Sidelines column: Sweet sixty
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Don Cantrell
On June 28, 60 years ago, Al and Lois Irwin chose to make Waukegan,
Ill. one of the most important towns in their lives. Due to the pressures
of World War II, it was most convenient to marry in the small city.
And the anniversary cake provided by friends and family was likely
very colorful, though no one would have expected them to blow out the
candles.
Irwin, who has achieved years of great success coaching football and
water sports at Newport harbor High, Orange Coast College and UC Irvine,
also celebrated his 84th birthday this past Feb. 11 with good cheer from
all quarters.
Although Irwin had been offered a football scholarship to USC in 1936,
he chose to attend College of the Pacific and play under the legendary
grid great Amos Alonzo Stagg.
As an outstanding lineman at COP, Irwin drew major experience by being
able to play against the likes of Notre Dame, USC, Washington and Oregon
State.
Stockton, home of COP, also became a vibrant place for Irwin after he
came to meet a lovely coed working at the college book store.
She was a Northern California girl named Lois. The relationship grew
warmly in good time.
Lois once remarked, reflecting back, “I used to wonder why he kept
asking to carry my books.”
Prior to marriage, Irwin, a naval officer, was stationed at the Great
Lakes Naval Training Center, where he taught swimming in 12 pools.
In time, he would be shifted to the South Pacific, where he would
become a flight deck officer aboard the famed U.S.S. Lexington.
After the war, the Irwins returned to the Stockton area, where he
became an assistant football coach at Antioch High. That’s where he came
to tutor the big giant, Gino Marchetti, who subsequently became All-Pro
for the Baltimore Colts and was eventually voted into the Pro Football
Hall of Fame.
Irwin also coached Duane Putnam, who later starred for the LA Rams, as
well as Jesse Cone of Stanford fame. Cone later coached at Pomona
College.
A graduate of Harbor High in 1936, Irwin earned a record 15 varsity
letters as a prepster and was voted Orange League Player of the Year in
football before returning to coach at Newport from 1948-55.
After coaching a championship team at Orange Coast in 1956, health
problems prompted him to drop football and put his coaching talents into
two other sports he enjoyed: swimming and water polo. He won nine state
swim titles in nine years and one water polo crown.
During his last year at OCC, Irwin was observed numerous times by a
UCI official, one who finally offered him a coaching post at Irvine.
Irwin was surprised by the offer, but chose to accept it. He then
advanced to produce numerous titles and awards at UCI and eventually
became the athletic director. He chose to retire in 1979.
Over the years, the Irwins have earned an army of friends in the
harbor area. They have made up for the war years, which has featured an
annual vacation to the Hawaiian Islands in late spring.
Two of the great joys date back to their early years, when they
welcomed two daughters, Claudia and Marcia, into the world.
Added to the colorful list, was granddaughter Carrie and grandson
Casey. Their Parents were Marcia and David Maze, both 1964 graduates of
Corona del Mar High. They’ve all maintained close ties with Al and Lois
Irwin over the years.
Interesting to note that Al and his late brother, Ralph, were both
four-year varsity football lettermen at Harbor High in the school’s early
years. Few players ever earn four years of varsity grid monograms.
In reflecting back on Al’s career, Lois once said his bowing away from
football coaching in 1956 was one of her husband’s greatest
disappointments in life. Nerve problems had prompted Irwin to turn away
from football.
Lois said, “Football was his true love. That was what he really wanted
to play and coach.”
One staggering loss from his championship OCC football team was losing
five of his top players to the new Cerritos College. Later, he lost his
two outstanding assistants, Jim Strangeland and Bill Poore, to Long Beach
City College.
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