Bob Francy, Millennium Hall of Fame
As one of the few principals honored in this unique Hall of Fame,
Bob Francy was called upon several times in nerve-racking moments and
always found the bottom of the net or split the goal posts.
Twice, coming out of retirement, the legendary former Estancia High
principal rescued the Newport-Mesa School District -- as fill-in
principal and interim district superintendent when Mac Bernd resigned.
Francy, a huge fan and supporter of teams at all four district high
schools, has been one of the area’s most dependable pinch-hitters since
retiring in July 1997.
“I haven’t exactly eased into retirement real gracefully,” said
Francy, who responded when the district needed an interim superintendent
in December 1997, an eight-month stint, then stepped up again when
Estancia needed a principal earlier this year for six months.
A 39-year veteran of the school district, the affable Francy has
served at all four high schools, including Estancia, where he was
principal for 14 years beginning in 1970.
“We’ve had some wonderful tussles in the school district, and between
the schools, over the years,” Francy said. “When I was principal, Bob
Packer was the principal at Costa Mesa, and at the same time Dennis Evans
was at Corona del Mar and Tom Jacobson was at Newport Harbor, and,
really, the four of us had a lot of fun competing, chiding each other all
the time. All four of us were big supporters of the value of high school
athletics and sportsmanship, and what that does to teaching life’s
lessons.”
Francy, a Glendale Hoover High graduate who played baseball and
basketball (though “not real well” in either), served in the U.S Army
from 1953 to ’55 and was stationed in Germany for two years, often
playing basketball, traveling throughout Europe and serving as medical
assistance for the military’s swinging bridge builders.
A Costa Mesa resident, Francy accepted his first teaching job at Costa
Mesa High in 1960, opened Corona del Mar in ’62 as part-time math teacher
and part-time counselor, then moved to Estancia in the fall of 1966, the
school’s second year of existence, to become head counselor, and, later,
assistant principal.
Following his first stay at Estancia in the late 60s, Francy went to
the district office to occupy the chair of director of student services,
a position he held for about four years, before returning to Estancia as
principal.
In the mid-1980s, Francy returned to the district office to work as
assistant superintendent, until his retirement.
“Sports can always teach you (life’s lessons), from leadership to
dedication, from discipline to camaraderie, and it teaches you compassion
for others,” Francy said. “It teaches young people who will learn the
thrill of victory and a dignified way deal with defeat, which is all part
of life.
“Having said that, I think the origination of high school athletics is
really the last opportunity, for most kids, to be a part of an organized
sport. Not too many kids go beyond high school sports.”
Francy, who taught match, world history and various shop classes at
Costa Mesa, also taught at Newport Harbor for several summers and worked
in the same math department as basketball coach Emil Neeme, who
frequently shared his thoughts about the upcoming squad.
“I really followed all four high schools over the years, not just
Estancia,” Francy said. “I remember back to the John Vallely days at
Corona del Mar when I was there, and watching John mature as a young man.
Bob Leslie was the (CdM) basketball coach at that time (1963 through
‘66), and Bob was also a counselor and we spent a lot of time together.”
Francy, who still enjoys following the major league baseball career of
former Estancia infielder Rich Amaral (Baltimore Orioles), recalled one
heated baseball clash when Cost Mesa played Estancia and tempers started
to flare on the field, and acting as peacemaker was Mesa catcher Brent
Mayne.
“That really showed sportsmanship on Brent’s part, and I’ll never
forget that,” said Francy, who congratulated Mayne after the game. These
days, Mayne keeps the National League in order and hits .300 for San
Francisco.
Francy, a big fan of Larry Hall (Estancia) and Dave Mollica (Costa
Mesa), football stars of the 70s, said one of his highlights was watching
Coach Tom Pestolesi’s Estancia boys volleyball team tackle Newport Harbor
in the CIF Southern Section finals in 1980, a dramatic Sailor win.
Coach Tim O’Brien’s 1991 boys state Division III championship
basketball team is also close to Francy’s heart, as well as Coach Lillian
Brabander’s tremendous run of CIF badminton titles (four).
Coach Larry Sunderman’s boys basketball teams were consistent
powerhouses. “(Sunderman) took us to the arena a few times,” said Francy,
no doubt referring to the 1984 squad, which played Riverside North in the
CIF 3-A finals at the LA Sports Arena. In those years, Estancia owned
some of the best basketball talent anywhere.
Francy, a member of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating
the millennium, has been married to Phyllis for almost 44 years. They
have two grown daughters who played sports at Estancia, Erin (cross
country and track from the Class of ‘78) and Cara (tennis and basketball
from the Class of ‘81).
Cara was an All-CIF basketball player whose team once reached the CIF
semifinals. Erin has two daughters to surround Bob with nothing but girls
in the family.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.