Catching Up With: Danny Rogers
- Share via
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - Always one to promote good will, Danny Rogers is
now at the top of Goodwill Industries of Orange County.
A former USC basketball star -- and the first men’s basketball coach
at UC Irvine -- Rogers quit coaching in the 1960s to enter private
business and later served as executive vice president of the World
Football League.
Rogers, also the former executive director of the Newport Harbor Area
Chamber of Commerce, was hired last year as president and chief executive
officer of Santa Ana-based Goodwill Industries.
“It’s so good to get that feeling that you’re really helping people,”
Rogers said. “That’s the most heartwarming feeling you can have, knowing
you’re really helping somebody.”
An advocate of nonprofit organizations, Rogers completed an 11-year
term last year as a real estate consultant for Ford Motor Land Services
Corp. Friends had encouraged him for years to get on the board of
directors at Goodwill, but the timing was never right.
However, when George Kessinger was promoted from Goodwill Industries
of Orange County to take the helm of Goodwill International in Bethesda,
Md., Rogers decided to apply for the president and CEO seat and landed
the job.
“It’s a fabulous organization. I enjoy it every day,” Rogers said of
Goodwill, which helps people with disabilities and other special needs to
achieve employment by expanding their opportunities through a variety of
resources.
Rogers, who has always been involved in the community, is a former
president of the Harbor Area Boys and Girls Club and was instrumental in
building the Boys and Girls Club facility in Irvine.
A longtime area resident, Rogers fell in love with Newport Beach when
he’d show up for construction work with his father after graduating from
Mark Keppel High in Alhambra in 1952.
“I told myself this is where I’m going to live, and I’ve been true to
that. I’ve loved being here. I’m very fortunate,” he said.
Rogers and his wife, Sheila, have been married 41 years. She’s been a
teacher in the Newport-Mesa School District for 34 years and has been
Teacher of the Year.
In addition to his new job, Rogers has also organized a fund-raising
event -- “An American Tribute” -- to honor an philanthropic individual
whose life exemplifies the American ideal.
The inaugural event, May 23 at the Grove of Anaheim (formerly the Sun
Theater) adjacent to Edison Field, will celebrate Newport Beach resident
and Irrelevant Week founder Paul Salata.
An American Tribute 2002 will raise funds for two of Salata’s favorite
charities -- the American Red Cross Orange County Chapter and Goodwill
Industries of Orange County. Salata started the Orange County Youth
Sports Foundation and is a recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award
from the NFL Alumni.
Rogers, a longtime friend, got the ball rolling on the event last year
before accepting an offer to become the head at Goodwill Industries in
Orange County.
Throughout his life, Rogers has been involved in other charities,
including serving on boards, or as president, for the Orange County Youth
Sports Foundation, 2nd Harvest Food Bank of Orange County, Orange County
Sports Celebrities and the Harbor Area Boys Club. He also volunteered
with Save Our Youth in Costa Mesa.
As a basketball player, Rogers was a standout at Fullerton College,
which won the state title in 1954 and finished as runner-up in ’53 with
the 6-foot-1 sharpshooting Rogers at the controls.
His stellar USC playing career concluded with several school records,
including the much-ballyhooed single-season scoring record in 1957 with
463 points, topping future Naismith Hall of Famer Bill Sharman’s total of
446.
Rogers, a member of the five-player first-team All-Pacific Coast
Conference who averaged 19.4 points per game in ‘57, still holds the USC
record for the most free throws attempted in a game (26 against Oregon).
His owns a basketball autographed by legendary former UCLA Coach John
Wooden, who wrote: “For Danny Rogers, who delighted in making things
miserable for me in those USC-UCLA games.”
In a memorable game his senior year, Rogers drained six free throws in
the final 45 seconds of a wild PCC contest against UCLA at the Pan
Pacific Auditorium as he finished with 26 points and USC stunned the
Bruins, 84-80.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.