Hall of Fame: Bill Greschner (Newport Harbor)
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Richard Dunn
The tougher the competition, the more Bill Greschner liked it,
whether it was football, basketball, track and field, tennis or
engineering.
Greschner, one of Newport Harbor High’s first and finest all-around
athletes, played quarterback on the Sailors’ varsity football team for
three years under legendary former coach Ralph Reed, after his freshman
year on the Cee team.
An excellent runner with out-of-reach leaping ability, Greschner
played at Newport Harbor with players like Al Irwin and Dave Phoenix in
the single-wing formation days, then starred at Santa Ana College in the
Dons’ original glory years under Coach Bill Cook in 1936-37.
“We won our conference both years at Santa Ana,” said Greschner, who
“played quarterback on running plays and played wide receiver on pass
plays. It worked out very good. We had a fullback who was an excellent
passer, and that’s what happened. And we scored a lot of points.”
Greschner, who later played at Cal as the backup quarterback to 1938
All-American Vic Bottari, said Cook “was the greatest coach I’ve ever
seen. He started the spread formations and everything else. He was way
ahead of everyone else. We just killed everybody.”
The Dons finished 10-1 in 1936 and captured the Eastern Conference
title with a 6-0 mark, then won a conference co-championship in ’37 and
ended 10-0-2 overall.
As the quarterback, Greschner was given the green light by Cook to
change the plays at the line of scrimmage if he spotted a hole in the
defense, and Greschner obliged with savvy and fearlessness.
When Greschner arrived at UC Berkeley, however, he once changed a play
during an intrasquad game and scored on a long touchdown run, but Golden
Bears Coach Stub Allison vehemently “wanted to know who was running the
wrong play.”
Greschner raised his hand and pleaded his case to Allison, but it
escalated into a fight. Next thing Greschner knew, he was sent down to
“the goose squad.”
It wasn’t long thereafter when Greschner decided to quit playing
football and focus on academics.
“(Allison) had a couple of wonder teams there, but you had to play the
way he wanted you to play, and that’s all there was to it,” Greschner
said. “Sometimes you can see something on the field, the way the defense
is. You can see (an opening), so you change (the play) and make a
touchdown. That’s the way we did it at Santa Ana. It didn’t take a genius
to find an open spot, but sometimes coaches can’t see it from the
sidelines. Only you can. But they’ve got their playbook. (Allison and I)
just didn’t get along.”
At Newport Harbor, Greschner was one of only 17 grid players his
sophomore year in the fall of 1932, the school’s second year of varsity
football competition. In 1934, the Sailors finished 3-3-2, their first
non-losing season, and 5-5 the following year.
“We weren’t great, but we kind of held our own,” said Greschner, who
was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, and moved to Long Beach with his family
when he was 5, before settling in the Newport-Mesa community a few years
later.
An excellent track man at Newport, Greschner was a blue-ribbon
performer in the long jump, high jump, pole vault and shot put, as well
as the relays.
The 5-foot-10, 155-pounder also played center in basketball and twice
led the Orange League in scoring. “I could jump, so I did pretty well,”
said Greschner, who was also a three-year letterman in tennis.
“I love sports. I love competition. The harder the competition, the
better I like it.”
William D. Greschner retired from private business about 20 years ago,
but still maintains an upstairs office at Gresco Corporation, the
successful construction engineering company he started and now operated
by his son, William F.
Greschner, a “young man of only 84,” is the latest honoree in the
Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame. He lives in Tustin with his wife,
Eloise. They also have a daughter, Patricia, and five grandchildren.
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