Janice Maran: OCC’s Ace
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Tony Altobelli
It even sounds funny to Orange Coast College women’s tennis coach
Janice Maran: third place.
“I’m not used to saying that,” Maran said, referring to where the 1999
OCC team finished. “It doesn’t roll off my tongue very well. But don’t
get me wrong. I had a blast with my players this year. They’re some of
the nicest kids I’ve ever coached.”
That says a lot considering just how many tennis players have come and
gone at OCC during Maran’s regime, who is now in her 23rd year.
“Jeez, has it been that long?” she said with a laugh. “It’s hard to
believe I’ve been here as long as I have. I still enjoy it very much. OCC
is a great place to work.”
In those 23 seasons under Maran, OCC has won more than 85% of her
matches, while claiming 16 conference titles and eight state
championships.
“I think the biggest thing that has changed, obviously, is the speed of
the game,” Maran said. “With all the new technology, the ball can be hit
much harder then in the past. But the tennis is still the same. My
strategies haven’t changed too much.”
Among her many accolades for her tennis work, Maran received the
Intercollegiate Tennis Association’s 1999 California Community College
Wilson Award Women’s Coach of the Year on Dec. 14, 1999 in Tampa,
Florida.
Maran, the only two-time winner of the award, was happy for the honor, if
not for the weather. “The award ceremony was excellent,” Maran said. “I
gathered a lot of tennis information from the various coaches who were
there. The only bummer was it rained half the time I was there.”
Maran grew up in the Northern California town of Stockton before moving
on to Pasadena City College and Cal State Los Angeles where she continued
her tennis career.
“They were hiring at Orange Coast and I was fortunate enough to hear
about it and applied,” Maran said earlier. “I was really lucky to be at
the right place at the right time.”
Maran, who has won over 320 matches in her 23-year career at Coast, has
seen the level of play change with all the new opportunities in women’s
athletics.
“There are so many more scholarships offered at the high school level,
the top players are now jumping right into Division I action,” Maran
said. “It’s a lot different now then it was when I was playing, that’s
for sure.”
Maran and her husband, Alfredo, live in Orange with their two daughters,
Katy, 19, and Jennifer, 18.
“They’ll both be at OCC next year, which will be fun,” Maran said. “We’ll
get to hang out a little more together and have some lunches together,
which means I’ll be buying a lot, I guess.”
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