Catching Up With ... Jerry Tardie
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Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - Walk into the men’s clubhouse at the Balboa Bay
Club early in the morning during the week and you’ll probably spot Jerry
Tardie hanging out with the self-described Six O’Clockers.
The in-house men’s club within the club includes several ardent sports
devotees, like community heavyweights Kirk Dawson, Don deVries, Mickey
Hartling, Zack Wright and Irrelevant Week founder Paul Salata.
But when Tardie arrives for his morning workout, he’s appropriately
referred to as “coach” by his fellow Six O’Clockers. Some in the
up-before-dawn men’s club claim to exercise on stationary bikes or lift
weights, but “most of them are eating doughnuts and watching the stock
market,” an insider once said.
Tardie, who has lived most of his life in Costa Mesa and the last 25
years on Balboa Peninsula, has always been the type of guy to stay in
touch.
For instance, the former Mater Dei High basketball coach and athletic
director sets up a reunion every year -- a weekend of golf at Indian
Wells Country Club, where he’s a member -- for his eighth-grade
championship basketball team of 1956 at St. Boniface of Anaheim.
“All five (starters) get together every September,” Tardie said.
“That’s 45 years ago we won (the Southern California Catholic school
title). It’s a great group of guys.”
Tardie, who also helped St. Boniface win 34 straight games at one
point, became Mater Dei’s first All-CIF Southern Section basketball
player in 1960.
Following an outstanding hoops career at Mater Dei, the 6-foot Tardie
played at Seattle University for four years, leading the Chieftains’
freshmen team in scoring in 1961, then serving as the varsity’s key sixth
man and part-time starter for three seasons.
While at Seattle U., Tardie played with, among others, 6-5 guard Eddie
Miles, who enjoyed a nine-year NBA career with the Detroit Pistons,
Baltimore Bullets and New York Knicks.
At the time, Seattle’s most famous basketball alumnus, Elgin Baylor,
would often show up on the weekends for pickup games during the NBA
offseason and provide free entertainment for the student body.
“(Baylor) was awesome,” Tardie said. “He was ahead of his time. He’d
come on weekends for pickup games and the gym would be half full (to
watch him).”
Like his former St. Boniface teammates, Tardie still gets together
with his Seattle U. teammates from the early 1960s.
“In fact, I’m up here in Seattle right now,” Tardie said recently
during a telephone interview. “I’m driving by that Safeco baseball
stadium right now, and that new football stadium looks unbelievable. I
went up here for a mini vacation for basketball.”
These days, golf is Tardie’s biggest habit. He drives out to the
desert from his Newport residence every weekend to play at Indian Wells
Country Club, where earlier this year he finally cracked the amateur
field in the Bob Hope Classic Pro-Am.
Tardie was on a waiting list to play in the event for several years,
but in 2001 his name came up. “Once you’ve been in the pro-am for five
straight years, you’re automatically in there,” he said. “That’s my goal
for the next (four) years.”
As a basketball coach, Tardie broke into the business as an assistant
at St. Martin’s College in Olympia, Wash., where he lasted two years.
Then came the opportunity of a lifetime: To return to his alma mater,
Mater Dei, in 1967. He was the youngest head basketball coach at the time
in Orange County at age 24.
Tardie, who coached the Monarchs for 13 years, was also Mater Dei’s
athletic director for 10 years.
“I was getting a little burned out after 13 years,” Tardie said. “I
started when I was 24 ... coaching all year, even in the summer. There
weren’t any gimmies. I wanted to take a year off.”
After the 1980-81 school year, Tardie’s final year as athletic
director, he entered the private business world and has been a successful
agent for State Farm Insurance ever since. Tardie was initially hired
into the business by Jack McInally, whose son, Pat, played football at
Harvard and several years in the NFL, mostly with Cincinnati, as a wide
receiver and kicker.
During lunchtime Monday through Friday these days, Tardie can usually
be spotted at one of his favorite eateries, like the Arches, or working
hard in his Costa Mesa office on Newport Boulevard. Local restaurateurs
know him by name.
“I love private business,” said Tardie, also a huge Boston Red Sox
fan. “It’s been great. I have no regrets (leaving Mater Dei) ... I’ve
been very lucky.”
Tardie has two grown children: A son who serves in the U.S. Navy
aboard the USS Cleveland and a daughter who teaches preschool in Mission
Viejo. He has two grandchildren. “God’s been good to me,” he said.
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