| Roy Taylor
was a pioneer on the prairies.
Not with a plow in the wheat fields, but with college kids on
baseball diamonds.
More than 50 years ago, Taylor and Pete Beiden led a group of college
players on a barnstorming tour of the West. The
California Mohawks
would set the stage for an influx of American college stars to suit up
in Canada and the recruitment of Canadians to play in California. Taylor
was instrumental in both.
 As coach at College of the Sequoias in Visalia,
California (and with a long-time friendship with Pete Beiden the coach
at Fresno State) Taylor was in a key position to bring players to Canada
and to scout Canadian talent for the California schools.
The San Joaquin Valley was a deep well of baseball talent for the
prairies. Even from the high schools. In 1951, Taylor brought a pair of
teenage schoolboys, Jack Hannah and Charlie Beene, to Saskatoon to suit
up with the 55s.
He made quite an impression on the Saskatchewan city:
"... Roy Taylor, playing coach of the Saskatoon 55s, left Sunday for
his home in Visalia, Calif., to get back to his position as athletic
director at the College of the Sequoias ... Taylor gave Saskatoon the
best ball club it has had in some time -- the last five years at any
rate -- and proved himself an all-round good fellow and fine citizen. He
will be welcome back here any time and so will be the good type of
athletes he brought with him this year -- Bob Garcia, Charlie Beene,
Jack Hannah and Steve Stavrianoudakis."
(Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, August 14, 1951)
Taylor spent nine summers playing and managing on prairie diamonds.
After the Mohawks tour in 1950, Taylor became playing-manager of the
Saskatoon 55s of the Northern Saskatchewan League and he followed up
with three years at the helm of the Kamsack Cyclones (his 1954 Kamsack
club won 40 of 46 exhibition and tournament games.
Moose Jaw Times-Herald, June 10, 1955).
In 1955 he joined Moose Jaw as playing manager and returned in 1956.
Taylor finally had a summer at home in 1957 working as business manager
and general manager with the hometown Visalia club. But, it was back to
the prairies in 1958 and 1959 with Saskatoon.
While his teams did well, he rarely saw a playoff game as he would
have to return to Visalia in mid-August to begin preparations for
football season at Sequoias. In later years at the college, Taylor was
also the golf coach. "It was so much easier than baseball," said Taylor,
"you only had to keep your eye out for one guy, not a field of them."
His keen eye for talent resulted in new experiences for many young
Canadian ballplayers who got a chance to hone their skills at Taylor's
program at COS. Often the discoveries were quite accidental.
"The (Kamsack) Cyclones were playing in Saskatoon, at a tournament I
think," said Taylor "and when we got out to Cairns field to unpack our
stuff a Junior Legion game was underway."
"This tall kid stuck out something like 21." With
that evidence, Taylor decided, "I have to have this guy." Later that day
there was a knock on Taylor's hotel room door. A man Taylor had met
previously said he had someone Taylor should meet. "I hope his name is
Doepker," said Taylor. It was. They worked out a deal that night for
Anaheim's Dick Doepker to play at COS. He'd star there for a
couple of seasons and move into pro ball after a stint in the Western
Canada League. He'd later become a celebrated educator in Visalia.
Taylor , in 1954, with two of his Canadian recruits, Bob Holowaty
(left) and Dave Kosteniuk.
"The 55s may not be the classiest among ball clubs in the province,
but they're shaping up nicely under the guidance of playing-coach Roy
Taylor and there's a spirit in the team that bids well to carry it on to
more victories. Taylor ... had become a popular figure here in Saskatoon
with players and fans alike. He has a wealth of baseball knowledge and
apparently knows how to pass it along to his men."
(Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, August 23, 1951)
In 1952 Taylor was recruited to head up the Kamsack Cyclones. Again,
he made his mark:
"This season of 1952 has been the Cyclones most successful year by a
wide margin. It is gratifying that the season has brought so many
victories and that it has been as successful as it has financially.
However, without either of these two points to lend their weight, the
season would have been a success.
This is so because of the fact that the Cyclones have played baseball
as it should be played -- not only with skill, but in the tradition of
sportsmanship, and with a distinctive air on the field and off which has
merited them wide approbation.
With no thought of attempting to detract from the worthy
contributions of many persons, this newspaper does not hesitate to
single out manager Roy Taylor for a large measure of credit. He deserves
a warm 'hats off' gesture."
(Kamsack Times, 1952)
Taylor might have said "you ain't seen nothing yet".
In 1954 he brought great joy to the Saskatchewan community with a
victory in the province's most prestigious tournament, the annual
gathering at Indian Head. With 19-year-old Ted Ellis on the hill,
the Cyclones beat North Battleford 4-1 to take top prize of $1,100. The
Saskatoon Star Phoenix reported the victory as Kamsack's 30th win in 32
games. (Saskatoon Star Phoenix,
July 16, 1954)
"Taylor, the sagacious, mild-mannered Moose Jaw mentor ...
established an enviable reputation in his three years in Kamsack."
(Moose Jaw Times-Herald, June 14,
1955)
Not just a respected leader, Taylor was also a fan
favourite. Near the end of the 1955 season, Moose Jaw held a night for
the skipper. (Moose Jaw
Times-Herald, August 23, 1955)
(In 1994, Taylor made the Coaches' Hall
of Fame)
Veteran College of the Sequoias Coach Roy
Taylor will be honored Friday by being inducted into the California
Community College Baseball Coaches' Association Hall of Fame. Taylor
will be feted in opening ceremonies of the state championship
tournament, which begins Friday at Cerritos College in Norwalk.
