A farewell to George Yardley
It would be easy to explain what a treasured son the Newport-Mesa
community lost when George Yardley passed away this month by listing
just his athletic accomplishments.
He was a three-time All-American at Stanford, where he set the
school’s single-season scoring record. He was the first NBA player to
score 2,000 points in a season. During his seven-year career, he was
named an All-Star six times and averaged 19.2 points and 8.9 rebounds
a game. He eventually was voted into the Naismith Hall of Fame.
But, as impressive as his prowess on the court was, the list tells
but part of the story.
Yardley, a product of Newport Harbor High, cut short a brilliant
NBA career, returned to California and became a successful
businessman -- Stanford does more than just churn out athletes, after
all. Among his successes in that world was patenting a seal for the
liquid oxygen fuel tank on the Atlas-Titan rocket that played a key
role in the United States keeping pace with the Soviet Union during
the Cold War.
And then he gave back to his community. He helped raise money for
athletic programs, most notably at his high school alma mater. He had
an infectious manner that lighted up rooms, tennis courts, golf
courses and, of course, basketball courts. Even his last battle with
Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease,
did not sap his spirit. Need proof? In his final months, he helped
raise 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.
The community has surely lost an irreplaceable member, one who
will live on in the annual high school basketball tournament that
bears his name and in so many charitable efforts that would never
have been as successful without his time and effort.
The community has a chance today to say goodbye and thank you to
Yardley. Funeral services will be at noon at Calvary Chapel of Costa
Mesa. It is at 3800 S. Fairview St., Santa Ana. We will see you
there.
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