Family Matters
- Share via
Mike Sciacca, Independent
Year in and year out, the District 62 All-Star tournament brings
out the best in our local little leagues.
The 2000 season was no different, but featured among this grouping was
the lineage of some of the great names in the game of baseball.
Over at Huntington Valley Little League, Matt McGwire, the son of
Mark, the St. Louis Cardinal slugger who, in the 1998 season, etched is
name in the Major League record books as the league’s all-time single
season home run hitter, played on his league’s All-Star team.
At Robinwood Little League there were the Dedeaux Brothers, Anthony
and Adam, who played on that league’s Senior and Junior All-Star teams,
respectively.
The brothers are the grandsons of college baseball’s greatest coach,
Rod Dedeaux.
Dedeaux spent 44 years at USC and coached the Trojans to a record 11
NCAA titles, which included five in row from 1970-74, and his Trojan
teams won 28 conference titles and appeared in 27 NCAA tournaments. His
was a two-time US Olympic baseball coach (1964-1984) and his honors are
too numerous to mention, but can be summed up by his being named Favorite
Coach for All-Time College World Series Team in June, 1999.
He has also served as a technical advisor in the entertainment field,
including the motion pictures, “The Field of Dreams,” and “A League of
Their Own.”
Rod Dedeaux’s talent gene was passed to his son Terry, who played at
USC and was on two of the Trojan teams that won those five national
titles between the 1970-74 season.
Anthony and Adam Dedeaux also have inherited those genes.
Anthony Dedeaux, 15, is a sophomore-to-be at Mater Dei, where he plays
both baseball and soccer. He has played several positions for James
Valicenti’s Robinwood Senior All-Star team, and was a key contributor to
Robinwood’s winning the District 62 title last week.
Anthony Dedeaux, who captained the North Huntington Beach Premier
Under-16 soccer team, has made a baseball All-Star team for four
consecutive years.
“Anthony’s one of those kids who has a winning attitude. It runs deep
in his family. He’s good under pressure, a real rock. More importantly,
he’s a good kid who any coach would love to have on his team. He
certainly was part of the nucleus of our team.”
Adam Dedeaux, 14, also is an all-around athlete. An eighth-grader this
fall at St. Bonaventure Catholic Church in Huntington Beach, Adam Dedeaux
quarterbacked the St. Bonaventure football team to the 1999 Parochial
Athletic League championship. He came back in the winter to be part of
the St. Bonaventure basketball team that also came away with a PAL title.
Dave Brock, Manager of Robinwood’s Junior All-Star team that also won
a district crown, calls Adam Dedeaux, a pitcher, “The Giant Killer.”
“I ay that because he pitched two great games against Ocean View, the
team everyone considered the team to beat in the tournament,” Brock
explained. “They (Ocean View) had big, intimidating kids who could smash
the ball. But Adam threw everything at them and came out with two big
victories, allowing just six hits in two games.
“He’s also a real competitor. He has about six or seven different
pitches, which is rare for his age. He seems to have quite a future in
baseball, if he wants that.”
Both Anthony and Adam Dedeaux says they want to take baseball as far
as it will take them. And yes, their grandfather has influenced their
careers.
“We know what he says is right, and he gives up pointers as we go on
playing,” Adam Dedeaux said. “He has some great wisdom. One of my
favorite things he has told me is that when I’m batting, I need to see
the ball the entire way in order to hit it.”
Rod Dedeaux, 86, has been on hand for several of his grandsons’ games,
although he was out of town last weekend and missed a few in Sectional
Tournament action. He was in Cooperstown for Sparky Anderson’s induction
into Baseball’s Hall of Fame.
Anderson served as Dedeaux’s first ball boy at USC.
Yet before he departed for Cooperstown, Rod Dedeaux, a gracious man,
had this to say about his talented grandsons:
“First and foremost, they both love the game of baseball, as well as
their other sports. I am personally impressed with the quality of
coaching and the interest of the parents.
“Anthony has the quickness and agility to become a pretty good
infielder, and Adam has a big advantage of developing into a more than
one dimensional player. Left-handed pitchers are hard to come by. At USC,
I always found a spot on our roster for ANY left-handed pitcher. In
addition, he shows some agility as a first baseman and will develop as a
power hitter.
“However, my one tip to them would be to always listen to your
coaches.”
Yes, it all comes down to family for the Dedeaux’s. A record weekend
for Terry and Christine Dedeaux featured 19 games between children
Anthony and Adam, 17-year-old daughter, Galyn, a soccer player and senior
at Mater Dei, and 10-year-old Patrick, who also plays baseball and
soccer.
While Anthony and Adam Dedeaux cherish the wisdom of their famous
grandfather, they both recognize the time and effort given by their
parents.
“They are our biggest supporters,” Adam Dedeaux added. “We just want
to thank them for all they’ve done, for all their sacrifices, running all
of us from game to game, from field to field. We don’t know how they do
it, but we’re grateful.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.