Pat Wilson, Millennium Hall of Fame
To comprehend Pat Wilson’s theory of coaching, you must first take
notice of his background.
“I understand the benchwarmer, because I was a benchwarmer,” said
Wilson, a former University of Arizona swim scholarship winner, who swam
and played football at Redlands High, before attending Orange Coast
College for one year as a swimmer.
Wilson, retired as a teacher and coach from the Newport-Mesa School
District but still a part-timer at Corona del Mar, is one of the most
successful and popular tennis coaches in district history, guiding
Newport Harbor’s boys to seven straight CIF Southern Section championship
match appearances, including back-to-back major division titles in 1970
and ‘71, when players like Bobby Ogle (singles), and Glenn Cripp and
Robbie Cunningham (doubles), captured individual CIF championships.
“I was fortunate,” Wilson said. “I had the material. I just didn’t
screw it up.
“(Ogle) was a phenom. He was one of the greatest athletes ever. He
used to run home from Newport Harbor to Mesa Verde (in Costa Mesa) at
night after every practice. He could’ve run a mile in four minutes flat.”
Wilson, who won 11 consecutive Sunset League titles in as many
seasons, coached at San Marino for three years before arriving at Newport
Harbor, which featured a JV program in Wilson’s tenure that did not lose
a match in 11 years.
At San Marino, Wilson coached the Titans to three straight CIF
small-division titles from 1963 to ‘65, after accepting his first
coaching job in 1962, handling both football and tennis. Wilson’s B
football squads at San Marino claimed the league championship three years
in a row.
After San Marino, Wilson was hired at Estancia, where he would help
open the new high school in the fall of ’65 and make his first of three
Newport-Mesa District stops. By 1968, Wilson was at Newport Harbor, which
had already been a CIF powerhouse under Wayne Horowitz, who led the
Sailors to the CIF large-division title in ’67.
Wilson, who also coached football at Newport Harbor from 1969 through
‘71, sent 42 kids to college on tennis scholarships from San Marino and
Newport Harbor in a 14-year span.
“The kids have done more for me in the long run than I ever did for
them,” Wilson said.
“I was very fortunate. We were like a family, every one of those
teams. There are so many great kids. The worse (player) on JV I loved as
much as the best on the varsity.”
Wilson arrived at Corona del Mar, following stints at Rea and Lincoln
middle schools, and coached the Sea Kings for nine years in tennis and
badminton. The school’s JV badminton program won nine straight league
titles, while the CdM varsity earned CIF playoff berths five times.
Former CdM standout Jerome Poyyak, perhaps the best badminton player
Wilson ever coached, captured a CIF boys singles championship in 1995.
The past president of the California Coaches’ Association and the
National Federation of Interscholastic Coaches, Wilson said he loved
coaching because the kids wanted to be out there, “unless their parents
forced them to come out,” a different situation than inside the
classroom.
Wilson said the Newport Harbor-Corona del Mar football game, billed
the Battle of the Bay, “is the greatest show in town and it’s just
super.”
A former breaststroker at Arizona, where he swam from 1955 to ‘57,
Wilson earned his masters degree from Arizona in guidance and counseling,
“which I never used. I should’ve used it. I’ve always been a P.E.
teacher.”
Wilson’s first name is Walter, but his mother dubbed him Patrick after
he was born on St. Patrick’s Day.
Wilson, a member of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating
the millennium, lives in Santa Ana and has four grown children. He loves
watching high school football more than any other sport.
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