Hall of Fame: Bob Packer (Costa Mesa)
- Share via
Richard Dunn
The late 1960s and early ‘70s meant difficult times at Costa Mesa
High, which went through four principals in five years and won about as
many football games in that span.
Not that football was nearly as important as some of the social chaos
on campus, but going 1-17 in back-to-back autumns has a tendency to douse
school spirit.
But, in 1973, things started to change.
Enter Costa Mesa Principal Bob Packer, whose unparalleled leadership
created a positive dominoes affect as Costa Mesa climbed to not only
respectability, but arguably the No. 1 high school in the Newport-Mesa
School District.
Packer, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, is
humble about his term at Costa Mesa from 1973 through ’81 and quick to
give credit to assistant principals Tom Jacobson and Terry Cole.
While Packer’s administrative staff at Mesa was seemingly among the
best anywhere in Orange County (Jacobson, for example, soon became
principal at Newport Harbor and later Corona del Mar), there’s no denying
that good companies and institutions are headed by top-notch leaders.
Through time, Packer would prove to be one of the most significant and
influential administrators in district history, and later was elected
president of both the CIF Southern Section (1985) and CIF State executive
committees.
“Those were great times,” Packer said. “Of all the things going on in
CIF, good and bad ... (and) because of my love for sports all my life and
love for athletes and kids, it was a wonderful time.”
Following a memorable eight-year stint as principal at Costa Mesa,
Packer became deputy superintendent at Tustin Unified School District,
then returned to his old stomping grounds and became superintendent of
the Duarte School District.
A member of the Monrovia High Wildcats’ Sports Hall of Fame, Packer
was an outstanding football center who went on to play at Occidental
College. As a senior at Oxy, Packer was selected to the All-Southern
California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference squad and voted team
co-captain by his peers, perhaps a sign of things to come in a successful
career.
“To be elected by my fellow teammates to a position of leadership,
well, I suppose that’s my highlight as an athlete,” Packer said. “You
know, as an old lineman, you don’t really have any highlights.”
After serving in the U.S. Air Force, Packer accepted his first
coaching position at Puente High in 1958 as the B football coach.
To this day, Packer’s coaching highlight will always be winning the B
championship that first season, because it was Puente’s first football
title at any level in the 43-year history of the school at that time. It
became La Puente High in the early ‘60s.
After four years at Puente, Packer helped open Nogales High (Puente)
in 1962, serving as athletic director and head football coach.
Four years later, Packer was promoted to assistant principal at
Nogales, then principal four years later in 1970. After three years as
the Nogales principal, Packer arrived at Costa Mesa, where he helped turn
school spirit around, including the hiring of football coach Tom French
in 1974. French led the Mustangs to two South Coast League titles.
“We had a great run at Costa Mesa High,” Packer said. “People have
asked me a number of times, in a career as varied as mine, what I would
say I’m most proud of. And what I’m most proud of is my time at Costa
Mesa High. When I came to Costa Mesa in 1973, those were some very
troubled times for the school. It had four principals in five years. It
was not a happy place.
“But I can honestly say eight years later when I left, and it wasn’t
me but everyone else around me, that it was the best high school in the
district and the kids were proud of that school ... There have been a lot
of highlights, but without any equivocation, those years at Costa Mesa
were the most satisfying, most gratifying in almost 40 years in public
education. And I’ve told that to a lot of folks.”
Packer, who earned his masters degree at Cal State Los Angeles and PhD
at USIU in La Jolla, retired as a school district superintendent in
January 1993. At the same time, Packer concluded a six-year term with the
CIF State, serving two years each as president-elect, president and
senior citizen president (to assist the current one).
The roles as president of the CIF Southern Section and CIF State
executive committees are voluntary.
Packer, who still plays golf with some of his former CIF State
officers, lives in Palm Springs in the winter and enjoys a summer home on
Whidbey Island, Wash., the largest island in the continental U.S., with
his wife of 47 years, Dorothy. They have three grown sons and six
grandchildren (two from each son).
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.