Tara Kroesch, Millennium Hall of Fame
Richard Dunn
Nicknamed “The Crusher” on Newport Harbor High’s girls volleyball
team, Tara Kroesch is preparing for another set, spike and kill in the
coaching ranks.
A former national champion in club volleyball under Charlie Brande and
a two-time All-CIF Southern Section Division I selection under Dan Glenn
at Newport Harbor, Kroesch became an NCAA standout at Pepperdine, then
returned to her Newport Harbor roots as an assistant coach.
“I discovered that I really like coaching,” said Kroesch, who coached
with Brande at the Orange County Volleyball Club the last five years and
with Glenn the last three at Newport Harbor, including the Sailors’
junior varsity boys her first year.
Now, with the aforementioned grooming from her two mentors, Kroesch is
ready to start her own program at Thousand Oaks High, where she was hired
Jan. 21 as the Lancers’ new head girls volleyball coach.
“It will be an exciting summer, to say the least,” said Kroesch, who
also plans to get married in August.
Kroesch, who lives on the Balboa Peninsula and is in her first full
year teaching at Carden Hall (a private school) in Newport Beach, said
her experience coaching at her alma mater has “been awesome,” and she has
“definitely learned a lot about coaching” while serving under Glenn.
But Kroesch, today’s honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
put on a clinic during her playing career.
A three-time All-Sea View League choice for the Sailors in the autumns
of 1989, ’90 and ‘91, the 5-foot-11 Kroesch reached turbo power at the
prep level as an outside hitter after training with conditioning guru
Marv Marinovich.
“I think that little extra I was getting definitely helped me in
strength and conditioning, and helped get me in probably the best shape I
could possibly be in,” said Kroesch, who trained with Marinovich three
days a week during her high school career, except during the season.
“I’d say that was the biggest difference for me, training with him and
all those football players and basketball players.”
A four-year varsity letter winner who picked up her nickname with
rocket-like kills, Kroesch started at middle blocker, then moved to
outside hitter her junior year. She was Newport Harbor’s co-captain her
senior year (along with Maureen McLaren).
For the Orange County Volleyball Club, Kroesch was captain of Brande’s
18-and-under national championship squad in 1992, a team that also
captured a title that summer at the prestigious UC Davis Invitational,
where Kroesch wrapped up the championship match with a game-winning kill.
“That club season was so tough, but I remember all of us coming
together and playing so well,” she said. “It gives me chills just to talk
about it now.”
Kroesch, 25, remembers the Sailors’ matches against Back Bay rival
Corona del Mar the most. “Playing against (CdM) in packed gyms every year
was just awesome,” Kroesch said.
After accepting a full scholarship to Pepperdine, Kroesch started at
outside hitter all four years for the Wave and earned first-team All-West
Coast Conference her junior and senior years. She was a second-team
all-conference pick as a sophomore.
As a senior, Kroesch merited all-tournament honors in the postseason
National Invitational Tournament in Kansas City, a sweet way to crown her
playing career considering her final season at Pepperdine was “a hard
year” with a lot of “ups and downs.”
“I think I played my best college volleyball throughout that whole
(three-day) tournament,” said Kroesch, who thought about playing overseas
after college, but the concept didn’t materialize and she immediately
started coaching. “It was disappointing not to make the NCAAs, but (the
NIT) was the next best thing, and going out and leaving it all on the
court felt very good to me.”
Off the court, Kroesch has been busy this month. She got engaged Jan.
16 to Russell White of Chatsworth. No exact wedding date has been set,
but Kroesch said “it was a big surprise” when he popped the question.
With her new husband and job coming up, Kroesch is preparing for
life’s next set.
Prior to her hiring at Thousand Oaks, Kroesch said: “I’d like to have
my own program and put together all the things I’ve learned through high
school and college and through Dan and Charlie. But it’s a tough area,
because a lot of the coaches here have been around a while and you don’t
see them leaving any time soon.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.