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When individuals with years of association with the Burbank Park,
Recreation and Community Services Department get together, it’s not
just a meeting of friends.
Instead, men and women who have devoted a large portion of their
lives to the organization are more like family. And when they see one
another, it’s like a giant reunion.
Members of the Park and Rec family came together Saturday for the
annual Burbank Athletics Walk of Fame induction ceremony at Olive
Park.
Rollie Bigbee, Gordie Martin, and Darrell Taylor took their places
among past honorees as this year’s inductees.
“The sense of community the Park and Rec department has with all
of the people is the most striking thing about the organization,”
said Taylor, who began his involvement in the organization in 1963 at
age 8 and has been associated with the department ever since as a
player, coach and sponsor.
“You see a lot of these people from the time you’re a kid through
adulthood. The people involved with all the sports really care about
the players, and they do all that they can to help.
“This is really like a huge family. The relationships you develop
through the Park and Rec department are the kinds that will never,
never, ever go away. And I feel fortunate to be a part of that.”
Taylor is a Burbank High graduate.
One of the individuals who is helping to foster that family
atmosphere is Eric Hansen, the Park, Recreation and Community
Services Department director. Hansen said it is one of the goals of
his organization to make all the participants, from T-ball baseball
players to senior softball players, feel a sense of belonging.
“The three individuals who we inducted [Saturday] are examples of
the people who have made us successful over the years,” Hansen said.
“If you look at how many people came out to see them honored, and the
people who are walking over to them, talking to them and thanking
them, you can see that family atmosphere.
“[The induction] ceremony is a special activity because we’re able
to renew relationships of people who may not have seen one another in
years. But when they do meet up again, it’s like catching up with a
friend.”
Taking in some of those renewed relationships was Bigbee. Bigbee’s
relationship with the organization spanned five decades, from the
1940s to the late-1980s, seeing time as a player, coach and city
employee.
Bigbee, who taught at Luther Burbank Middle School for 30 years,
moved to Morro Bay near San Luis Obispo in 1987. He returned to the
city for the induction ceremony.
“This is a great honor for me,” said Bigbee, a Burroughs High
graduate. “Just to be remembered when you have been away from the
community for 19 years is a wonderful thing.
“I have been lucky to have such great memories, and I was able to
coach some great kids, over the years.”
For Martin, a Burbank High alumnus, he said he feels fortunate to
have been a part of the Park and Rec organization.
“Sports wise, what you have in Burbank you can’t find in any other
city,” he said. “All of us have been lucky to be a part of it all for
all these years.
“The Park and Rec does a great job at making the sports fun for
all the players. This is just the best organization around, and to
honor us like this is great.”
*
The Walk of Fame was established to acknowledge the contributions
of athletes, coaches, volunteers and staff members who have shown
dedication and commitment to the department.
In recognizing the value of sports and athletic activities within
the community, the tribute highlights individuals who, in their roles
as participants, volunteers or professional staff, have furthered the
excellence of the local organized sports programs.
Inductees are permanently honored with their names chiseled on
individual bricks that adorn a walkway behind Diamond No. 2 -- Bill
Burton Field -- at Olive Park. Complete with inscriptions, the walk
has room for hundreds of future honorees.
The department plans to honor a group of Walk of Fame inductees
every October.
ROLLIE BIGBEE
* Involvement in the Burbank Park, Recreation and Community
Services Department organized sports programs spanned five decades,
from the late 1940s to the late 1980s.
* Was involved as a participant in the youth and adult sports
programs, as a staff person, performing as a game official and as a
sports game supervisor, and as a volunteer coaching youth and adult
teams.
* He logged playing time in the adult basketball and fast pitch
softball programs until 1982, and in the slow-pitch softball program
through 1986.
* He coached youth basketball (mostly junior high boys) for 23
seasons through 1980.
* Proposed two rule changes to the Sports Office staff which are
still intact today: Bringing in the tee for the batter upon receiving
ball four and batting through the lineup.
* Served on the Park and Recreation Board for six years.
GORDIE MARTIN
* Began his involvement with the organized sports program
sponsored by the city of Burbank in 1958, teaching sports and crafts
classes and providing facility supervision.
* He coached youth baseball and basketball teams for over 15 years
until 1978. In addition, coached 13- to 15-year-old boys’ flag
football for four of those years.
* Continued working in the recreation centers and summer parks
areas until the early 1970s, when he was assigned to work in the
Sports Office with the boys’ sports programs.
* He developed T-ball rules that helped cut down on walks for the
younger players and helped revolutionize the game, making it more
popular.
* Was the person responsible for taking the curveball out of all
baseball divisions except for the 7th-8th -grade division, which
helped cut down on injuries to pitchers’ arms.
DARRELL TAYLOR
* His involvement in the City of Burbank Park, Recreation and
Community Service Department organized sports programs has spanned
five decades, from the early 1960s to the present.
* As a player, began his career at age 8 in 1963, playing Hap
Minor baseball with the Cobras until he entered high school in 1969.
* Began playing fastpitch softball at age 16, and since he began
playing that year in 1971, he has been playing some form of softball
with teams continually ever since.
* He has logged 45 seasons/years up to today playing in the adult
softball and basketball programs with the organized sports programs
* As a coach, he has been involved in baseball for 27 seasons,
football for five seasons, basketball for nine seasons and Roller
Hockey for one season.
* As a businessman, he has helped sponsor 48 youth sports teams.
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