Bob Ogle
Bryce Alderton
Sitting under an umbrella overlooking one of the Balboa Bay Club
Racquet Club’s 24 tennis courts, Bob Ogle wonders how life can get
any better.
The head professional and general manager has been a mainstay on
these grounds since he began playing tennis at age 10.
The Newport Harbor High graduate and University of Houston
All-American in 1973 remembered the day in the fall of his senior
year in college when he got a call from then-head professional Don
Leary about being an assistant.
The previous summer Ogle filled out an application and gave it to
Leary, who months later called back, saying there was an opening as
an assistant.
Ogle took the job and has been at the club ever since.
“How could I ask for a better place to work?” Ogle said, peering
west across courts on a pristine, sunny Southern California day with
the Pacific Ocean on the horizon. “My neighbors don’t think I go to
work because they see me going off in shorts. I never feel like I go
to work.”
Ogle was promoted to head pro in 1980 and has been the club’s
manager for the last seven years.
He has scaled back his teaching schedule to concentrate on duties
that come with being a manager, such as promoting membership and
organizing social events, but recently has begun to play singles in
Southern California Tennis Association senior division events.
“It is a report card to see if I can hit the ball under pressure,”
Ogle said with a smile. “I have been playing about four SCTA events a
year.” In August he will play in the Pacific Southwest tournament at
the Palisades Tennis Club in Newport Beach.
Before August arrives, Ogle and Gail Glasgow, hired as the junior
program’s head administrator, will be preparing the next two weeks
for the 14th annual War by the Shore Junior Tennis Classic July
21-25. Though the tournament runs about the time some players are
competing in national events, Ogle said the crop of juniors that
annually enter the junior classic provide glimpses of talent.
“The kids are great and the level of tennis gets better each
year,” he said. “Hopefully we provide a visible entity in the
neighborhood, but there is enormous competition out there.”
When he was solely a teaching pro, Ogle would travel to the
tournaments his students would play in. But with his increased
workload and a desire for the younger coaches to gain experience in
tournament settings, the 50-year-old father of two and husband stays
at the club more so than in years past.
Ogle has seen the club go from six courts in the mid ‘70s to 24
toward the latter part of the decade, when tennis experienced its
“boom.”
“You would walk into a grocery store and almost every person was
in shorts and a shirt,” Ogle said of people’s rush to tennis in the
late ‘70s. “We had people lined up on every court waiting to play.”
As with many sports, fluctuations in interest exist and Ogle
doesn’t see anything different in tennis.
“In the late ‘70s, the [United States Tennis Association]
estimated 40 million people were playing,” he said. “In 1985, there
were 18 million.
“People went to other sports. Tennis is tough on the body with
your body pounding on the concrete. It is cyclical, so you will start
to see people coming back to tennis.”
Coming back to tennis has never been a factor for Ogle since he
never really left the game that surrounded him at a young age,
beginning with his family. With the influence of his father, Bob Ogle
Sr., mother, Peggy Van Horn, brother Tim and sister, Peggy McKay, Bob
took an immediate liking to the game and has developed a devotion to
it.
The enthusiasm still emanates from his face.
“It’s addictive,” Ogle said. “It made me want to work hard for the
next week to beat the guy in the next town.
“I am still good friends with some of my college teammates. Just
recently we went to a concert together. The bonds you form make the
game enjoyable. It is the sport of a lifetime.”
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