Hall of Fame: Garth Bergeson (CdM)
- Share via
Richard Dunn
There’s a certain line that should never be crossed in any
competitive sport, in the World According to Garth.
As a four-time NCAA All-American water polo player at UCLA and later a
head coach at the University of Utah, former Corona del Mar High standout
Garth Bergeson has a good feel for right and wrong.
And, plainly, “I’m all about kids,” said Bergeson, now a high school
coach in Beaverton, Ore., where he lives with his two highly energetic
sons, Alex, 12, and Max, 9.
Bergeson, who still plays world-class water polo at the masters level,
is slightly disgruntled with parents who interfere with their child’s
development because, perhaps, of their own agendas.
“Parents need to understand that they need to back off and let their
kids become whatever they can be, not what you want them to do,” Bergeson
said. “That does nothing but create problems down the line. Support them,
make sure they get (to practice and games), and maybe you’ve got to
motivate them to get them into it, but that’s as far as it ought to be.
“I love kids. I give kids the benefit of my knowledge .. adults who
step in with egos I could give a (expletive) about. They screw it up more
times than I want to recall.
“I tell parents to sit on it in the stands, and I tell other people to
back off and watch. They can enjoy it, but it’s all about the kids.”
Bergeson, the 1970 CIF Southern Section Player of the Year for Corona
del Mar, led the Sea Kings to the CIF title as a junior in 1969 under
Coach Cliff Hooper, but they lost to Sunny Hills in the semifinals in
‘70.
“There is no game where officials have more say than in water polo,
more so than ice skating, because of the fact that water polo is so
interpretive in terms of how someone sees a foul and how someone views
what’s going on in the water,” said Bergeson. “People who officiate,
especially here (in Oregon), there’s a good percentage of them who have
never played water polo. The only reason I mention it is because I’m
trying to figure out whether I’m going to (remain) as coach or not (at
Beaverton High). If it’s for the parents, I won’t. But if it’s for the
kids, I will.”
In the 1970 CIF semifinal game, Bergeson, a two-meter standout, also
felt the officiating destroyed his team’s chances of beating Sunny Hills,
who went on to lose to Newport Harbor in the finals, 5-4.
“They were just killing us,” he said. “The officials didn’t want to
see one person dominate in a semifinal game.”
Bergeson, whose younger brother, James, was a two-time CIF Player of
the Year for Newport Harbor (1977-78), helped UCLA win back-to-back NCAA
championships his first two seasons in Westwood.
He earned All-American honors in all four campaigns, including his
freshman year in the fall of 1971, when freshmen still weren’t eligible
to compete, except in the NCAA Tournament. Bergeson made a big enough
impression in the NCAA Tournament that year to garner honorable mention
All-American accolades.
“Do you know what kind of animal Garth Bergeson was?” said Hooper, his
coach at CdM for four years. “He could do anything. Bergeson and I got
along well. He’s very academic, very aggressive and very sure of himself.
His brother’s an ex-Olympian, his mother (Marian) was the state secretary
of education (under former Gov. Pete Wilson) and his father (Garth) is
one of the best guys you’ll ever meet. It’s a very strong family.”
Bergeson is a former member of the U.S. national team whose Olympic
wounds were healed when his brother won a silver medal for Team USA at
the 1988 Seoul Games and, in an earlier game, scored a game-winning goal
against Yugoslavia.
“That (goal and silver medal) took care of 16 years of competitive
bile,” said Bergeson, who was still bitter about not playing in the
Olympics in 1976 or 1980, the latter when President Carter boycotted the
Moscow Games.
Bergeson, 48, grew up in Newport Beach and spent six years as a
lifeguard, but these days he wouldn’t trade his Pacific Northwest
lifestyle for anything.
“I’m staying here. It’s a gorgeous place,” said Bergeson, the latest
honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame.
Bergeson, a single parent, said he teaches his two sons “all the
games” and that they’re “competitive animals.”
“My job is to teach them how to play (a game or sport), and once they
understand how to play, they understand how to have fun and learn, then,
if you learn, you can learn in life,” he said.
“We have Team Bergeson up here. It’s the testosterone house. We also
have a 140-pound dog, Harrison. I haven’t locked my doors in a decade.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.