with an enthusiasm that is so rare today. What a dimension he added
to the community.
“He told me not to shed a tear for him, that he was the luckiest
man in town. But, it was we who were the luckiest town to have a guy
like that.”
In the business world, he started the George Yardley Co., a
manufacturer’s representative for engineered products in 1960. During
the basketball off-season, he worked for Robertshaw Fulton and the
Fluor Corp.
Among his accomplishments: patenting a seal for the liquid oxygen
fuel tank on the Atlas-Titan rocket that allowed the United States to
keep pace with the Soviet Union during the Cold War.
An original selection into the Orange County Sports Hall of Fame,
he was never at a loss for words, even when enduring the harshest of
conditions as the disease progressed.
In recent months, when a Daily Pilot reporter asked his daughter,
Anne, if she could respond with a comment from him, he murmured with
a wink of an eye and a wry smile:
“Tell him to read the article in the Register. He’ll love that!”
Roy Orgill, a close family friend and a business partner with
Yardley’s son Rob, had fond memories of the help he received from
George Yardley as he played basketball at Estancia High School and
Orange Coast College.
“He was an extraordinary man, and he treated me like a son,”
Orgill said. “He opened up so many opportunities for me, and he
leaves a huge legacy.”
The son of the late George, Jr. and Dorothy, George Yardley’s
surviving children include Marilyn, Robert, Richard and Anne.
There are 14 grandchildren.
He is also survived by his younger brother, Robert, of Rancho
Santa Fe.
* ROGER CARLSON is the former Daily Pilot Sports Editor.
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