Greg Patton, Millennium Hall of Fame
The affable Greg Patton knew he’d made it as a tennis coach when
his former UCI players showed up wearing Boise State Bronco hats at the
1997 NCAA Championships.
Sitting in the stands at UCLA and cheering hard for Boise State was
former UCI All-American Trevor Kronemann and about 20 other former
Anteaters who played for Patton from 1979 to 1992, an unforgettable era
in UCI sports history as the Anteaters captured nine Big West Conference
titles.
“I remember feeling that this is what it’s all about -- that’s the
reason you coach, that’s the reason you want it and that’s the reason
it’s a passion,” said Patton, who left UCI to pursue a slower-paced
lifestyle in Idaho, then turned Boise State into a national power.
Patton, whose former players have always followed him no matter where
he landed, is now a junior national coach for the United States Tennis
Association, after six years at Boise State, which had never won a Big
West championship or reached the NCAA Tournament before Patton arrived.
“I miss college coaching a lot -- I miss the guys and I miss the
competition. But I don’t miss recruiting and I don’t miss the
fund-raising,” said Patton, who guided Boise State to five Big West
titles in six seasons, and once had the Broncos ranked No. 2 in the
country.
But Patton, voted the National Coach of the Year in 1987 by the
Intercollegiate Tennis Association and a five-time Big West Conference
Coach of the Year while at UCI, endured a different sort of racket in
World TeamTennis as coach of the Newport Beach Dukes (1990-93) and Idaho
Sneakers (1994-97).
“It was a dream experience (with the Dukes), being able to coach
world-class tennis players in front of all my friends and the community
where I lived,” said Patton, who led the Dukes to championship match
appearances in 1992 and ’93 in the now-defunct WTT, before becoming the
Sneakers’ first coach and leading Idaho to the finals twice.
“I’m the Marv Levy of World TeamTennis,” added Patton, referring to
the former NFL coach who led the Buffalo Bills to four Super Bowls, in
which they lost every time.
“(WTT) was such a great thing in the summer for people in Orange
County. It’s a shame it folded.”
Patton, though, known for his ability to fill up a reporter’s notebook
as much as his prowess to coach winning tennis teams, found himself in
hot water with the Dukes’ former owner, Fred Lieberman, when he accepted
the Sneakers’ job.
“When I left, he threatened to sue me. But the only thing is, I never
got paid,” Patton said. “How can you have a contract with a slave? How
can you serve somebody with a suit who’s doing volunteer work? Later on,
he asked me if I wanted to come back. Boy, life is good.”
In 1992, the Dukes lost their first four matches, then won 12 straight
to reach the title match against the Atlanta Thunder and Martina
Navratilova.
In ‘93, they went 13-1 in the regular season, beat Jimmy Connors and
the Phoenix Smash in the playoffs, then lost to Wichita in the title
match, 26-23.
But Patton’s favorite highlight is coaching UCI to an upset victory
over UCLA in the 1989 regional final, an Anteater squad featuring
Kronemann, Mark Kaplan and Mike Briggs (Corona del Mar). They ended 25-7
in dual matches and fourth in the nation, Patton’s best national finish
at UCI.
“It was a dream season,” Patton said. “There was so much pride built
with UCI becoming a major tennis power that year, and the whole thing
was, I just went along for the ride, because those guys took over
ownership of the team.
“That whole season, it was like falling in love. You always wanted to
be with each other. We were all in love with the whole experience.”
Patton, the USTA coordinator for player development in the Western
U.S., attended Bishop Diego High in Santa Barbara and graduated in 1971.
He went on to play tennis at UC Santa Barbara. “I was one of the bottom
guys,” he said. “But I was just glad to be on the team. I loved the
game.”
After college, Patton joined the Peace Corps and went to Africa, then
returned to California. He was planning to play tennis at Westmont and
use his final year of collegiate eligibility. But UC Santa Barbara hired
him instead -- at age 23 -- as its men’s tennis coach. Two years later,
Patton was at UCI and a legend was on its way.
Patton, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
celebrating the millennium, lives in Boise, Idaho, with his wife of 13
years, Christa, and two children: Chelsea, 8 1/2, and Garrett, 7. Both
reportedly already have a strong forehand.
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