Left to Right - Kody (Grandson), Darren (Son), Coach Bert Holt
Coach Bert Holt
Coach Bert Holt passed away on December 4, 2015. "This has been the longest baseball game ever. The 7th inning stretch has come and gone. The 9th inning arrived and he did lose the battle with complications from cancer, but he did not lose the game." - Click Obituary for more. Coach Holt’s uniform number 6 was retired in recognition of the significant contributions to COS Community College baseball and is proudly displayed on the left field wall
Bert Holt is one of those fortunate people whose vocation is their life. In his senior year at Greenville, California High School, where he lettered in three sports, Bert attended a baseball clinic in Chico taught by Pete Beiden. Impressed by Pete’s thoroughness in coaching fundamentals and respect for the game, Bert made a decision to attend Fresno State College and seriously engage in baseball. For four years he worked hard for a spot in the lineup and also studied the game as taught by Pete Beiden. Bert’s love of baseball, especially when played well, developed into a “calling” to coach.
At Fresno State Bert courted Sue Hord from Paso Robles and they were married midway through his graduate year. Sue has been a lifetime partner with Bert in his baseball career as well as a wife and mother. He and Sue have four children- Dave, Darren, Teri, and Sheila- each an athlete. Both Dave and Darren played for Bert at College of the Sequoias, at Fresno State, and in professional baseball.
Bert began coaching in 1957 at Redwood High School in Visalia where he was Junior Varsity coach for Sam Farsakian, one of many Beiden disciples coaching in the Valley. In 1960 he moved to Exeter Union High School, were after one year as J.V. coach, he coached varsity baseball until 1965, winning one league championship.
In 1965 College of the Sequoias hired Bert to be assistant coach in football and baseball. He assisted Roy Taylor, another Beiden protégée in the baseball program. When Roy retired in 1968, Bert became head baseball coach at COS.
During his twenty-one years as head baseball coach at COS, Bert’s teams won 423 games and four conference championships. His 1970 team won the Northern California Championship and was runner up to Cerritos for the state title. Four of his players, Jim Wohlford, Steve Straughter, Bob Ojeda, and Brad Mills, played in the major leagues. Bert is a member of California Community College Baseball Associations’ Hall of Fame, and his number “6” has been retired at College of the Sequoias. When Pete Beiden retired at Fresno State, Bert was comfortable enough to ask him to coach fundamentals at COS, which not only helped the players develop but enables Bert to keep learning.
Retiring from coaching in 1988, Bert became an area scout; first for the Cubs, then the Expos, and finally the Rockies, a job he held until just last year. Bert’s knowledge of fundamentals, his thoroughness in observation, and his work ethic made him an excellent scout.
Bert’s commitment to baseball is whole. A well-kept ball field, properly worn uniform and reasonably disciplined players are as important as homeruns and shutouts. Properly executed fundamentals are as important as wins and championships. A coach is an expert in agronomy, botany of grasses, irrigation systems, meteorology, characteristics of cloth and leather, as well as the fundamentals and rules of baseball. A coach interrupts his or her leisure to move a sprinkler or put a tarp on a mound, even in the dark. Most of all, a coach, knowing that the only way a player will learn fundamentals is through repetition, learns how to use a fungo and uses it often. When Bert was fully retired, he loved playing another game, golf, on many an afternoon after a morning round he would be found on the College of the Sequoias ball field hitting fungos as an assistant coach.