Laurie Sawin-Quinn
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Richard Dunn
Laurie Sawin-Quinn’s career as a physical therapist began
innocently enough when she sprained an ankle during club volleyball
practice the night before the Sea View League girls track and field
preliminaries.
“That entire Friday morning was spent in the physical therapist’s
office, trying to rehab my ankle,” she said. “I definitely think
being a dual sports athlete has its pros and cons. That was
definitely a low point in my (athletic) career, but it turned me on
to be a physical therapist -- to help athletes, and also non-athletes
for that matter, get back.”
Sawin-Quinn, a 1989 Corona del Mar High graduate who later starred
in volleyball at Stanford, is enjoying the fruits of her labor as a
physical therapist at a “ritzy athletic club,” where she works 16
hours a week, and as an eighth-grade girls volleyball coach in
Portola Valley, adjacent to Menlo Park, where she lives with her
husband, Willie, and two boys, Patrick, 4, and Jake, 2.
“Mostly, I’m a full-time mom,” said Sawin-Quinn, a human biology
major at Stanford.
While volleyball became Sawin-Quinn’s primary sport -- she helped
Stanford win the 1992 NCAA championship as one of the Cardinal
captains -- track and field provided her greatest prep glory,
highlighted by the Sea Kings’ 1988 CIF Southern Section 3-A team
championship under Coach Steve Kaczynski. Four-event stars
Sawin-Quinn and d’Layne Kerr were the team’s top scorers and it
remains the school’s only CIF title in the sport. Newport Harbor’s
1993 squad is the only other CIF championship girls track and field
team in Newport-Mesa history.
In the CIF 3-A Finals of the 400 meters at Cerritos College, Kerr
and Sawin-Quinn finished one-two, while the latest honoree in the
Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame also scored in the high jump, 400
relay and 1,600 relay.
The Sea Kings’ 1,600 relay placed third at the state meet that
year in an Orange County-record 3:48.24, after winning the 1987 CIF
3-A championship in 3:55.06 when Sawin-Quinn was a sophomore. Later,
Stanford also wanted her for track.
“But no way,” Sawin-Quinn said. “I still don’t know how I did it
with one of the toughest majors at Stanford and playing volleyball.”
Sawin-Quinn, a 5-foot-9 outside hitter who was groomed under Coach
Charlie Brande at the Orange County Volleyball Club, played three
varsity volleyball seasons at CdM, after moving from Texas in January
of her freshman year.
When a club soccer coach, who also coached club volleyball with
Brande, discovered the athletic Sawin-Quinn, he suggested the
California newcomer take up the sport of using hands to hit and no
feet. She struggled in volleyball initially, but, since Brande knew
she’d be playing for his CdM team in the fall of ‘86, she was given a
crash course and “lived, ate and breathed volleyball for about six
months.”
Sawin-Quinn twice earned All-CIF 5-A honors. In her junior year in
the fall of ‘87, CdM reached the CIF 5-A match, losing to Back Bay
rival Newport Harbor, coached by Dan Glenn, in five games, after
winning the first two. It was the third of four times the schools
have met in a CIF title match.
The Sea View League Player of the Year in volleyball, Sawin-Quinn
was voted the Female Athlete of the Year at the school and in the Sea
View League for the 1988-89 calendar year.
A second-team Volleyball Monthly All-American, Sawin-Quinn
considered Stanford, Cal, UCLA, Princeton and UC Santa Barbara,
before selecting the Cardinal, for whom she played from 1989 through
1992. She was a starter for Stanford when the Cardinal defeated UCLA
for the ’92 national championship in Albuquerque.
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