"I'm thrilled," Taylor said Wednesday. "It's one of the best honors
I've ever received. The kind of kids you get make you, I've been pretty
lucky."
Taylor was the Giants' head baseball coach from 1951-67, compiling a
record of 285-199-6. He won five championships, and his 1957 team
captured the state championship.
Many of the players on the 1957 team continue to live in Visalia,
including Golden West High School Principal Dick Doepker, Tulare Union
baseball coach Jim Garrett, former Tulare Western High School Coach Ted
Hitel, Mel Silva and Glenn McMillan.
Former COS baseball Coach Bert Holt, Taylor's successor, was inducted
into the CCCBCA Hall of Fame two years ago.
Taylor was a member of the college's Physical Education and athletic
staff for 1950-84, when he retired. He continued to serve part-time as
golf coach until 1989.
Over than span he was a COS head and assistant football coach,
assistant basketball coach to the legendary Polly Wilhelmsen, head
baseball coach, and more recently, head golf coach for 20 seasons.
He continues to serve the COS program as an assistant golf coach to
Gene Hofer.
Three years ago, Taylor was inducted into the COS Hall of Fame.
Taylor, a star player in baseball, basketball and football, was a
letterman at Fresno State in 1946-47 (a short stop and pitcher, Taylor
won All-Conference honours in 1946). He coached all three sports at
Kerman High School for three years until his appointment to coach at COS
in 1950.
Taylor (far left) with members of his American Legion
team in 1948. The club won the Fresno district title with a perfect,
14-0 record. Don Barnett and Jake Abbott, later to be
college stars, were key members of the pitching staff.
Roy Taylor (left) and Pete Beiden
(right) with the California Mohawks, 1950
Roy Taylor (right) and Pete Beiden (left) in 1990 at
Beiden's 80th birthday party.
Summer, 2002. Roy Taylor & Art Shahzade (above
left) and with
Dick Doepker (above right) at the unveiling of the Pete Beiden statue
outside the Fresno ballpark -- Beiden Field.
From left, Dennis Williams, short stop; Dick Doepker,
pitcher; Michael Wlasichuk, an all-position player; and
Roy Taylor, past coach of the College of Sequoias baseball
team
Taylor was saluted, in an article in the Fresno Bee in October, 2003,
for his role in mentoring his young athletes. See below.
HOME ADVANTAGE
COS coach inspires Canadian players to stay in Visalia after the
season's over
Legendary baseball coach Roy Taylor has impacted the lives of
countless athletes over the past half century or so. For three Canadian
baseball players, he did more than bring them success on the diamond.
He brought them home.
Taylor, 84, has coached everything from football to golf in a career
spanning five decades, 10 presidents and two countries.
As a player-coach in the Western Canada League in the 1950s and early
1960s, Taylor recruited talented young men to play for his team at the
College of the Sequoias.
Among them were Canadian players Dick Doepker, Dennis Williams and
Michael Wlasichuk, all of whom still live in Visalia. After several
seasons of baseball in Visalia, they didn't want to leave.
"It's such a clean city," Wlasichuk says. "The people are personable.
I feel like Visalia is home, always will."
They are all grateful to Taylor for bringing them here.
"All three of those guys are just outstanding people,: Taylor says.
"I feel like they're my kids."
The feeling is mutual.
"I always had the sense that he was my second father," says Wlasichuk,
now a doctor specializing in occupational medicine.
"He's a real gem of a guy," says Williams, chairman and chief
executive officer of the Buckman Mitchell Group. "We love him to death."
Although Taylor has a special ability to forge winners on the field,
his players say that was not his main concern.
"Roy stood for helping people and acting as a proper role model,"
says Doepker, a counselor at Chapman University and longtime principal
of Golden West High School. "He didn't judge success by the win column;
he judged success by how we did in life."
Accordingly, Taylor is thrilled that Doepker, Williams and Wlasichuk
made Visalia their home.
"I've been fortunate to run into some real good kids," Taylor says.
"Somebody told me, 'You really brought these guys along.' But they had
the talent and the drive. Anybody could've brought them along."
The smell of wet grass is almost as strong inside Taylor's house as
it is on his front lawn. Whether it comes from the open window or is
borne of the myriad memories he so lucidly recalls is hard to tell.
Taylor points to a plaque of of which he is particularly proud. It
was presented to him by Fresno State, where he initially attended in
1939, to commemorate his contribution as an educator and coach after
leaving school. Taylor's recruits say he was most interested in good
people, not necessarily the best players.
"It's very unusual," Wlasichuk says, "but that's typical Roy. He's
just giving, and he doesn't forget a person."
Much like the one at his Visalia residence, the door to Taylor's
heart is always open. Taylor once promised a military buddy that he'd
look after his mother if anything every happened to him. When that
friend died in World War II, Taylor made good.
"I didn't want to let him down," Taylor says, "so I took her in."
He's done the same with some of his baseball recruits over the years
while they settled into a new environment. A list of Taylor's
accomplishments could fill a page. He has been inducted into the
California Community College Baseball Coaches' Association Hall of Fame,
as well as the COS Hall of Fame.
Dubbed "Mr. COS," Taylor led his team to a state championship in
1957. He coached baseball at COS for 17 seasons. At one point he even
served as athletic director there, a position he fancied none too much.
"I loved those sports," Taylor says, "but I hated the office. I got
out of there as soon as I could."
That was just fine with his players. Wlasichuk's years of schooling
and successful practice are far removed from the Canadian garage he
worked in when he first met Taylor.
"I feel like my whole life is dedicated to Roy," he says, "for his
insistence that I do something with my life." |