Dave Carlisle, Millennium Hall of Fame
Richard Dunn
For someone thrust into coaching basketball at Estancia High, it’s
hard to believe Dave Carlisle took over under such circumstances
considering the players he groomed and teams he coached.
The head man of Estancia’s first great basketball teams, igniting a
program that has traditionally produced championship contenders, Carlisle
arrived at the school as a football coach.
But, after one year, the Estancia Athletic Department had a courtside
void to fill.
Carlisle, who had coached hoops at TeWinkle Junior High in Costa Mesa
for three years and was just completing his second autumn as the Eagles’
sophomore gridiron coach, was asked to replace Gary Carr, sort of.
“They kind of forced me into that,” Carlisle said of his Estancia head
basketball coaching assignment in 1972, which started a memorable
six-year term.
Under Carlisle, the Eagles began at the bottom of the Irvine League
heap, then became champions of the Century League with a talented 1977
squad led by Pete Neumann and Ray Orgill.
From 1972 to ‘77, Estancia worked its way onto the Orange County
basketball map. Carlisle compiled 76-66 record in that span, but a 52-23
mark in his final three seasons, including the school’s first league
championship in the sport and 21-6 showing in his final campaign.
Carlisle, the head coach of the South team in the ’77 Orange County
all-star basketball game at Orange Coast College, virtually handpicked
his successor when then-Estancia Principal Floyd Harryman sought his
recommendation.
“I told Harryman, ‘That’s your man for my job right there,”’ Carlisle
said, referring to former Costa Mesa basketball coach Larry Sunderman,
who became a huge success at Estancia from 1978 to ’84.
In the 1975-76 campaign, 6-foot-6 standout Jim McCloskey, who attended
USC on a basketball scholarship, led the Eagles (17-8) to a school record
for victories in a season and the program’s first CIF Southern Section
playoff berth since 1970.
Estancia also won its first-ever playoff game in 1976 with a 57-49
upset victory over Sunset League champion Marina and future Notre Dame
star Rich Branning.
But, in his last season as head coach, Carlisle would make his biggest
splash as the Eagles smashed the school record for victories in a season
(21) and captured the league crown with players like Mike Camp, Greg
Krohnfeldt, Jim Price, Kevin Corbett, Brad Cooper, Orgill and Neumann.
“That (’77 team) was probably the best team we had,” said Carlisle,
who taught science at TeWinkle and U.S. history at Estancia, before
completing a long and distinguished career in the Newport-Mesa School
District at Back Bay High for three years and one more year at TeWinkle.
Carlisle, who has been retired for several years, grew up in
Henderson, Ky., and later played baseball and football at Murray State
University, where he was the quarterback of the Ohio Valley Conference
champions his senior year.
After graduating from high school in 1942, Carlisle spent 2 1/2 years
in the U.S. Army during World War II, serving in the allies’ drive from
Africa to Germany.
After the war, Carlisle started at quarterback for two years at Murray
State, including one year in the Tangerine Bowl at Orlando, Fla. (now the
Citrus Bowl).
Then, Carlisle went to Lakeworth, Fla., to play semipro football. “We
played Ft. Lauderdale for the championship and won,” Carlisle said. “It
was right around 1950 or ’51.”
For three years, Carlisle coached football, baseball and basketball at
Lakeworth High, his first job out of college, then moved to East St.
Louis, Ill., for a football coaching position.
After about five years, Carlisle picked up his family, which included
four children, and moved to California, where the pay scale for teachers
and coaches was higher. He coached baseball and football at Centennial
High in Compton and helped nurture the baseball careers of future major
leaguers Roy White and Reggie Smith.
After three years at Centennial, Carlisle taught one year at
Huntington Beach High, then landed at TeWinkle and stayed in the school
district the rest of his career.
These days, Carlisle enjoys traveling throughout the U.S. with his
wife, Joan, a longtime Estancia teacher and cross country and track and
field coach.
Carlisle drives a truck with a V-10 engine, pulling a boat and 30-foot
trailer in search of the country’s best hunting and fishing spots.
When Carlisle meets new folks on the road and is asked where he’s
from, he simply refers to Costa Mesa as “God’s country.”
Carlisle, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
has four children and seven grandchildren.
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