Hall of Fame: Pat McClellan -- Corona del Mar
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Richard Dunn
When tracing the rich water polo tradition at Corona del Mar High,
you begin with its first coach, Ted Newland, then go straight to Pat
McClellan.
In the autumn of 1965, the Sea Kings captured their first of what
would become 11 CIF Southern Section championships. They repeated as CIF
champions in 1966 as McClellan, a two-meter standout, was the Crestview
League and CIF Player of the Year.
But, because of a coaching change from Newland to Cliff Hooper, the
CdM know-it-all seniors in ’66 didn’t exactly make it easy on their new
coach.
“We were not particularly coachable, and it’s a tribute to a couple of
the guys on the team that we actually won the next year, because we were
fortunate to get by,” McClellan said. “Hooper was a great guy, but he was
just trying to fill in (for the legendary Newland, who became the first,
and only, water polo coach at UC Irvine).”
McClellan was the primary beneficiary (read goals) of the Sea Kings’
vaunted counterattack, as players like Eric Carson and Mike
Martin-Sherrill were the fast swimmers and “workhorses” who tired out
every opponent by the fourth quarter.
In McClellan’s junior year, the ’65 Sea Kings ended the long reign of
El Segundo, which had won 12 of the last 18 CIF titles under Coach Urho
Saari since 1947. CdM edged the Eagles, 8-7, in the CIF title game.
El Segundo, which won its 12th CIF title in ‘64, never won again,
while Back Bay aquatics powers Newport Harbor and CdM would begin an
unprecedented supremacy in water polo with a combined 19 CIF
championships from 1965 to ’89.
Newland formed strong relationships with his players, including
McClellan, and some of the CdM stars from the ’65 title team who returned
the following year didn’t welcome the new coach with open arms.
“We had a stubborn unwillingness to be beaten, even though we weren’t
doing the team workouts like we should have been doing,” McClellan said.
“I think our problems (in ‘66) were unrelated to Hooper. The problems
with us were, we’d been there and knew everything, and I don’t think we
were as inclined as seniors to put in the time and energy of the previous
year. It was not unusual to find some players not at workout, but instead
shooting billiards or bowling or goofing off ... it was an interesting
year. I suspect a lot of high school kids are a little less diligent as
seniors than earlier, having figured some things out and with college
already in the books. I think we had some senioritis going on most of
that time.”
In the 1966 CIF championship game against Downey, McClellan’s shooting
went cold, although CdM won in overtime, 10-9. “I couldn’t make
anything,” McClellan said. “Carson came up to me and said, ‘Don’t shoot
anymore! Give (the ball) to someone else!’ I was fortunate to have guys
around me who were all great, and we were real fortunate to have played
under Newland (from 1963 through ‘65), who taught us how to think in the
water.
“It was a great experience and a great group of guys, all of whom
contributed equally in my opinion. I wouldn’t have traded any of our
guys.”
McClellan, a 6-foot-1, 205-pounder at CdM, followed Newland to UCI,
where he played water polo for three seasons (1967 through ‘69).
But McClellan, a starter for the Anteaters, figured he’d played long
enough and needed a break, so he transferred to the University of
Colorado, which didn’t even have a water polo program and where McClellan
earned his bachelor’s degree in history.
“I wanted a change,” he said. “I wanted to get out in the mountains
and do some fly fishing. I’ve been doing that ever since ... Newland’s
50-weeks a year if you played water polo for him and if it was
year-round. It’s an intense program. I was just at the point where I’d
come to the end of my willingness to continue to put in the time and
energy.”
McClellan moved back to California after two years in Colorado, then
attended law school and has been a practicing attorney ever since.
McClellan, who lived in the Bay area for most of the 1980s and
currently lives on Balboa Island, was encouraged to try water polo by his
father, Gerald, a former CdM High administrator and San Gabriel Valley
football coach who was impressed with Newland’s disciplined teaching when
the family moved to Newport Beach in the early 1960s.
McClellan, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
has four grown children -- Todd, Brian, Elisabeth and Matthew -- and
four grandchildren.
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