Catching Up With: Pat McGuire
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Tony Altobelli
He may be stepping down from his post, but now-former Costa Mesa
American Little League President Pat McGuire will be remembered in the
local youth baseball circles for quite some time.
“It’s been great, but it’s time to move on,” McGuire said. “I’ve been
doing this for a while know and it’s time for the next group of parents
to get involved. That’s how the program will continue to grow and
flourish, with the help of more parents.”
McGuire, a fixture in the CMALL program for nearly a decade remembers
when the current Majors Division, Minor A and Minor B fields were just a
vision.
“Where the field is now (behind the tennis courts at Costa Mesa High)
was nothing but horse fields,” McGuire said. “It was just an extended
area of the farm area. We played on the current high school field area,
which was small and crowded. The new fields really make a huge
difference.”
McGuire grew up in Mount Vernon, New York, home of Dick Clark, as well
as NBA stars Gus Williams and Rodney McCray.
“I was your normal kid, growing up playing football and baseball,”
McGuire said. “I got into umpiring at an early age and my parents were
involved with the little league out there as well.”
After his athletic career came to an end with semipro baseball,
McGuire moved to Southern California in 1973, but didn’t get into youth
baseball until 1991. “When my oldest son, Michael, started playing in
1993, I started getting into coaching,” McGuire said. “As he grew, I went
up the coaching ladder with him, to the Majors Division.”
At that level, McGuire coached three CMALL All-Star teams in the first
three Mayor’s Cup tournaments with the Costa Mesa National Little League,
winning two out of three years.
“District 62 split up our league into a National Little League and an
American Little League in 1995,” McGuire said. “Instead of just playing
against our own teams, we started playing interleague contests, which
really helps keep both organizations thriving. Otherwise, playing the
same teams over and over again would have bored us to death.”
Unfortunately, according to McGuire, the division has thinned out the
quality of All-Star teams in Costa Mesa, which can be a major problem
when the Tournament of Champions and the District 62 Tournament gets
underway.
“We try to keep the teams balanced, but that spreads out our talent
pretty thin,” McGuire said. “For us to be as successful as possible, we
should bring the two leagues back together again.”
After coaching, McGuire became chief umpire for three years before
taking over for Kirk Bauermeister as league president.
“Kirk has done such a tremendous job with bringing youth sports up to
the level where it now is,” McGuire said. “Now at Costa Mesa High, he’s
doing the same thing again. Instead of losing all of the athletes to CdM
or Newport Harbor or Estancia, kids are coming to Mesa and a lot of the
credit belongs to Kirk.”
As CMALL President, McGuire helped create the Mayor’s Cup, now in it’s
fifth year of existence, as well as bringing last year’s Tournament of
Champions to Costa Mesa for the first time ever.
“Having the TOC in our backyard was a real feather in our cap,”
McGuire said. “People like Angie Rodriguez and Amy Stevens had a lot to
do with the success of that event, as well as all the field maintenance
guys and the other parents and volunteers involved. It was really
something special.”
Now, out of the CMALL limelight, McGuire has passed the reins to Erik
Kough. “The new group of active parents all have young kids in the
program, so they will be here for a while to keep this whole thing
going,” McGuire said. “Erik will bring a lot to the league and he’ll go a
great job.”
So what is the key to continued success for CMALL? According to
McGuire, the answer is simple.
“Get more of the parents involved,” he said. “If there’s 300 kids in
the league and let’s say even half come from broken homes, that means
there are 450 parents in our league. Usually, it’s always the same 12 of
13 heavily active parents doing everything, with the exception of the
coaches. If we can get more parents involved, it would make this program
that much stronger.”
After years of working for as a public relations specialist for
Lincoln Mercury, McGuire is now looking to open an office involving
senior citizen assisted living. “It’s an opportunity to help people with
non-medical related issues with assisted living,” McGuire said. “I’m
looking forward to getting that off the ground.”
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