Football player presumed drowned
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An 18-year-old high school football star from Moreno Valley is
presumed to have drowned off Huntington State Beach between Magnolia
and Brookhurst avenues at just after 8 p.m. Monday.
The disappearance of Drean Rucker is believed to have been the
second drowning death at Surf City beaches in less than a week and
the third this summer.
Rucker was reportedly swimming with a friend when he disappeared
underwater just after sundown.
Lt. Mike Brousard, lifeguard program supervisor for Huntington
State Beach, where Rucker disappeared, said it sounds as though the
young man walked into an inshore hole while wading close to shore and
was knocked down by a wave and pulled into the current.
According to eyewitness accounts, he struggled briefly before
being pulled down, Brousard said.
The 6-foot-2, 235-pound man was considered by many football
experts to be one of the top high school linebackers in the state. At
the end of the 2002 football season, Rucker was a first-team
selection on the All-CIF Southern Section and Cal-Hi Sports All-State
teams and named to the Super Prep All-American team at the end of the
2002 high school season. He was recruited to the University of
Southern California and planning to attend on a full scholarship this
fall.
City and state beach lifeguards from Huntington and Newport Beach,
as well as rescue teams from the Harbor Patrol and the U.S. Coast
Guard, have been searching for Rucker since Monday evening.
Lifeguards, who had left their station for the day, were called
back to the beach for the search.
It is the latest in a string of what city lifeguards have begun
calling “sunset drownings.”
Less than a week ago, a 22-year-old man drowned while boogie
boarding at Huntington City Beach after sundown.
On June 25, 14-year-old Oswaldo Jesus Ramos, disappeared while
swimming near Tower No. 2 at Huntington State Beach, in the water off
Bolsa Chica State Beach.
All of the lifeguards have noticed an increase in night swimmers,
Brousard said and called it “a product of the hot weather we’ve been
having.”
Brousard also attributes the increase to the warm water, which
draws people from inland to the surf. The ocean water temperature
climbed as high as 75 degrees last weekend.
“It’s been so nice that people come down [to the beach] even at
dark,” Brousard said. “It’s nice enough and enticing enough that
people think about going to take a swim. And if it’s dark, that can
be a fatal decision.”
Beach rescues have been unusually high this year. So far this
year, state lifeguards made about 2,700 rescues, almost as many as
were made in all of 2002. Brousard said he wouldn’t be the least
surprised if they broke the record number of rescues this year.
Although resources have dwindled, lifeguards are still actively
searching for Rucker.
“The common theme is the tragedy of the summer -- people are
coming down to the beach to recreate and then not going home at
night,” Brousard said.
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