Cook to coach at Estancia
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Barry Faulkner
COSTA MESA - Rick Cook, a varsity head coach for 24 of his 29-year
high school coaching career, has been named boys basketball coach at
Estancia High, Eagles Boys Athletic Director Tim Parsel announced Monday.
Cook, an assistant for Newport Harbor High Coach Larry Hirst last season,
after a 14-year tenure at Workman High in the City of Industry, replaces
Rich Boyce, who resigned after four seasons to become coach at Edison
High.
Cook, a 51-year-old Chino Hills resident, said he will continue to teach
physical education at Workman, until a teaching position opens at
Estancia. Parsel said that likely will not occur for at least a year.
Cook met with Estancia players for the first time Monday and will coach
them in tonight’s first summer league game, ironically, against Newport
Harbor.
In addition to his stint at Harbor, where Hirst praised Cook’s basketball
acumen as among the most impressive he’d ever been around, Newport-Mesa
District basketball rooters may remember Cook as the high school coach
and valued mentor of Jason Ferguson. Ferguson, a star guard at Workman,
died of cancer at age 24 in January, 1996, during his second season with
the Mustangs.
“It’s really kind of eerie,” Cook said. “The last game Jason coached
before he passed away was against Estancia.”
Cook, who witnessed the Sailors’ 56-54 nonleague loss to Estancia form
the bench last season, said he is aware of the Eagles’ proud basketball
tradition. That history includes a 1991 CIF State Division III
championship, the lone state basketball title won by a Newport-Mesa
school.
“I’m certainly not starting from scratch,” Cook said. “Rich Boyce has
done a fantastic job and a lot of the intangibles you need to have a good
program are already in place. Hopefully, I can just continue to build on
the good foundation others have left.”
Cook said the presence of Parsel, who preceded Boyce as coach and
continues to help coach the freshmen team, was a huge factor behind his
decision to accept the job. Cook also said he has been impressed by the
support offered by Principal Tom Antal.
“(Parsel and Antal) really made this decision a no-brainer,” Cook said.
“I know I’ll be working with people I like.”
Cook, whose playing career ended at Marshall University, began his prep
coaching career at his West Virginia-based alma mater, Logan High.
His 10 seasons as varsity coach at Logan included four state
championships and seven state title games, though Cook insisted on
deflecting credit for those accomplishments to his players.
After stints as an assistant at Winfield and Hurricane high schools in
West Virginia, Cook took the job at Workman, where he turned a
downtrodden program into a two-time league champion and a consistent CIF
playoff participant.
“I’ve been fortunate to be around some pretty smart basketball people,”
Hirst said. “But Rick is at least equal to them all. There were times
when we’d talk for three hours after practice and I’d be taking notes.”
Despite his successful track record, Cook said his primary emphasis is
not on winning.
“I’ve always said the purpose of high school athletics is not to win
games. The major purpose is to help kids make memories and help them
develop as people and become successful adults.”
Hirst, preferring not to compete against a close friend, said The Sailors
and Eagles have mutually agreed not to play each other, beginning next
year.
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