TOM TRAGER
Steve Virgen
Tom Trager never really knew he wanted to become a baseball coach
until he learned more about the game in college.
At Glendora High, he simply used his talent to attain notoriety
and success. However, at La Verne University, Trager met a coach who
changed his life and taught him more about baseball. That helped
Trager want to become a coach, and he went on to flourish at Corona
del Mar High.
“I never had a coach like that until I went to La Verne,†Trager
said of Ben Heinz, who later became the hitting coach for the
Dodgers. “I didn’t know how much baseball I did not know until I got
to La Verne.â€
Trager was a standout athlete for the Tartans in Glendora,
excelling in football, basketball and baseball. Baseball was his
specialty sport and he earned All-San Gabriel Valley honors.
At La Verne, he was first-team All-NAIA and led the NAIA in RBIs.
When he was with the Leopards, Heinz made quite an impression on him.
“He was a motivator and he made the game fun, so I tried to do all
of that,†Trager said. “But it’s always more fun when you win.â€
After his career at La Verne, Trager later became the baseball
coach at Azusa. He guided the Aztecs to three league championships in
the four years he coached. Then, Ron Davis, the athletic director at
Azusa, moved to Corona del Mar to take the same position. Davis lured
Trager to come over to the Sea Kings in 1969.
Trager found a home at CdM, where he worked for 32 years.
There were several highlights in baseball, but the Sea Kings’
shining moment came in 1981, when Corona del Mar defeated Sante Fe,
3-2, for the CIF Southern Section 2-A title.
“I had a great time at CdM,†Trager said. “We had some very good
players there. Jeff Pries was the CIF Player of the Year for us in
1981 and went on to UCLA. Matt Keough was an All-CIF shortstop for
us.â€
Trager coached the Corona del Mar baseball team from 1969 to 1983.
He said he stopped coaching because he wanted to see his son, Tom
Jr., play at Laguna Beach. When he was subsequently asked to coach at
his son’s school, he couldn’t turn it down.
In 1985, midway through the baseball season, Trager became coach
of the then-Artists.
“The first team we played when I took the coaching job was Corona
del Mar and we won,†the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame member
recalled. “The next year, we played Corona twice and we beat them
twice.â€
After coaching at Laguna as a walk-on, Trager coached the boys
tennis team at Corona del Mar, where he continued to teach. He said
his best coaching days were when he first started out with the Sea
Kings.
“Those were the days I didn’t have to depend entirely on parents,â€
Trager said. “I think most ballplayers enjoyed playing at CdM. But
the times changed. When I saw that money was not coming in, it was
just different. And when I could see the parents wanted to be more
involved, that’s when I said, ‘I have to get out of here.’ â€
Trager, 62, lives with his wife, Sharon, a retired CdM teacher, in
Laguna Beach. They have been married for 40 years and have two grown
children and two grandchildren.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.