Rosso recalls
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DON CANTRELL
It was 61 years ago and Ray Rosso was strapped into his Navy fighter
plane in Hawaii and preparing for his orders to fly out and join the
USS Lexington for the closing days of World War II in the South
Pacific.
The odds for a long life were not impressive during the early
years of the devastating war for American pilots since the nation
lagged behind on modernized aircraft, but by 1945 the U.S. aerial
advancement was superior to the Asian enemy, Japan.
In fact, the U.S. had bombed Tokyo seriously in early 1945, then
struck Hiroshima and Nagasaki in August with two atomic bombs,
leveling both cities.
Hence, Rosso soon learned after the August action that he could
turn in his uniform and pack bags for his home in California.
Rosso not only returned to enjoy a long career coaching football,
sailing, golf and tennis, he celebrated his 89th birthday on Monday.
His return in the mid-1940s also found him heading to the tower of
top junior college coaching. Blessed by superior athletes at Chaffey
College, he directed the Panthers to two conference titles in
1946-47, and led the ’47 club to a victory over Northeastern Oklahoma
in the Junior Rose Bowl.
It was familiar ground since Rosso played guard for Cal at the
Rose Bowl in 1937. He was also an 180-pound guard who could kick
short-range field goals when called upon and became honored on the
All-Pacific Coast squad in 1939.
His high achievements at Chaffey prompted the new Orange Coast
College president, Basil Peterson, to extend the head football
coaching job to him in 1948.
Rosso happily accepted since a new college provided a sterling
challenge and he and his family were constant visitors to the harbor
area over the years.
He and his lovely wife, Jean, have three children, two boys and a
girl. The Rossos have lived on Lido Isle for many years.
In time, Rosso led OCC to its first grid championship in 1951 and
that highlighted his 8-year coaching period, 1948-55.
He was turning to tutor spring sports when Al Irwin of Newport
Harbor High was selected to be the new OCC grid coach in 1956.
Born in Turin, Italy, Rosso has been charting plans in the recent
past to try and attend the Olympic winter games in that area in 2006.
Rosso has never turned away from sports and has continued to
follow OCC athletic teams over the years. He still maintains
friendships with former OCC coaches and athletes, including Irwin and
former Pirate grid chief Dick Tucker.
He still remembers how OCC came together, having been granted a
huge amount of land by the government from the old Santa Ana Army Air
Base.
“When we took the campus over, all the old buildings were there,”
Rosso said, “but we had to build our own football practice fields and
the baseball field.”
This was created across two former golf courses, he explained.
Looking back, Rosso noted that the old memories arise at a time
when the first football team physician, Bernard Mason, is being
mourned since he passed away recently. Mason was known by hundreds of
former players over the years.
“I’ll be 89 this month and I still marvel that I’m able to be
around,” Rosso said.
“Finally, as you get older, people, places and events grow larger
in your memory. We were in our 62nd anniversary March 5.”
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