MATT TOMLIN
Steve Virgen
When he was not playing soccer at Corona del Mar High, Matt Tomlin
was running and jumping for the track and field team, strengthening
his special bond with his father, the head coach.
The values he learned from sports, and the fitness he received,
helped him later in life. One day, he had to let go of soccer and
follow a different path. In Tomlin’s life, he has had two major
decisions in dealing with sports and his goals.
After high school, he played soccer for Navy. Then, he decided he
wanted to totally concentrate on being in the Navy SEALs. The main
reason he went to the Naval Academy in Maryland was to be part of
that elite sea, air and land commando team.
After one season of soccer, Tomlin prepared himself for the
rigorous selection process that included competition in swimming,
running, push-ups, pull-ups and sit-ups. He also went through a
character evaluation and was selected for Navy SEALs training in
Coronado, Calif.
There were 10 selected from the Navy Academy to train and Tomlin
was No. 6. In 1993, Tomlin made the Navy SEALs.
“You do what you think is right at the time and I felt that was
the best thing for me,” Tomlin said of giving up soccer, which he
also played as a sweeper in 1987 and ’88 for Corona del Mar’s varsity
team. “It was hard for me [to stop playing]. I had been playing my
whole life. But I had to look at what my true goal was for being
there.”
After five years of service, in which he traveled basically all
over the South Pacific, Tomlin made another major decision. He ended
his time with the Navy SEALs to become closer with his family. In
1994, he and his girlfriend, Lonie, married. And, in 1996, they had a daughter, Samantha.
“I was done with traveling 80% of the time,” Tomlin said. “I was
gone for weeks, sometimes six months. I decided to get out and it was
time to move on.”
He now lives in Trabuco Canyon with his wife and Samantha, who has
two younger brothers, Tyler, 4, and Trey, 1. Tomlin, the latest
honoree of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, works as a national
sales manager for a computer and cellular phone equipment company.
Obviously, he still keeps in touch with his father, Jim, who
coached the Sea Kings when his son went there.
Matt Tomlin competed for two years on the varsity team at Corona
del Mar. He competed in the triple jump, long jump and, if his father
instructed him, would also run in the 1,600-meter relay.
“I enjoyed it a lot,” Matt Tomlin said of being on the team with
his father as coach. “Just growing up sometimes, you take your
parents for granted. As a teenager, you’re trying to break away from
your parents. But I was with my Dad a lot. I spent a lot of time with
him and have some great memories.
“You don’t realize all there is about your parents,” he continued.
“But being around him, I realized how special my father is, with all
the students that come back and keep in touch with him. I’m very
proud of him and I feel special, too, that I got to share my time
with him. It was just fun to be with him.”
It was also fun to win for the Tomlins. In Matt’s junior and
senior years, the Sea Kings won the Sea View League championship.
“In my junior year, we won by 10 points [at league finals],”
Tomlin said. “I was an OK triple jumper and in [league finals] I had
my best triple jump by two feet. I went from fifth place to second
place and that was one of the differences for winning [the league
title].”
The two league championships read like a storybook ending. Growing
up, Tomlin would watch the Sea Kings’ track and field team.
“I saw him win so many Sea View League championships,” Tomlin
said. “I got to see all the hard work that really went into that. The
heart and soul of what he put into it. Looking back on that, it was
really special stuff and special times.”
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