Gust of wind
Roger Carlson
Scholar-athlete awards have been a tradition on the high school
level for a long time, and are one of the major ribs around the backbone
of the sport of football.
A good example is the National Football Foundation and College Hall of
Fame Orange County Chapter’s annual banquet, which honors excellence on
the field and in the classroom.
This year’s banquet comes Monday at the West Coast Anaheim Hotel in
Anaheim, and as usual, it will indeed be a class event.
Another event of considerable merit, but without a lot of the
trimmings and geared to just one school, is the John Gust Athletic
Scholarship at Newport Harbor, where one of the Sailors’ all-time
boosters, Marilyn Gust, continues an endeavor she and her husband, Ev,
began some 28 years ago.
She began this award for a Newport Harbor athlete in the memory of her
son, John, whose own story was that of a late-bloomer who burst on the
scene for one glorious senior year, only to have his life cut short
because of an auto accident when on a skiing trip after the football
season of 1973.
John Gust was like a lot of kids you know today. As a junior he was a
no-name on the junior varsity, hoping that his one last year as a prep
would find him a berth on the varsity, and in a manner which would make a
difference.
There are many, every year, in that boat. Only a handful make it to
shore.
Just getting a spot on the varsity was an accomplishment. But making a
difference, that was the trick. And he certainly did.
Also a wrestler for the Tars, he moved from guard to center in
football, won a starting role for the Sailors, and eventually was named
All-Sunset League, All-Orange Coast, All-Orange County, and perhaps his
happiest moment, the Sailors’ Most Improved Player.
A lot of major players have since been honored with the John Gust
Athletic Scholarship, which is a $500 scholarship toward (hopefully)
college expenses, and a commemorative plaque.
It’s no small thing. This year alone there were six candidates with
4.0 GPAs.
Jim Erickson, this year’s winner, is a 3.9 student. There were 37
candidates with a 3.0 or better.
It’s something the Gusts have kept going for more than a quarter
century, but there’s one thing the Gusts didn’t do, and I know, it’s one
of the hardest: Keeping track of the Long Gray Line.
And that’s really the point of all this. Many are unaccounted for at
this point in time and we’d like to catch up with them.
We know about Greg Steverson, now married with two children in New
Hampshire where he is a vice president and chief financial officer with a
bank in Hanover.
Alan Gaddis is married, has a couple of children and still lives in
Newport Beach.
Matt Burns ... most know he’s a current coach at Newport Harbor. And
‘99 recipient Kelsey Peterson is at Annapolis.
Tom Bazacas is the pastor at Lighthouse Coast Community Church here in
the harbor area.
I know all these things, because Marilyn told me.
But she doesn’t have the goods on many.
Let us know if you can help Marilyn out with the big list. And if
you’re one of them, hey, picture Marilyn, with that twinkle in her eyes,
waving you in with her right index finger.
Here it is:
1973 - Mark Duffy
1974 - Tom Bazacas
1975 - Steve Bruno
1976 - Greg Steverson
1977 - Doug Brockmeyer
1978 - Dave Thompson
1979 - Alan Gaddis
1980 - Robert Anthony
1981 - Jamie Kitchens
1982 - Bill Brown
1983 - Rich Powers
1984 - John Spangler
1985 - Scott Craig
1986 - Jason Granneman
1987 - Perry Mason
1988 - Sean Ellis
1989 - Don James 1990 - George Greenwalt
1991 - Darin Mangnall
1992 - Justin Ketcham
1993 - Matt Burns
1994 - Jack Hogan
1995 - Ramsey Allen
1996 - Ian Dorish
1997 - Garrett Govaars
1998 - Lance Chavez
1999 - Kelsey Peterson
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