Catching up with: Bill Wettengel
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Barry Faulkner
When Bill Wettengel gave up his first career choice because he
believed it would infringe upon raising a family, he had no idea that the
number of kids he’d wind up shepherding into adulthood would fill most
NBA arenas.
But, after 37 years in education, more than 30 of which he spent
counseling students and coaching runners at Costa Mesa High, the
63-year-old retiree acknowledges his “family” extends way beyond the four
children and nine grandchildren he and wife Joanne so thoroughly enjoy.
“I think the thing that stands out most was getting close to kids and
being their friend,” Wettengel said of his more than three decades at
Mesa, for which he still works as a volunteer public address announcer at
home football games. “I still keep in touch with many of them.”
Wettengel, who dreamed of being a sportswriter until his senior year
of college, slowly lost touch with his love for writing as paternal and
professional duties, including 22 years as the Mustangs girls cross
country and girls track and field coach, consumed his days, months and
years.
But retirement, following the 1997-98 school year, by which time the
last of his four children had gone off to college, allowed Wettengel to
reintroduce himself to the keyboard.
“When I was young, I wrote quite a bit, including short stories and
things,” he said. “The first three years of college, I was a journalism
major and I always wanted to be a sportswriter. But the closer I got to
it, I realized it would be harder to raise a family working nights and
weekends. And one of the most important things to me was always raising a
family.”
Wettengel’s writing, these days, is devoted to a mystery novel, which
he said is one chapter away from completion. He hopes to have it
published.
“It’s a who done it?,” he said. “I wish I could be more dedicated, but
if I spend three hours a week on it, that’s a lot.”
Wettengel relishes the freedom retirement has brought. He spends his
ample free time playing golf, working on the yard he has cared for since
moving to his Fountain Valley home 31 years ago, traveling and tending to
that family, which will soon add a 10th grandchild. He is also heavily
active in his church.
He still runs regularly, though the onset of post-polio syndrome (a
degenerative disease affecting the nerves in his legs, which has caused
atrophy in one of his calf muscles) keeps him from approaching the 30-70
miles a week he accumulated while running with his teams at Mesa.
“It’s hard to tell you what freedom I have,” he said. “I awake every
day and marvel at the fact that I get paid for having fun. I just love
it. We visit the family of one of our children in Arizona, we have a time
share in Hawaii and visiting my youngest son, a senior at BYU who got
married in June, gives me an excuse to go to BYU football games in
Provo.”
Wettengel never needed an excuse to help kids. He became head
counselor his second year at Mesa and remained in that position until his
retirement. In addition to his coaching, he helped sponsor a hiking club.
He also supervised regular student trips to the Havasupai Indian
reservation in the Grand Canyon, as well as bicycling tours in Hawaii.
His early days at Mesa included assistant coaching assignments with
the freshman football team and the boys track and field and cross country
programs. He became the school’s first girls cross country coach when the
CIF Southern Section initiated the sport in 1976. In 1980, Costa Mesa finished second to CIF 4-A champion University.
During his tenure as girls track and field coach, Bonnie Dasse, who
would go on to compete in two Olympic Games as a shot putter, starred for
the Mustangs.
Wettengel played football in the 1950s at Narbonne High in Lomita,
where he said “We lived ‘Happy Days.’ ”
He moved with his parents to Anaheim and attended Fullerton Junior
College, before making the football team at Long Beach State. But a
recurring ankle injury ended his football career and he left after one
semester to attend Orange County State College, which is now Cal State
Fullerton.
During his college years, he worked part time at Disneyland and, along
with his wife, has built a collection of Disney memorabilia.
This is his 22nd season as the school’s football announcer, which, he
says, he thoroughly enjoys. But increased travel commitments may preclude
him from continuing in that role after this season.
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