Bruce Chapman, Millennium Hall of Fame
Once a power forward for the original Runnin’ Rebels, Bruce Chapman
is now a godfather in Las Vegas.
No, not the Hollywood type. Not like the ones portrayed on the silver
screen after Benjamin “Bugsy” Siegel helped build the place.
Instead -- even though he’s not a religious man -- Chapman has been a
godfather with an enormous heart to children dying of cancer.
A self-proclaimed rebel rouser who survived a serious surfing accident
in Newport Beach when he was 18, Chapman has turned his attention to
drumming up support for Candlelighters for Childhood Cancer, a group that
provides comfort and resources to parents and children facing
life-threatening illnesses.
The grace and dignity of the children first humbled Chapman 13 years
ago, when a visit to the Pediatric Oncology Unit at Sunrise Hospital in
Las Vegas changed his life.
Chapman, who retired last year before his 50th birthday, is everywhere
in Vegas, from charity golf tournaments to social soirees. “He’s the
tallest grip-and-grin guy in town,” a Las Vegas Review Journal columnist
once described the 6-foot-8 Chapman, a former basketball star at Costa
Mesa High, Orange Coast College and the University of Nevada Las Vegas.
Chapman urges businessmen and philanthropists to contribute to
Candlelighters, often speaks to service groups and appears on local
television shows. The reason why is simple: He has had children die in
his arms and whisper the secrets of the heart and soul in their final
breaths.
“It’s not a job, it’s a passion for me,” said Chapman, who made money
in advertising, following a stellar hoops career that ended with knee
injuries, even though he was drafted by the NBA’s Detroit Pistons and
ABA’s Utah Stars in 1970.
Once, when a little girl named Katrina Sailey was fading before his
eyes, the parents of the child asked Chapman for more than a hug. They’d
called in a priest and Chapman, as usual, was at the scene. As
22-month-old Katrina was being baptized, the parents asked Chapman to be
her godfather. He was honored.
Two hours later, she died of cancer.
Chapman continues to bond with these children and recruit his golf
buddies into the Candlelighters, which sometimes even pays for funerals.
“I’ve buried over 125 kids,” Chapman said. “But this is not a job for
everybody. People ask me how I can do it. Well, I guess because I o7
canf7 do it. I have the passion and stomach for it.”
Had Chapman not discovered a passion for basketball, it is unlikely he
would’ve landed in Las Vegas to help the young cancer victims. Chapman
said he was “wild” growing up, “always fist fighting somebody.” Without
basketball, he “never would’ve got out of high school or college.”
Only 6-5 in high school, Chapman grew one inch at OCC, then two more
inches at UNLV. “I was a very late bloomer,” said Chapman, who played
under Coach Jules Gage at Costa Mesa in 1965 and ‘66, leading the
Mustangs to the CIF Southern Section playoffs his senior year against
top-seeded Long Beach Poly, which defeated Mesa, 109-81, and “could have
beat the Lakers that year.”
From there, Chapman and John Vallely led Orange Coast to back-to-back
Eastern Conference titles, as the Pirates compiled a two-year record of
47-20. In 1967-68, Vallely set a school record for points in a season
(904), while Chapman’s point total for one season is second (695) all
time.
Chapman, OCC’s No. 3 career scoring leader behind Vallely and Chris
Beasley, averaged 20 points per game in ‘68, when Vallely averaged 25.8
ppg under Coach Bob Wetzel.
Recruited by every four-year college on the West Coast except UCLA,
Chapman signed with UNLV and hasn’t left Vegas since.
In the old saucerlike Las Vegas Convention Center, before the Thomas &
Mack Center was built, Coach Roland Todd’s 1970 team was labeled the
Runnin’ Rebels. They’d frequently crack the 100-point barrier and run
opponents out of the gym like a pit boss in a bad mood.
“Las Vegas was extremely good to me,” said Chapman, who averaged 20
ppg as a junior in 1968-69, and 17 ppg as a senior, and is now a UNLV
booster.
Growing up, Chapman said longtime Harbor Area Boys Club Coach Rod
MacMillian was his “biggest inspiration.” Chapman, Bart Carrido, Craig
Falconer and the Mancebo brothers, Rick and Larry, formed a traveling
squad that rarely lost.
It was also Carrido who found Chapman in the ocean on a stormy day
after a surfing accident. “Bart saved my life,” said Chapman, who broke
his back, dislocated his neck and was unconscious when Carrido spotted
him in the waves.
For two days, Chapman was blind and paralyzed from the waist down,
then miraculously recovered.
“Maybe there is something more to the spiritual world that I don’t
know about,” Chapman once said in the Las Vegas Review Journal.
Chapman, a member of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating
the millennium, has a grown daughter, Kelly, and is married to Dr. Pamela
Moore.
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