Hill takes the helm
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Mike Sciacca
The words scribed on a blackboard in a conference room at the base of
Dugger Memorial Gymnasium on the Laguna Beach High School campus,
reveals the three principles Mark Hill uses to run a basketball
program.
Coachable. Discipline. Work ethic.
Each was discussed, at length, last week when Hill met his team
for the first time.
On Tuesday night, Hill was officially introduced as the new boys’
varsity basketball coach at Laguna Beach.
He is the 20th person to hold the position and he replaces Rob
Cullinan, who resigned at the end of last season.
“I’m really excited to be the coach at Laguna Beach High,” Hill
said Tuesday. “I took this job first, because I love Laguna Beach and
second, because I love a challenge.”
Hill, 44, inherits a program that has won just one league
championship in the past 36 years -- that coming in 1999 -- although Laguna teams on three occasions have finished in second place and
twice placed third since 1990.
“We’re very fortunate to land someone like Mark Hill,” Laguna
Beach Athletic Director Mario Morales said. “The great thing about
Mark is that he is firm but fair. He’s got a proven track record as a
coach and I think he’s going to be very good for our program.”
Morales said that he received more than a dozen applications for
the position and interviewed five prospects.
Hill said that not many head coaching jobs opened up this year,
noting that Katella, Orange and Laguna Beach were the three schools
with vacancies.
“I wasn’t really looking around but I knew that I wanted to get
back into coaching,” he said. “Laguna was the only school I pursued.”
Hill first made a name for himself when he coached Esperanza of
the Sunset League from 1988-96.
He turned around an Aztecs program that had not been to the
playoffs seven years prior to his arrival and had won just one league
championship in the school’s first 17 years.
Hill guided Esperanza to three Sunset League titles in his last
five years at the school and his final seven Aztec teams qualified
for the playoffs. His teams consistently were ranked in Orange County
polls and in his final year, his 1995-96 squad finished the season
25-4, was ranked second in the CIF Southern Section’s largest
division, Division I-AA, and was ranked third in Orange County.
He left Esperanza and pursued his master’s degree at Azusa Pacific
University. A year later he returned to coaching and served for two
years as an assistant at Orange Coast College.
He then spent two years as the Pirates’ head coach and this past
season, he helped out his former player and assistant coach, Nate
Harrison, now the head coach at Canyon in Anaheim Hills.
“I started from scratch when I began coaching at Esperanza,” he
said. “It was a similar situation at Orange Coast College and all
four years I was there, we made the playoffs.
“My strength as a coach, I feel, is that I get my teams to play to
its strengths and minimize our weaknesses. To be successful, a coach
needs to know how to put the pieces together. Taking on the Laguna
program is a new challenge and I’m starting from square one.”
Hill’s coaching tour has taken him from one of the county’s larger
schools, Esperanza, with an enrollment of 3,000, to the collegiate
level at Orange Coast, and now, at Laguna which has one of the
smallest enrollment figures among county public schools.
“It’s going to be interesting but I’m not backing down from the
challenge,” said Hill, who played at El Toro High and spent his
youth, he said, playing on the courts at Main Street Beach. “I’m
familiar with this city and I enjoy Laguna Beach very much. I still
spend a lot of time down here in the summertime.”
Hill said the first order of business will be to evaluate the
talent in the program and establish a “comfort level” with the kids.
He’ll also drive home those three principles he shared with them
on that first meeting.
“My whole coaching philosophy is not based on winning, but those
three goals: that the kids be coachable, to instill discipline and to
have a solid work ethic,” he said. “I’ve found through all my years
in coaching that when you implement those three principles, winning
takes care of itself.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports for the Laguna Beach Coastline Pilot.
He can be reached at 494-4321 or by e-mail at
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