MIKE STARKWEATHER
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Steve Virgen
Be it volleyball, golf, swimming or basketball, Mike Starkweather has
always loved to coach, on any level.
When he does coach, he invests a lot of his time, so much that his
other work sometimes takes a hit. He had to quit working at building
his own insurance business to devote more of himself to the boys swim
team at Corona del Mar High in 1984.
Starkweather sacrificed for the good of his athletes and for the
sake of winning, attributes he learned from his club swim coach, Don
Gambril, who also coached Starkweather at Pasadena City College and
Long Beach State. Gambril was also the head coach of the U.S. men’s
Olympic team in 1984.
“He was truly an inspiration to me,” Starkweather said. “He was
the one who got me going with coaching. I could see how much of an
impact coaches can have. I really wanted to mirror that man. He was
phenomenal.”
Starkweather, who competed in swimming and water polo in college,
coached basketball, volleyball, football and track and field at
Lincoln Intermediate. When he moved over to teach at Corona del Mar,
he never thought to coach swimming, until a motivational encounter
with Gambril.
The former Olympic coach mailed a thank you letter to
Starkweather. The note read, “Thank you, Red Rider, for helping me
reach my goal.”
Starkweather, who had the nickname Red Rider because of his red
hair and his focus on distance freestyle events, kept the note
framed. His reaction was to coach the boys swim team at Corona del
Mar.
“I thought I would do it just for a year,” Starkweather said. “It
ended up being 15 years. We won several league championships and
three CIF [Southern Section] championships.”
Starkweather also received various coaching awards from his
colleagues and publications in California. He said he took great
pride in the athletes he worked with and he was also excited to be a
part of the contributions that went into building the swimming pool
at CdM.
In 1997, Starkweather made the transition to coaching the boys and
girls golf teams. He had always enjoyed golf and wanted to build a
winner for the Sea Kings in that sport. His wife, Janelle, helped
make the changeover to a smooth one by coaching the junior varsity
teams.
At first, Starkweather, the latest honoree of the Daily Pilot
Sports Hall of Fame, coached solely the girls golf team. But former
boys golf coach Paul Hahn asked Starkweather to take over his team,
too.
When the Starkweathers would take their girls golf team to the
Newport Beach Country Club, they would split the squad into four
groups so the players would not interfere with the members on the
course. Hahn took notice and thought Starkweather would be the best
man for the job.
For the past three years, the Corona del Mar boys golf team has
won the Pacific Coast League title.
Starkweather has always had the desire to win and to compete. He
was an All-American swimmer at Pasadena City College. He also played
water polo and continued at Long Beach State. He was on the 49ers’
team that went to the semifinals of the first NCAA tournament in
1972, when UCLA defeated the 49ers.
Throughout his life, Starkweather was also a lifeguard. He worked
for 30 years and then retired. He said he wanted to devote more of
his time to his wife, teaching and coaching.
“I love the kids,” said Starkweather, who is in his 33rd year of
teaching in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District.
Starkweather, 55, lives in Fountain Valley and has two children.
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