Sumner seeing beyond boundaries
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Bryce Alderton
The cliche “going the extra mile” gets tossed around so much that its
meaning can easily become lost and watered down.
Not so with Bill Sumner.
Physically and mentally, Sumner, who 22 years ago began building
the foundation for one of the most successful cross country and track
and field programs in Southern California and arguably anywhere else
at Corona del Mar, doesn’t believe in getting by.
“I don’t do stuff, I become [whatever he’s working on at the
time],” Sumner, 57, said at his Cal Coast Track Club of Southern
California offices in Newport Beach.
The club welcomes runners on every scale from casual to
competitive and has blossomed to include more than 2,300 active
members.
In February 2004, he shifted to part-time status at Cal Coast and
full-time status with the Orange County Marathon, which celebrated
its first birthday by raising $380,000 for children’s charities.
Sumner said 9,137 runners crossed the finish line on a rainy December
Sunday, nearly 4,000 more than he expected.
He jokes that what he does shouldn’t classify as “work.”
A typical half-day for him equals 12 hours.
“I get in a lot of trouble calling what I do work,” Sumner said.
“I work on the [OC] marathon, which I love doing along with CdM track
and cross country. Where is the job? There is no job. What could be
better than doing what I want for a living? Which came first, doing
it, or getting paid for doing it?”
When Sumner followed his passion in 1982, leaving the world of
insurance sales, he said he made $5,000 combined from Cal Coast,
private lessons and coaching duties at CdM, the first year out.
“I was leaving the [insurance] office at 1 p.m. every day to
coach,” Sumner recalled. “I gave up [money] to be a coach. I never
worried about money. The things I cared about were, ‘Did I have
enough money for gas, to eat and go to the movies?’
“I have never done any project because of the money.”
Sumner, along with countless supporters and volunteers, have often
found themselves on the fundraising end.
The synthetic track at CdM went in six years ago and not without
its share of skepticism.
Sumner, a walk-on coach, said once construction began, the
estimated budget bloomed to $222,000 for renovation of a dirt track
that sat three inches lower than the grass level. Pools of water
covered the area when it rained.
One man whom Sumner said called the idea for a synthetic track
“crazy” made him so angry that Sumner composed two lists: one with
the names of supporters and the other with skeptics.
Sumner then called on the supporters and since then, some $370,000
poured in from booster clubs, running clubs, corporate sponsors, the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District and the foundation, he said.
Sumner said he was hurt more that people took shots at the idea
for a track.
“I went over to a group of people that included Evan Gruber and
Jeff Morse and they said, ‘Why are you listening to [the skeptic],”
Sumner recalled. “I never thought of it that way. I went back and
asked people, ‘How do we do this?’”
They did it and today, the track welcomes runners from dawn to
dusk.
“Not only is it used by the school, but community members are
running on it in the mornings or [physical education] classes or
trainers are using it,” said CdM boys athletic director Jerry
Jelnick, who has known Sumner for more than 20 years.
“Year in and year out, he does an excellent job,” Jelnick said of
Sumner. “In a world of walk-ons, you never know what might happen.
“Every year he has a lot of returning kids who ran for him come
back and help out. That says something about the coach, when kids
want to give something back.”
Through trail, Sumner has learned to see the positive.
“I probably got into 100 fights in high school,” he said.
He comes from a rough upbringing -- at 17 he was stabbed and shot
in the same month. He bounced around five high schools before
graduating from Baldwin Park High.
When the bullet missed, Sumner turned to what he now knows and
loves.
“I had to have eyes around my head to deal with those types of
things,” Sumner said. “But when I got shot at, I was in shock ... I
ran first, then packed my bags and moved.”
And run he does, quite well, actually.
Sumner averages 50 races a year and in the last five years, he has
lost his division, usually the 55-59 bracket, only twice. Now he
enters into the 50-54 grouping.
In May, it will be 50 years since he first started running.
A torn Achilles tendon couldn’t keep him down.
“The key is you never stop and understanding what your limits
are,” Sumner said. “You’ll never see me peddle to the metal. I run
hard, but controlled.”
Sumner ran competitively in high school and was part of Mt. San
Antonio’s state championship cross country team in 1967, a year
before he was drafted for the Vietnam War, which he is hesitant to
talk about.
“I don’t like talking about wars, politics or religion,” Sumner
said. “You can’t win, no matter what.”
The winning is reserved for Sumner’s teams, which have combined
for nine CIF Southern Section divisional crowns with five state
championships. Add a startling 18 straight trips to the state meet
and the program speaks for itself.
“I was planning on staying only two years [at CdM],” Sumner said.
Jim Tomlin, a track and cross country coach in 1982, helped woo Sumner to CdM from Edison.
At the time, Sumner was assisting friend Ruben Chappins with
building the Charger boys distance program.
Tomlin eventually tugged hard enough and Sumner took the challenge
of building the boys program at CdM.
The rest is history, wrapped in a pair of shoes.
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