Leon Skeie, Millennium Hall of Fame
You wouldn’t find him dancing in the end zone or pitching
last-inning miracles, but Leon Skeie has collected more saves than any
athlete at Orange Coast College.
Skeie, whose name became synonymous with OCC athletics in 1973, would
get more high-fives than the top home run hitter, more office visitors
than any coach on campus.
When joints and muscles got sore, and ankles needed to be taped and
arms required icing, OCC athletes relied on Skeie to mend them.
Those who never had a sports medicine class seemed to learn as much,
or more, about the art of training-room etiquette than they did in their
regular classes.
A friend to every visitor, Skeie healed wounds, fixed aching bodies
and promoted good nutrition, weight training and fitness.
“It’s been really fun to see some of these kids, though they’re not
kids anymore, in your Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame (to celebrate the
millennium), because I’ve taken care of so many of them,” said Skeie, the
latest edition to the locals-only Hall of Fame.
Skeie, the Pirates’ head trainer for 12 years from 1973 to 1984, was
voted the Community College Trainer of the Year in 1980 and ‘84, and
named the nation’s top first-year strength coach by the National Teachers
Hall of Fame in 1974.
In his 27th year as an OCC physical education professor, Skeie is
director of the school’s Fitness Specialist Certification Program, which
was launched in 1980 as the first in the country. Today, there are about
180 students in the program.
Skeie, whose open-door policy made the OCC Sports Medicine Center one
of the most attractive features on campus for student-athletes, turned
down several offers from professional sports teams in the early- and
mid-80s to remain at OCC.
“It was an important time in my life when those offers came,” Skeie
said, “but I would always have this dream that I took another job and
hated it, and when I’d call Wendell Pickens to see if I could get my old
job back, because I didn’t like this job with the pro team, he’d always
say, ‘Sorry, we already hired someone else.’ Then I’d wake up in a cold
sweat and wish I was there with the students.”
Skeie, who loves teaching and developed a special bond with OCC’s
athletes when he served as head trainer, still oversees the Sports
Medicine Department, which has become one of the finest facilities on any
campus in the nation, and Exercise Science Lab, which features
state-of-the-art equipment.
But what keeps Skeie at OCC are people.
For example, there’s a special plaque from 1978 JC All-American
halfback Dan Duddridge (Costa Mesa High). “Thanks for the 1,000-yard
season,” it reads.
When former U.S. Olympic volleyball gold medalist Steve Timmons spoke
at the Commission On Athletics Hall of Fame once, he saw Skeie in the
crowd and acknowledged him, saying “I still use his stuff and
techniques.”
While technology has advanced, the world of sports medicine has kept
its foundation of ice, heat and ultrasound intact. The best remedies of
the late 1950s are still the best in the late 90s.
“It hasn’t changed a lot,” said Skeie, who started a health club for
women in 1983, operating it for nine years, and added a second (coed)
facility in 1988 called the California Coast Club, which has since been
sold.
“There weren’t a lot of health clubs to start off with when we tried a
new venture in the early 1980s,” he said.
Skeie, a native of Ames, Iowa, graduated from Iowa State, where he
played football and fell in love with sports medicine when he first saw
the school’s enormous facility.
“I thought trainers were only for horses,” said Skeie, who attended a
small high school with only 23 in his graduating class of 1960.
Skeie graduated from Iowa State in 1967, after serving two years in
the U.S. Marines, then worked as the Cyclones’ assistant athletic trainer
and strength coach for four years.
The author of the flexibility book, “Hang Loose and Stay Happy,” Skeie
arrived at Corona del Mar High as the athletic trainer in 1972, but
lasted only one year after working closely with Sea King football players
Rhett and Travis Tucker. That’s because their father, Dick, was head
football coach at Orange Coast, and, when he found out how much Skeie
helped his sons in the training room, Skeie suddenly became a blue-chip
recruit for the Pirates’ program.
“Dick Tucker just called and asked me to teach and train at Orange
Coast,” said Skeie, who didn’t hesitate when he realized what a great
opportunity it would become.
Skeie and his family suffered a scare in 1985, when he was
consistently experiencing headaches. It was discovered that Skeie had a
brain tumor and later he underwent a successful craniotomy. “I was very
fortunate, because the tumor was benign and not in the brain, but behind
it,” he said. “As soon as they got it out, it was quite a relief. All the
headaches were gone.”
These days, Skeie is going strong and is one of OCC’s most beloved
individuals.
He lives in Corona del Mar with his wife of 36 years, Cheryl. They
have two daughters, Kimberly and Stacey, both of whom are married. There
are two grandchildren from Stacey, Shaya and Jessica.
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