Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

A champion in hoops and volleyball

- By Ben Bolch

At UCLA, Greg Lee helped the basketball team win two national titles. But his greatest success would be on the sand.

Greg Lee once described the dominance of his UCLA basketball teams by saying if he had a perfect game, they would win by 50 points instead of 40.

It was no exaggerati­on. Those Bruins won national championsh­ips in 1972 and ’73 under coach John Wooden while amassing the bulk of a record 88-game winning streak that would end the following season.

A cerebral 6-foot-5 guard known for throwing lobs to big man Bill Walton, Lee was mostly a complement­ary piece while surrounded by seven future NBA players. He started his first two seasons on the varsity team before coming off the bench as a senior.

But his greatest profession­al success came on the sand, not the hardwood, while splitting his time between basketball and volleyball careers. Lee won a record 13 consecutiv­e pro beach volleyball tournament titles from 197576 alongside partner Jim Menges, another former Bruin. Lee said one of the things that drew him to volleyball was having a bigger impact on his team’s performanc­e.

“If I played poorly in volleyball, I was out of there,” Lee once told The Times. “If you made errors, you were history.”

After years of declining health, Lee died Wednesday at a hospital in San Diego from an infection related to an immune disorder, his older brother Jon said. He was 70.

Greg Lee had battled many health issues in his later years, including neuropathy and a heart valve that required replacemen­t.

“He had a very glorious front nine,” Jon Lee said of his brother’s life, “but the back nine was fraught with problems.”

Greg Lee grew up in the San Fernando Valley and played at Reseda High for his father, Marvin, a former UCLA center under coach Wilbur Johns. He was valedictor­ian of his high school’s senior class and a two-time Los Angeles City Section player of the year, making him a natural recruit for the Bruins. Last month, he was selected for induction into the City Section Hall of Fame.

Unlike Menges, his eventual pro volleyball partner who won two national championsh­ips at UCLA, Lee did not play the sport while in college. The duo met while playing beach volleyball with friends in 1972 and they partnered occasional­ly before playing together fulltime when their respective college careers ended.

Their 13-tournament winning streak was later matched by two other former Bruins: Karch Kiraly and Kent Steffes.

Lee’s profession­al basketball career included brief stops with the San Diego Conquistad­ors of the ABA and Portland Trail Blazers of the NBA, where he

was reunited with Walton. Lee also played four seasons in West Germany.

Later, he taught accelerate­d math and coached basketball for many years at San Diego’s Clairemont High, the school that inspired the Cameron Crowe movie “Fast Times at Ridgemont High.”

Lee is survived by his wife, Lisa, son Ethan and daughter Jessamyn Feves in addition to his brother. They were all by his hospital bedside this week, Lisa holding his hand while Ethan played the Neil Young song “Thrasher” on his guitar, Greg singing along in a haze of medication­s until he lost consciousn­ess for the last time.

 ?? Associated Press ?? BIGGEST IMPACT CAME ON A DIFFERENT COURT
Lee, shown playing against Notre Dame in 1973, later won 13 consecutiv­e pro beach volleyball tournament titles with partner Jim Menges.
Associated Press BIGGEST IMPACT CAME ON A DIFFERENT COURT Lee, shown playing against Notre Dame in 1973, later won 13 consecutiv­e pro beach volleyball tournament titles with partner Jim Menges.

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