Green takes Eagles’ post
- Share via
Steve Virgen
COSTA MESA -- Jon Green, who helped lead the Laguna Hills High
baseball team to back-to-back Sea View League titles as an assistant
coach the past two years, is the new head coach of the Estancia
baseball program.
Green also spent one year at Newport Harbor with Jim Kiefer,
before moving on to Laguna Hills to coach with Jeff Cecil.
“I felt I was ready to take the next level,” Green said of his
interest in the Estancia job. “This is something I’ve been looking
for. My plan is to turn Estancia baseball in to a well-respected
program in Orange County. I want to be a teacher first of all,
through teaching I’ll be lucky enough to coach.”
Green, 24, also plans to maintain what he calls, “a positive
atmosphere for baseball,” at Estancia.
“There is a good solid base, with the boosters and the
administration,” Green said.
Green, who played as a shortstop at Dana Hills High, will be
walk-on coach at Estancia, and will also be a substitute teacher. He
plans to earn a degree in political science and work for a teaching
credential throughout the school year at Cal State Fullerton.
Green said he was in charge of first-base coaching, hitting and
outfielders while at Laguna Hills, which reached the CIF Division I
semifinals in 2001.
He detailed the type of players he’s looking for in the Eagles’
program.
“Overall commitment to baseball, and a love for the game,” Green
said of the players’ criteria. “They should have a desire and a
passion to succeed, and to get better not only as a baseball player
but as a person.
“What I learned at Laguna Hills,” he continued. “You have to take
the good with the bad. Building a program, it’s a day-to-day process.
Laguna Hills taught me that success comes from the whole team
concept. If we all have the common goal, we’ll reach that goal.”
Green takes over a program that carried just 19 players last
season. The Estancia varsity team has not made the playoffs the past
eight years. Last season, Doug Deats resigned early in the campaign,
citing personal reasons for his decision. C.K. Green, no relation to
Jon Green, took over as the coach. The Eagles finished 6-18, 3-12 in
the Pacific Coast League.
Deats’ shocking resignation marked the second time in five years
the Eagles lost their coach early in the season. One game into the
1998 season, Joe McKittrick resigned, and was replaced by Tim Green,
C.K.’s father. Tim Green returned as coach in 1999, and resigned
after the season. Deats replaced him. The Eagles went 9-14, 2-10 in
the PCL in Deats’ first year and he was named Newport-Mesa District
Coach of the Year. In 2001, Deats repeated that honor when the Eagles
went 6-18, 3-12 in league and won the perpetual Paul Troxel Trophy
after winning two of three games against crosstown rival Costa Mesa.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.