Albritton dead at 50
Terry Albritton, whom some believe may have been the most gifted
athlete in the history of Newport Harbor High, has died at age 50.
Albritton, a football and track and field standout who set a world
shot put record at age 21 and is a member of the Stanford athletic
Hall of Fame, died Sept. 1 in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, said longtime
friend Tony Ciarelli, who competed with Albritton at the University
of Hawaii.
The cause of his death is unclear.
Ciarelli, in his 12th season as an assistant football coach at
Newport Harbor, said he maintained periodic contact with Albritton,
whose athleticism and personality made him an almost mythic figure as
early as his sophomore year at Newport Harbor.
“He was a 67-feet, 9-inch shot putter who ran on the 400 relay
team,” said Ciarelli, who competed against Albritton in football and
track and field through junior high and as a standout for Huntington
Beach High. “He played defensive end and either offensive tackle and
offensive guard.”
Albritton, who had just turned 21, put the shot 71-8 1/2 on Feb.
21, 1976 to break the world record at an all-comers meet in Honolulu.
Ciarelli, who threw the javelin at Orange Coast College and
Hawaii, teamed with Albritton at Hawaii, where Albritton had
transferred after a dispute with football coaches at Stanford in
1975.
“He was a pretty amazing person,” Ciarelli said. “He was probably
as gifted intellectually as he was athletically. He was a lot of fun
to be around.”
Albritton, a three-year varisty starter in football, won the CIF
Southern Section shot put title in 1971 and ’72.
He began his collegiate career at Stanford, where he returned
after Hawaii dropped track and field. He graduated from Stanford in
1977.
Albritton tore a pectoral muscle just before the Olympic trials in
1976, which likely cost him a shot at an Olympic medal, Ciarelli
said.
Albritton worked for 14 years as a teacher and coach at St.
Anthony High in Maui, before moving to Southeast Asia in recent
years.
A memorial service was held for Albritton recently in Maui.
Albritton is survived by sons Shane and Thomas, sisters Lorelei
Davies and Marla Ramirez Albritton, a grandson and a nephew.
-- Barry Faulkner
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