James Bergeson, Millennium Hall of Fame
Richard Dunn
Olympic fans can be harsh. Come home with anything less than gold,
and people ask, âWho won?â
With headliners like âGo for the gold,â it is cruel and unusual
punishment for athletes, who have sacrificed so much in life to merit
Olympic honors, to return to shame if a parade or celebration is not in
order.
The thrill of victory and agony of defeat goes on every summer
quadrennium for two weeks -- this year in Sydney, Australia -- and former
Newport Harbor High and Stanford water polo All-American James Bergeson
had it both ways, sort of, during the 1988 Olympic Games in Seoul, Korea.
Bergeson was the star everywhere he played, including on the U.S.
Olympic team.
Team USA settled for a silver medal when the Bill Barnett-coached â88
Olympic squad lost to Yugoslavia in the gold-medal game.
âIâm not saying winning the silver medal in the Olympics wasnât fun,
but there was a lot of pressure ... from people back home you felt wanted
you to win,â Bergeson said. âYouâre playing for yourself, but youâre
playing for them, as well. Thereâs a little more stress to go out and win
(in the Olympics) ... winning the silver was obviously very nice. But we
didnât win the silver, we lost the gold.â
Bergeson, a two-time CIF Southern Section 4-A Player of the Year for
Newport Harbor in 1977 and â78, starred in the field in â88 along with
former Stanford All-Americans Jody Campbell and Alan Mouchawar, while
Jeff Campbell, Peter Campbell, Chris DuPlanty, Terry Schroeder, Kevin
Robertson (Newport Harbor) and Greg Boyer (Newport Beach) were also part
of Barnettâs first Olympic team.
In the first round at Seoul, the U.S. knocked off Yugoslavia in the
last four seconds when Bergeson scored on a âlucky shot.â
âIf you related it to golf,â Bergeson said of his game-winning shot,
âit would be like sculling it to the green and you wind up 18 inches to
the pin, or banking in the 8-ball (in billiards). The shot was very
lucky.â
But Bergeson, a four-time All-American at Stanford who led the
Cardinal to NCAA team titles in 1982 and â83, his sophomore and junior
years, might have felt the urgency to win the Olympic gold medal more
than others.
âWhen you go to the Olympics, you donât want to let people down,â
Bergeson said. âObviously youâre playing for yourself and your team, but
we felt if we didnât at least medal, weâd be letting a lot of people down
... I donât know if we all felt that way on the team, but I did. Maybe it
was self-induced pressure.â
Much-ballyhooed advertising, media hype and black tie fund-raising
events all increase the Olympic pressure of finishing with positive
results, but at times, it can be overbearing.
âEverythingâs go for the gold, and if you fall short, you feel like
youâre letting people down,â Bergeson said. âThatâs why, when you asked
about high school, I feel itâs my most memorable time. High school was
pretty easygoing and fun.â
Bergeson, Tom Taylor and Mike Grier led Barnettâs Sailors to CIF 4-A
championships in 1977 and â78. From 1975 to â80, the Tars won five
section titles.
âNot to take anything away from the Olympics, but the most fun I had
playing water polo was my senior year in high school, because we were
playing for ourselves. We were young,â Bergeson said.
Bergeson, the son of former Orange County Supervisor, state senator
and assemblywoman Marian Bergeson, played for Barnett in high school,
then after college, had four more years of him on the U.S. national team.
âAfter four years of two-a-days with Barnett, a lot of people were
wiping the sweat off their brow,â Bergeson said. âFor me, it was another
four years of two-a-days with him. But Barnett was a good coach. I think
(the older Olympians) were a little more grown up, which was probably
easier for him to manage.â
Of Stanfordâs 51 All-Americans in 24 years of water polo, only seven,
including Bergeson, were All-Americans all four years of their collegiate
career.
Bergeson, who grew up in Newport Beach, started playing water polo at
age 5. âItâs a good beach sport, like volleyball,â he said.
For several years, Bergeson kept his Olympic silver medal in an
âunderwear drawer,â until his wife, Fran, made a plaque for it to hang in
the den.
âShe did it to remind me that I did something, rather than just hack
around golf balls,â said Bergeson, who plays to a 14 handicap these days
and is a member at Dove Canyon Country Club.
To make a living these days, Bergeson owns and operates two
equipment-rental businesses -- one for construction based in Mission
Viejo, the other for weddings and parties in Laguna Hills.
Bergeson, 39, graduated from Harbor in â79 and is the latest honoree
in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame. He lives in Dove Canyon with his
wife and three daughters, Kimberly, Andrea and Danielle, who was born May
19.
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