Lee Haven, Millennium Hall of Fame
As a 6-foot-4 center, the basketball court was a jungle for Newport
Harbor High’s Lee Haven, who played like a lion and ruled the Sunset
League in the Woodstock era.
Haven, who switched to guard as a collegiate player and became an
All-Big 8 Conference performer for the University of Colorado, was a
force in the middle at a time when Newport Harbor played (and defeated)
the biggest and baddest teams around.
“I was always pretty intense, and believed that was the way you won
basketball games,” said Haven, who was drafted by the NBA’s Portland
Trail Blazers and ABA’s San Diego Conquistadors out of college, but opted
to play professionally in Europe for one year and in the Philippines for
two more, before settling down with his high school sweetheart, the
former Martha Gregory.
Haven, a shining hoops star from Harbor’s Class of 1970, carried the
Sailors to the championship of the then-prestigious Huntington Beach
Tournament his senior year, earning tournament MVP accolades as Coach
Dave Waxman’s squad went through heavily favored Warren, host Huntington
Beach, and, in the final, a Marina team coached by Lute Olson (now at the
University of Arizona).
Haven, a three-year varsity player, averaged about 18 points and 13.5
rebounds per game in 1969-70 as the Sailors finished 17-8. Waxman and Al
Hackney, who coached Harbor in Haven’s sophomore year (1967-68), both
made a tremendous impact on his life.
“My father passed away when I was in junior high, so I was one of
those kids who really kind of needed the support athletics brought and it
became a big part of my life, and those guys (Waxman and Hackney) were so
instrumental,” said Haven, whose supporting cast on the court included
standouts John Kazmer and Taras Young.
Haven, who also high jumped 6-5 during track and field in the spring,
was a rebounding machine who wasn’t tall, but more than made up for it
with physical maturity and good jumping ability.
“I was pretty physical,” Haven said, “and if there was a free ball, I
was going to get it.
“Coach Hackney instilled in us a lot of hard play, and we learned how
to practice hard with Dave Waxman. I never thought about (playing
physical) much. We just pretty much had a big desire to win basketball
games, and the way to control the basketball game is to get rebounds, and
I tried to do that.”
Newport Harbor went 16-8 under Hackney in 1968 and ended 12-12 in
1969, when the Tars finished the season by losing to Westminster in o7
fivef7 overtime periods, 97-95, losing to Anaheim in o7 threef7
overtimes, 58-57, then losing to powerhouse Huntington Beach.
Haven, a two-time first-team All-Sunset League player, made first-team
All-Orange Coast area as a senior and second-team all-area his junior
year. Haven also merited third-team All-Orange County as a senior and was
selected to play in the Orange County All-Star basketball game, in which
he dropped in 22 points.
“We (the South All-Stars) lost that game, but I remember it was a lot
of fun,” said Haven, who signed with Colorado after the basketball
season.
Haven, who added about 25 pounds by his junior year in college (1973),
started all three years for Colorado (freshmen at the time were not
eligible for varsity competition, according to NCAA policy).
In Haven’s junior year, the Buffaloes enjoyed an outstanding season,
taking second place in the Big 8 and once knocking off rival Missouri,
which was ranked No. 8 in the nation at the time, as Haven poured in 28
points.
In those days, however, runner-up conference finishes got you nowhere
in the NCAA Tournament, which invited only 16 schools.
Haven was voted All-Big 8 in 1973 and was named on a couple of
All-American teams, including one published by Converse, but he injured
his knee at the end of his junior year and that slowed him down his
senior year.
Haven was a 92% free-throw shooter his junior year at Colorado, and
was third in the Big 8 in scoring and field-goal percentage. But he
simply didn’t have the same steps the follow year after tearing his right
anterior cruciate ligament.
“I really didn’t shoot a lot, I just stayed within myself,” Haven
said. “I did things pretty well fundamentally, and that was because of a
lot of coaching from Dave Waxman. He played for John Wooden at UCLA and a
lot of that influence carried over into his coaching.
“It felt like we were being coached by John Wooden. (Waxman) was a
super basketball coach, and so when I went to college, I was technically
advanced.”
Haven later played in Belgium for one season under player/coach John
Vallely, the Corona del Mar and Orange Coast College hoops legend, then
competed in the Philippines.
The summer before his senior year in high school (1969), Haven
attended the Snow Valley Basketball Camp, operated by Herb Livsey, and
his career was never the same. Livsey, who continued to help Haven in the
summers, is now a scout for the Trail Blazers.
Haven, who turns 47 on Nov. 3, has lived in Palm Desert for the last
17 years, working for Granite Construction, a nationwide contracting
firm. Haven has also been a volunteer assistant basketball coach at Palm
Desert High the last 12 years.
Haven, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
celebrating the millennium, and his wife have three children: Matt, 22,
Andy, 20, and Becky, 17.
Matt is one-handed former OCC basketball player who was once featured
in this newspaper and now has a history degree from Westmont College.
Andy, also a basketball player, is a junior at Northern Arizona
University. Becky is a high school senior who is involved in cheerleading
and reportedly got her jumping ability from her father.
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