Danny Rogers, Millennium Hall of Fame
Richard Dunn
Long removed from the court, former USC basketball star Danny
Rogers was listening to a Trojans game on the radio one day in 1994 and
heard his name.
Pete Arbogast, the USC broadcaster, was talking about Harold Minor, the
former All-American and No. 1 draft choice of the Miami Heat. “Minor
needs to make one free throw to tie the school (single-season) record set
by Danny Rogers in 1957,” Arbogast said on the air.
Moments later, Minor went to the line again to break Rogers’ mark of 195
free throws ... and made it. “We got a new record, and that’s the last
you’ll hear of Danny Rogers,” Arbogast said.
Rogers, however, got the last laugh. No matter how many announcers
unintentionally dispose of the past, Rogers will forever be linked to USC
basketball lore.
Even if his one remaining school record is broken -- his 43-year-old
standard for the most free-throw attempts in a game (26 against Oregon)
-- Rogers will always have the distinction of being a UCLA killer.
In 1957, the season Rogers averaged 19.4 points per game in the Pacific
Coast Conference, he provided the USC faithful with a heroic effort down
the stretch as the Trojans upset UCLA and snapped the Bruins’ 18-game
winning streak.
A hard-driving, 6-foot-1 guard, Rogers made six free throws in the last
45 seconds of the much-ballyhooed PCC contest at the Pan Pacific
Auditorium, as he finished with 26 points in the Trojans’ stunning 84-80
victory.
Rogers’ feat was mentioned last year in the Los Angeles Times’ Countdown
to 2000 series, a day-by-day recap of some of the most important sports
moments of the 20th century. For the Trojans’ basketball archives,
they’ll never hear the end of Rogers.
“Arbogast was wrong ... it wasn’t the last time they’d heard of me,”
Rogers said.
A part of the five-member All-PCC squad in ‘57, Rogers never met a key he
couldn’t penetrate or a lane he couldn’t fill. He “would run an opponent
over if he were in the way on a basketball court,” a Los Angeles
Herald-Examiner reporter once wrote of Rogers, the year he served as
UCI’s first basketball coach (1966).
Rogers, a longtime Newport Beach resident who fell in love with the area
and insisted on living here after graduating from Mark Keppel High in
Alhambra, broke future Naismith Hall of Famer Bill Sharman’s
single-season scoring record at USC.
Rogers, who rewrote the Trojans’ record book in ‘57, scored 463 points
his senior year, topping Sharman’s total (446) in the last game of the
season against Cal.
“I got fouled a lot and made a lot of three-point plays,” Rogers said. “I
went to the basket really hard ... I guess I was a good actor. But the
game is very different now. It is officiated very differently. The game
is played a lot higher now.”
Rogers, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, was a
JC standout at Fullerton College, leading the Hornets to a state
runner-up finish in 1953 and state title in ’54. Rogers was twice an
all-state tournament selection and captured state tournament MVP honors
in ’54.
After his outstanding USC career, Rogers played several years in the
Amateur Athletic Union, including on championship teams with Denny
Fitzpatrick (Newport Harbor, Orange Coast College and Cal).
Rogers completed his graduate studies at USC and joined the faculty at
Newport Harbor High, where he coached the Sailors’ Bee basketball teams
to Sunset League championships in 1960 and ‘61, compiling a 35-12 record
in two years.
“Those were good years, and we had a lot of fun,” said Rogers, who also
taught English.
Then, USC head coach Forrest Twogood persuaded Rogers to join the
Trojans’ coaching staff, and, for the next four years, Rogers served as
the program’s freshman basketball coach and only varsity assistant coach.
Rogers also handled recruiting and, one year, helped lure Paul Westphal
to USC.
But when UCI announced it was opening in 1965 and needed a basketball
coach, Rogers, who desired to be closer to Newport Beach, took on the
challenge after being hired by former Anteater Athletic Director Wayne
Crawford. Rogers recruited players, as well as regular students, to UCI.
Rogers left in 1967, after a 30-22 record in two years as UCI’s coach,
and entered the business field. Among his endeavors, Rogers worked for
Gary Davidson in the World Hockey Association, World Football League and
World TeamTennis. He served as general manager of the WFL’s franchise in
Hawaii, before the league folded.
Later, Rogers became manager of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of
Commerce and, in 1978, oversaw the completion of the chamber’s building
on Jamboree Road.
After five years with the chamber, Rogers entered the real estate
business and was a founding partner of Lee & Associates in Newport, one
of the largest independently owned real estate organizations in the West
Coast.
For the last nine years, Rogers has been a real estate consultant for
Ford Motor Land Services Corp.
Rogers and his wife of 40 years on Aug. 20, Sheila, have four grown
children: John, Joe, Pete and Tracy.
Additionally, Rogers has been heavily involved in the community,
including serving as Chairman of the Board for the Second Harvest Food
Bank of Orange County, president of the Harbor Area Boys Club, president
of the Orange County Sports Celebrities and a volunteer for Save Our
Youth in Costa Mesa.
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