JC baseball: Down and dirty
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Barry Faulkner
In those inevitable off-season lulls, when taking extra ground
balls or a few extra hacks in the batting cage could be considered
overkill, Orange Coast College baseball players needn’t look far for the
inspiration to keep grinding.
Sometimes, all that is required is a glance to the side, where Coach John
Altobelli is drilling right along with them.
Altobelli, coming to the close of his eighth season at the helm of his
former community college rival, is a walking -- sometimes even running,
crouching, swinging and throwing -- example of how much one can get back
from investing in the game.
A gamer without glory at Newport Harbor High, Altobelli was thankful for
the chance to continue playing at Golden West College. It was an
opportunity not available to him at his future home.
“Orange Coast had just won a state championship in 1980 and didn’t
recruit me,” Altobelli recalled. “I had to drive by OCC every day on my
way to Golden West and I really didn’t like OCC. (Former Pirates Coach)
Mike Mayne still refutes this, but we beat Coast both times I played
them. And I had the game-winning hit in one of those games.”
Displaying the work ethic instilled in him by his father, Jim, a former
St. Louis Browns draft choice from Chicago who also rendered his son a
lifelong Cubs fan, Altobelli toiled tirelessly until his talent surfaced
at GWC.
“I had dislocated my shoulder my junior year at Harbor and when I got to
Golden West, I could barely throw the ball from the outfield to the
infield,” he said. “But I worked on my arm and by the time I was a
sophomore, I was the starting right fielder with one of the strongest
arms in the conference.”
Altobelli’s development, including being named team captain and Rustler
of the Year as a sophomore, led to a scholarship to the University of
Houston.
“I had two good years at Houston, but I didn’t get drafted, which was
very frustrating to me,” he said. “I was never all-anything, which, I
guess, summed up my career.”
He went 7 for 11 in a two-day tryout with the Salt Lake City Trappers,
but was cut.
In Chicago to try out for the White Sox organization, Altobelli got word
about a possible opportunity with the independent Miami Marlins. He
bolted to South Florida and was offered a contract by the single-A team.
“They offered me $500 and I said ‘Where do I sign,’ ” he recalled.
Though he logged some precious memories, his dream of playing
professionally ended after a half season. He returned to Orange County,
resigned to making it in the real world.
“I started working for my dad’s company in outside sales. It took me
about a month to realize I didn’t want to do that the rest of my life.
Even though I was coming from baseball, a game based on failure, going
about 1 for 20 on sales calls wasn’t sitting real well with me. I guess
coaching was a way to stay away from real life.”
Altobelli returned to Houston for one season as a graduate assistant
coach, then spent five years as an assistant at UCI.
When the Anteaters dropped baseball after the 1992 season, it was only a
month before “Alto” was named the sixth coach in OCC history at age 28.
“I’m a firm believer, things happen for a reason,” he said.
His first OCC squad won 30 games and reached the state final four,
earning him Orange Empire Conference Co-Coach of the Year honors.
Last season, Altobelli guided the Pirates to a 29-20 mark and the second
round of the regional playoffs. In between, there have been some lean
years.
“I’ve gone through both ends of the spectrum, from the top to the bottom,
and the top is a lot more fun,” he said.
“But my time at OCC has been fun and I’ve met a lot of great people. I
usually am at school at 6:30 a.m. everyday working out, whether I’m off
or not. It has never seemed like a job, which is probably why I spend
more time there than I do at home.”
Altobelli, who also teaches physical education and health education at
OCC, maintains a consistent workout regimen to enhance his teaching
ability on the diamond.
“I work out so I can throw BP to my team, hit fungoes and even run with
my players,” he said. “We were going through a little funk a few weeks
ago and I was looking for a way to spark the guys. So, one day, I put on
the uniform and practiced with them. I think I opened some young guys’
eyes that an old guy could still do it. I couldn’t walk the next two
days, but I got the point across.”
Altobelli’s primary point usually involves effort.
“Pete Rose is my guy and I’m a firm believer that it doesn’t take any
talent to hustle. The scrappy guys who don’t mind getting dirty and
diving head first are the kind of guys I want to be around. I try to
instill that work ethic in all my players.”
Altobelli said beyond wins and losses, he savors the chance to help
athletes improve, year-round, pushing them closer to the dream he held in
their shoes, more than a decade ago.
“I want to stay at OCC as long as they think I can still do a good job,”
he said. “I love the area, I love the school and working with athletes is
awesome. I still have a lot of goals in mind.”
Any time away from the diamond, Altobelli, an Irvine resident, devotes to
9-year-old son J.J.
“He plays baseball, soccer, roller hockey and golf and watching him
compete is the biggest joy I’ve ever had,” Altobelli said.
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