Millennium Hall of Fame: Janice Maran
Tony Altobelli
Orange Coast College women’s tennis coach Janice Maran describes
herself as a dictator when it comes to her team.
“I’m a dictator, but a soft, friendly dictator,” Maran said with a
laugh. “I’m very tough on the fact that I set guidelines and I like to
take full responsibility for the team. I like to be in charge, but I’m
relatively calm and friendly when it comes to coaching the team”
Sounds like a combination of Mussolini and Elmo, but whatever the
mixture involves, the results have produced not only top-quality tennis
players for the past 22 seasons at OCC, but top-quality people.
That hard work for Maran is being recognized by the Intercollegiate
Tennis Association as she is being honored with the 1999 California
Community College Wilson Award Women’s Coach of the Year for the second
time in her career, the first-ever two-time recipient.
“I’m thrilled to recognized for such an honor,” Maran said. “Coast has
had the success throughout the years and I’ve been very fortunate to have
been a part of the winning tradition.
Maran will pick up her award at the Saddlebrook Resort in Tampa
Florida this week.
“I’ve got my sunscreen and my floppy hat ready to go,” she said prior
to departing.
Maran grew up in the Northern California town of Stockton, where she
played tennis, before she did some cruising around the country with a
friend.
“It was just an unbelievable experience,” Maran said. “We traveled all
around the country and into Canada. It was quite a time.”
After her travels, Maran attended Pasadena City College, before
attending Cal State Los Angeles, where she continued her tennis career.
“Plus, those were the days before women received scholarships for
athletics,” Maran said. “So it was a very different situation than like
it is today.”
After her playing career was over, Maran realized that she needed to
find some career and chose to pursue coaching.
“I had been doing some part-time coaching while I was Cal State L.A.,”
Maran said. “They were hiring at Orange Coast and I was fortunate enough
to hear about it and applied. I was really lucky to be at the right place
at the right time.
“I wanted to have I job doing something I loved and I’d been playing
tennis since I was nine, so I figured coaching would be perfect for me.”
Looking at Maran’s coaching numbers, Coast was just as lucky to find
Maran. In her 22 seasons at OCC, the Pirates have won more than 86
percent of their matches, while claiming 16 conference titles and eight
state championships.
Did Maran ever think she would be entering year No. 23 at OCC?
“It’s funny, when I first got here, there were coaches here for 10 to
15 years and I thought, ‘Man, how could anyone stay at one job for so
long?’ But it’s a constant learning experience,” Maran said. “Each year
is different from the last.”
In addition to her other honors mentioned, Maran was also a recipient
of the 1992 California Coaches Association Community College Women’s
Coach of the Year.
Maran’s squad finished 8-6 last season and finished second in the
Orange Empire Conference with a 7-2 mark. Her career record in 319-48-1
(.868) and 232-25 (.903) in conference play.
Maran likes to consider herself as “Half Mom, half coach” and that
shows as former players continue to return to OCC and thank the “friendly
dictator” for teaching not only lessons on the court, but lessons off the
court.
“That’s the most rewarding thing, without a doubt,” Maran said.
“Seeing my former players and seeing their kids and them telling me that
even though I was tough on them, it taught them so much about never
giving up in life.
“Tennis shows the players how they react under pressure,” Maran
continued. “When things get tough, how does the player handle it. Do they
get rattled, or do they find a way to pull it out?”
Despite the long run at OCC, Maran still has a long way to go before
hanging it up.
“I’ve still got a few years left,” Maran said with a laugh. “After my
career at OCC is finished, I’ll play in my yard doing my gardening. That
will keep me very busy.”
Maran and her husband, Alfredo, live in Orange with their two
daughters, Katy, 19, and Jennifer, 18.
“Katy is a freshman at OCC, while Jennifer is a senior at Villa Park
High,” Maran said.
Were they tennis players, too?
“They grew up playing soccer,” Maran said. “It was the big thing
around here. Now, really big on kickin’ back and hanging out with their
friends.”
Janice Maran, now kicking’ back in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of
Fame, celebrating the Millennium.
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