No. 92: Rich Dimler

This is the latest post for an ongoing media project — SoCal Sports History 101: The Prime Numbers from 00 to 99 that Uniformly, Uniquely and Unapologetically Reveal The Narrative of Our Region’s Athletic Heritage.  Pick a number and highlight an athlete — person, place or thing — most obviously connected to it by fame and fortune, someone who isn’t so obvious, and then take a deeper dive into the most interesting story tied to it. It’s a combination of star power, achievement, longevity, notoriety, and, above all, what makes that athlete so Southern California. Quirkiness factors in. And it should open itself to more discussion and debate — which is what sports is best at doing.

The most obvious choices for No. 92:

= Rich Dimler, USC football, Los Angeles Express

The not-so-obvious choices for No. 92:

= Rick Tocchet, Los Angeles Kings
= Don Gibson, USC football

The most interesting story for No. 92:
Rich Dimler, USC football nose guard (1975 to 1978), Los Angeles Express defensive tackle (1983 to 1984)
Southern California map pinpoints:
Los Angeles, Glendale, Inglewood, Hawthorne, Torrance, Rancho Palos Verdes


Los Angeles Times, Sept. 8, 1978.

Raise a glass to Rick Dimler.

The fact he made it through 44 years of roughhousing, yet was heralded by USC defensive line coach Marv Goux as “the toughest player I’ve seen in 22 years of coaching” while playing on four straight Trojan bowl victories, is worth a toast.

But then again, there was the time when his home town in New Jersey tried to throw a parade in his honor, and it didn’t end well.

Homecomings cam be problematic.

In March of 1979, the 6-foot-6, 255-pound Dimler was a couple months removed from finishing his final year of football at USC, capped off by a 12-1 season, co-captain of the defensive squad completely responsible for a Rose Bowl win over Michigan, giving the Trojans a split national championship.

Dimler was back visiting friends and family in Bayonne, New Jersey as they were finalizing plans for what would be Rich Dimler Day — a parade in his honor, give him a key to the city, the red-carpet treatment. He could now look forward to NFL fame.

Weeks before that happened, Dimler put himself in a situation that had penalty flags flying all over the place.

Bayonne police say they saw Dimler in a car racing another car right down Broadway through the city, and started chasing him at 2 a.m. Dimler, according to the authorities, ran three red lights trying to escape. The other car got away. Dimler was hauled in.

At that point, Dimler had a dim view on anything about learning a lesson.

“I’ll have your jobs; I’ll have both your jobs,” Dimler screamed at the officers, pushing one of them away. He was eventually accused of striking a patrolman in the chest at police headquarters and deemed “unruly” while in the jail cell.

“He flunked his breathalyzer test in flying colors,” said Lt. Vincent Bonner said in newspaper accounts. The .22 result was well above the legal limit of .15.

Dimler was out on bail but faced charges of assault and battery and creating a disturbance. That’s when reporters covering the incident discovered he had been arrested a month earlier in Los Angeles on driving under the influence, but no charges were filed. Those digging further into his police records found out about the time in 1973, the year before he left New Jersey to attend USC, when Dimler, then 17, was acquitted of a death by auto charge in juvenile court. He had been charged of hitting and killing a 10-year-old girl as she crossed the street and then leaving the scene. All that happened at the time was getting put on probation.

Bayonne City Councilman Donald Ahern, who had also been Dimler’s high school coach, was asked about how any of this might taint the upcoming day in his honor.

“He’s a good kid with a good heart; I’d be the last guy to leave the ship for that kid,” said Ahern.

As if Dimler needed another character witness, in November of ’78, USC coach John Robinson was telling the Los Angeles Times’ John Hall about how the season had been progressing with Dimler in command of the defense.

“If they ever draw up a blueprint for the ideal leader,” Robinson said, “that’s Dimler.”

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