Dave Holland, Millennium Hall of Fame
There are few structures or buildings named after living human
beings, let alone a facility with the name of the o7 opposingf7
football coach written in big block letters.
But that’s just what Corona del Mar High’s football team sees this
week. There is no escaping Dave Holland.
Holland, the former CdM coach who led the Sea Kings to back-to-back
CIF Southern Section Division VI titles in 1988 and ‘89, was honored by
the program when the CdM football weight room was named after him in the
mid-90s.
But Holland, who returned to high school coaching four years ago when
he accepted the Laguna Beach position, will coach Thursday night against
the Sea Kings for the first time in his storied career, which includes
112 victories and league Coach of the Year accolades four times.
Holland this week has told Orange County prep reporters that the
Pacific Coast League clash against CdM (at Newport Harbor High) is “just
another game,” but the reality is much different. It’s homecoming for CdM
(0-5) and many of Holland’s former players will be in attendance.
“Playing Corona del Mar is real special,” said Holland, who has the
Artists (3-2) believing they can win this year. “It means a lot to come
back.”
The winningest football coach in Newport-Mesa District history (with
106 victories at CdM), before Newport Harbor’s Jeff Brinkley broke the
record earlier this season, Holland served two separate terms as head
coach at CdM, a total of 20 years.
Holland, once a scrawny, 138-pounder at Garfield High in East Los
Angeles, bulked up by lifting weights -- a rarity in the 1950s -- and
played at East LA College and Whittier College, where his coaches
included George Allen and Don Coryell, both of whom would become NFL
coaches.
“It was a life-changing experience for me,” Holland said of his senior
year at Whittier, when Coryell replaced Allen as the Poets’ head man. “In
fact, the way I coach, I try to coach like he coached. People think
(Coryell) is a shy person, but he brought out the best in the guys he
coached and made each guy feel like they were the most important guy on
the team. He had a way of doing that.”
Holland, who said every practice and chalk talk with Coryell was “a
coaching clinic,” returned to East LA College as an assistant coach while
doing his graduate work, then coached at El Rancho High.
Meanwhile, Holland became a black belt in karate, which helped form
his coaching philosophy for offensive linemen. “It became the basis of
the techniques I taught, keeping it simple with a lot of repetition,” he
said.
Shortly thereafter, Holland heard of an opening at CdM and arrived for
a job interview he’ll never forget.
“I’d never experienced anything like it,” Holland said. “I had come
from almost the ghetto in East LA, and El Rancho was similar, with a lot
of city kids and minorities. I had coached a lot of minorities. But when
I came down to Corona del Mar and walked through the quad during a lunch
period for an interview, it was like I was on a movie set. They were the
most gorgeous-looking people I’d ever seen. I’d never seen so many
blond-haired, blue-eyed people in one place.
“(CdM) was very laid back, but very special. And I found out that the
kids could play football. Some of the toughest kids I ever coached were
right there.”
After serving as an assistant coach for a couple of years, the CdM
head coaching job opened up and Holland didn’t hesitate, taking over the
reins in 1967.
In Holland’s first term, which lasted nine years, CdM won its first
football championship in 1971, as the Sea Kings captured the Irvine
League title with Karl Killefer, quarterback Reed Johnson and running
back Bob Ferraro.
“The team didn’t believe it could win, but finally, in our senior
year, Holland had us believing,” said Ferraro, who coaches with him now.
“It was hard, because (CdM) had so many losing years in a row.”
But when winning turned to three straight autumns of losing, Holland
figured it was time for a change. “I really got discouraged,” said
Holland, who resigned and later accepted an assistant coaching position
at Orange Coast College, serving under Pirates Coach Dick Tucker for four
years (1976 to ‘79).
“I learned a lot from Dick,” Holland said. “He kept everything in the
right perspective. He never got excited or depressed. He just kept
pushing along and the kids always responded. He knows how to take games
as they come and forget about it. He always had real good self-confidence
and self-esteem. He was a great coach with Xs and O’s, but I think I
learned more about the day to day, the ups and downs of football.”
Holland returned to CdM as offensive coordinator and coached under
Dick Morris, who was Holland’s assistant the first time around. But when
Morris was felled by a heart attack, following the ’82 campaign, Holland
stepped back in as head coach and remained there until 1993.
“(Morris) was a good guy to work with, because he allowed his
(assistants) to coach and develop, and he was well-organized,” Holland
said.
CdM went 8-3 and made the CIF playoffs in Holland’s first year back,
then captured three straight Sea View League titles from 1987 to ‘89,
including two CIF championships.
“That was one of the best parts of my life,” Holland said. “When the
Katovsich boys (Todd and John) moved in from Texas, they brought in a new
philosophy -- you don’t win unless you practice hard. They both had a
really good work ethic, especially Todd, who was the older one.
“The first day of practice, we were having a drill ... not at full
speed, but pretty hard. And Todd whacked some guy that was heard
throughout the whole school, and everybody started tightening their chin
straps. (The Katovsich brothers) were really the development of those CIF
championship teams.”
Guys like Jerrott Willard, who later played linebacker at Cal, and
Jeff Thomason, a tight end who has played in two Super Bowls for the
Green Bay Packers, also performed for CdM in the era of three straight
league championships.
But some of Holland’s favorite Sea Kings were those without tremendous
skill, but who played with enormous heart, like guard Pat Kelly in the
late 80s, special team player Ryan Dalton in 1992-93 and quarterback Matt
Evans. “(Evans) typified a lot of Corona kids, overachievers who played
with a lot of heart,” he said.
Holland, two-time CIF Division VI Coach of the Year and the State
Coach of the Year in 1990, is a member of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of
Fame, celebrating the millennium.
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