Dave Gleason, Millennium Hall of Fame
- Share via
Although Dave Gleason was one of the best defensive tackles the
Newport-Mesa community has ever produced, his true athletic joy didn’t
come until he discovered a game with physical contact and no pads.
A Costa Mesa High and Orange Coast College football and heavyweight
wrestling star, Gleason got a taste of heaven playing rugby at Cal.
After his first football season for the Golden Bears, Gleason, whose
grappling reputation preceded him, was approached by the school’s
wrestling coach. But Gleason wanted to try something different, a noble
concept for early-70s Berkeley.
“Why would anybody want to wrestle, when there’s rugby and linemen can
carry the ball?” said Gleason, who, despite a long and illustrious
football playing and coaching career, believes rugby “is the greatest
game on earth.”
A JC All-American defensive tackle for Orange Coast in 1970, Gleason
arrived at Berkeley during a tumultuous time. Not only was the football
program on NCAA probation following the Coach Ray Willsey regime, there
were student protests throughout the campus and antiwar demonstrations as
radical as anywhere in the country.
During football practices in the spring of 1971 -- Gleason’s first
semester -- there were days when players had problems breathing because
of tear gas emitted from police to break up riots.
“I was going from conservative Orange County to Berkeley, and it was
really eye-opening,” Gleason said. “You didn’t really want to wear your
lettermen’s jacket, either, because there was a lot of apathy. If you
played sports, you were part of the establishment. Nobody gave you a hard
time, but it just wasn’t cool.”
On the field, Cal went 6-5 in Gleason’s junior year before Willsey
resigned with NCAA sanctions pending. The next year, Mike White became
head coach. Gleason started every game for the Bears, but felt he was
caught in the transition of defensive philosophies. “But I was happy ...
I had a good time,” he said.
Gleason remembers traveling to Ohio State in ’71 and playing in front
of 90,000 fans, then playing the Buckeyes at home in ’72 and stuffing a
freshman halfback named Archie Griffin. “We gave him his worst day,”
Gleason said.
White also played rugby at Cal, a novelty since he was the head
football coach. Consequently, it generated interest on campus and a lot
of football players went out for rugby.
In the spring of ‘72, Cal won a mythical national rugby championship
with Gleason, a 6-foot-2, 230-pound bulldozer, and he would later
participate on the Newport Beach Rugby Club.
Prior to college, Gleason was Costa Mesa’s Athlete of the Year in
1969.
Greatly influenced by Mesa line coach Doug Brown, Gleason was a
two-year starter after moving into the area from Fresno, where he and his
brother, Mike, played for traditionally tough Fresno High.
In Week 2 of the 1967 season, Gleason’s junior year, the Mustangs
knocked off Newport Harbor, 3-0, on Ramon Ricardo’s 34-yard field goal.
Gleason had transferred from a winning Fresno program and was surprised
when “everybody went crazy” after the Mustangs’ early-season victory.
“My brother and I were thinking, ‘What happened?’ Because truly,
people went nuts,” Gleason said. “It was like we’d won a CIF
championship. We were puzzled.”
Gleason realized later it was quite a feat to beat Harbor, while
snapping a three-year losing streak against the district rivals.
The next day, an account of the game in the Daily Pilot read:
“Jubilant Mesa supporters broke into tears for joy and excited shouts
when the final gun signaled that the upset triumph was indeed theirs.”
Gleason, who went on to become one of Mesa’s top players, was also a
standout wrestler, placing fifth at the CIF finals for heavyweights his
senior year.
Once, at the Santa Ana College Tournament, Gleason pinned an opponent
in five seconds. “He was fish,” said Gleason, whose two-year prep record
was 60-6, while going 75-7 at OCC.
Jack Fair, former OCC wrestling coach and assistant football coach,
made sure Gleason was ushered into the wrestling room immediately after
football.
“When (Fair) coached me, I hated him, but I never respected a coach
more,” said Gleason, who later coached at OCC with Fair and legendary
former head coach Dick Tucker, including the 1975 season when the Pirates
won their second national championship.
Gleason, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
celebrating the millennium, began his coaching career at Corona del Mar
High in 1973 under Dave Holland, then moved over to OCC the following
year.
A mainstay at OCC until 1986, Gleason also coached wrestling and
women’s basketball for the Pirates, who captured back-to-back South Coast
Conference wrestling titles in 1978 and ‘79, before the program was
retired.
From 1993 to ‘96, Gleason returned to OCC’s assistant football
coaching ranks under Bill Workman.
Gleason, an OCC professor who teaches health education, is in charge
of the strength and conditioning programs in the state-of-the-art Orange
Coast exercise science facility.
He lives in Newport Beach with his wife, Laurie.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.