Passings
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Maurice ‘Maury’ Gerard
The longtime Orange Coast College men’s tennis coach succumbed to
cancer Jan. 8. He was 91.
In 19 seasons at OCC and 10 at Santa Ana College, he compiled a
career coaching record of 410-75. His OCC teams won five conference
titles and one state crown (1971), before he retired in 1976.
Gerard is a member of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame.
Sean Fenton
A former All-Pacific Coast League and All-Newport-Mesa offensive
tackle and league discus and shot put champion at Corona del Mar
High, he died Jan. 17 in an automobile accident. He was 20.
He was a junior computer science major at Yale, where fellow
students remembered him as ambitious and gregarious.
Some 700 mourners attended a memorial service at CdM High and a
scoreboard has been erected in his name on the school’s freshman
football field.
Matt Large
A former two-time Sea View League wrestling champion at Newport
Harbor High, his skeletal remains were identified Feb. 8 in Eureka,
Calif. and he was believed to be murdered after disappearing in
December, 2001. He was 23.
He was league champion as a junior 103-pounder in 1996 and went on to finish fourth at the CIF Southern Section Division II finals. As a
senior, he won the league 112-pound crown and finished third in
Division II at the CIF Southern Section finals.
At the time of his disappearance, he was preparing for an ultimate
fighting bout.
Dick Freeman
A second-team All-CIF Southern Section football tackle as a
Newport Harbor High senior in 1944, he died of heart failure Feb. 21.
He was 76.
He was known for his toughness, but also for his ability to make
friends easily.
He was one of two sophomores on the Sailors’ 1942 Sunset League
championship team, which played in the school’s first CIF (small
schools) title game that fall.
Pat Cox
A four-time women’s club golf champion at Santa Ana Country Club,
the renowned Newport Beach community activist died last spring. She
was 81.
The mother of accomplished amateur golfer Marianne Towersey, Cox
won SACC titles in 1947, ‘52, ’61 and ’62.
Kelvin Kirk
The inaugural Mr. Irrelevant, he died suddenly while playing
pickup basketball July 2. He was 49.
He was drafted as a speedy receiver out of Dayton by the
Pittsburgh Steelers with the 487th and final pick of the 1976 NFL
draft, walking right into the Irrelevant Week spotlight that still
focuses on Newport Beach every summer.
He had a fine career in the Canadian Football League, finishing
with 103 receptions for 2,942 yards.
Charlie ‘Tex’ Bleiker
His nearly 40-year career as a teacher and coach included 28 at
Newport Harbor High, after he moved to California in 1970.
He died Aug. 4 of natural causes. He was 66.
He was best known for his work with the Sailors’ boys and girls
tennis teams, but he also coached football at Newport.
He spent a brief time at Costa Mesa High, before coming to Harbor
and after working at schools in New Mexico and West Texas.
Andrea ‘Andi’ Collins
A member of the Newport Beach-based Orange County Volleyball Club,
she died of cancer Sept. 4. She was 16.
A Mater Dei High student, she made many friendships with
Newport-Mesa athletes with her club volleyball involvement, which
included being the starting setter on the OCVBC national 16-and-under
champions.
Chris Premer
The Toshiba Senior Classic media director was killed in a
twin-engine plane crash in Norco Oct. 1. He was 30.
A talented writer and sports enthusiast, his affiliation with Hoag
Hospital led him into his role as spokesman for the golf tournament
held annually at the Newport Beach Country Club.
He was the event’s media director since 1997.
Kevin Magee
Widely regarded as the greatest player in UC Irvine men’s
basketball history, he was killed in an auto accident in Louisiana
Oct. 23. He was 44.
He was the school’s only two-time, first-team All-American,
averaging 26.3 points and 12.3 rebounds in a two-season career that
spanned 1980-82.
He played professionally overseas and his No. 44 jersey is the
only one retired by UCI.
Glynn Boies
One of Newport Harbor High’s most valuable athletes in the
mid-1940s, he died Oct. 28 of leukemia. He was 75.
He was a standout end on the 1944 varsity football team, played
guard on the varsity basketball team and was a notable pitcher for
two varsity baseball seasons. He also served as student-body
president as a senior in the 1944-45 school year.
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