Doug Sparks, Millennium Hall of Fame
A former world-class pole vaulter whose best Olympic hope came
during the boycotted 1980 Moscow Games, Doug Sparks turned into an
overweight Wall Street investment banker who lived on the run.
Then, one day in 1988, he read an ad in the Daily Pilot promoting a
Masters Track and Field Meet at UCI, so he showed up and watched from the
stands.
“I can do this,” Sparks told himself, while desiring to return to top
physical condition.
Sparks blew off his yuppie job, entered the physical therapy business
with his wife, Kay, and gave UCI track and field coach Vince O’Boyle a
proposition.
“I’ll coach your (pole vaulters) for free as long as you let me jump
there,” Sparks said to O’Boyle, who gladly accepted the terms and hasn’t
let go of him since.
In the last 11 years, any athlete who has pole vaulted for Corona del
Mar or Newport Harbor high school has probably come across Sparks, who
coaches all levels, including past and hopeful Olympians. In 1996, Sparks
was one of two coaches selected to work with pole vaulters in preparation
for the Atlanta Games.
A year later, Sparks decided he wanted more jumping and less coaching,
so he went out and won the 1997 indoor national championship in the
Masters division in Boston. In July 1997, Sparks placed third at the
world championships in South Africa.
Sparks, the reigning honcho of all things pole vault, coaches, at no
charge, about 10 elite vaulters at UCI, including Long Beach State’s
Borya Celentano, an 18-foot 6 1/2-inch vaulter who has already qualified
for next year’s Olympic Trials.
“When I first got (Celentano), he was jumping 12-6, so it’s pretty
exciting (to see the progress) and he’s not done,” said Sparks, who also
trains former NAIA champion Lesa Kubishta (Point Loma), who expects to
compete in the first Olympics for women pole vaulters at Sydney in 2000.
As a physical therapist, Sparks works with top athletes and even opens
his home in Corona del Mar to prospective Olympic pole vaulters -- all at
no charge.
“We learn a lot from them, because they tell us everything they’ve
tried, so it’s a great mutual exchange of information, which I can use
for anyone else,” said Sparks, whose generosity has paid dividends in the
long run, with his business growing from $120,000 in 1993 to over $3
million this year.
“It has certainly been fun, and I was given some good advice (about
entering the health care industry). The other thing is that (the
business) has given us a way to work with athletes, especially at this
higher level. We attract a lot of elite athletes who want to work with
us.”
Sparks, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
celebrating the millennium, grew up in Houston and began pole vaulting at
age 12 with bamboo sticks from a nearby housing development (used to
carry rolls of carpeting) and piles of old netting for a landing pad.
He saw Bob Seagren compete on television at the Sunkist Indoor Meet
from the Los Angeles Sports Arena and immediately went out with his
younger brother, Bill, to find a suitable runway. Both became world-class
competitors, with Doug going just a little higher (18-1 in 1978) than
Bill (17-4 1/2). A Web site for pole vaulters has them listed as the
10th-ranked brother combination of all time.
A football wide receiver and safety in high school who was recruited
by several colleges in Texas, Sparks turned down full-ride scholarship
offers in order to pole vault. At the time, Sparks was vaulting 14-6 and
some thought he was crazy to pursue it rather than accept a football
scholarship.
“I’d always played football my whole life,” said Sparks, who accepted
a new athletic challenge while attending Southwest Texas State, where he
became a three-time NAIA All-American, including indoor and outdoor
national championships in 1976.
“When I realized we weren’t going to the Olympic Games in 1980 because
of the boycott, I decided to retire rather than starve for two more
years,” said Sparks.
Sparks attended Scarborough High School in Houston and pole vaulted
with a guy named “Buddy” Swayze, who would later turn up on the silver
screen in films like “Dirty Dancing” and “Point Break”.
“(Patrick Swayze) was our star of the team,” Sparks said. “He was a
10-foot vaulter and that was huge for us. After junior high, he gave it
up. He had a big dance background and his mother (operated) the Patsy
Swayze School of Dance. He’d point his toes over the bar -- so his
vaulting was not only high, but near perfect in form.”
Sparks, 46, has lived in the area for two decades. Kay, his wife, had
three grown children: Krista, Kevin and Kara. Krista has two children.
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