When the Orange Coast College baseball team, the Pirates, gathered at Wendell Pickens Field to begin their 2020 season on Tuesday, a very important member of the team was missing: Coach John Altobelli, who tragically died with eight others in a helicopter crash on Sunday morning.
John, his wife Keri and their daughter Alyssa passed away alongsideNBA legend Kobe Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter Gianna, as they were all on their way to a basketball tournament in Thousand Oaks, California when their helicopter crashed, killing everyone on board.
After walking into the stadium underneath a banner that read “The House That Alto Built,” the OCC Pirates — all wearing John’s number, 14 — and fans in the stands took a moment of silence before the first pitch to honor their fallen coach on Tuesday afternoon.
“We have a long hard day ahead of us, but we’ll entertain ourselves for a couple hours with some baseball,” John’s brother, Tony Altobelli,said to the crowdbefore the game began.
John Altobelli and family.GoFundMe

The players voted to keep the game against Southwestern Community College, just two days after the death of John, on schedule, something that assistant coach Ron La Ruffa said iswhat John would have wanted.
“The more normal you can keep things, the better,” La Ruffa told theOrange County Registeron Monday. “And I think ‘Alto’ would want us to play.”
OCCconfirmedthe deaths of John, Keri and Alyssa on Sunday.
“John meant so much to not only Orange Coast College, but to baseball,” the school’s athletic director, Jason Kehler, said in a statement. “He truly personified what it means to be a baseball coach. The passion that he put into the game, but more importantly his athletes, was second to none – he treated them like family. Our deepest condolences go out to the Altobelli family during this time of tragedy.”
Orange Coast College/Twitter

“I’m numb right now, I’m numb, I’m broken, I’m going to miss him terribly,” John’s brother, Tony Altobelli,told PEOPLE. “He was my brother, he was my idol growing up, also my idol as an adult.”

Alyssa Altobelli.Facebook

“You want to live my brother did, he was straight and narrow, he worked hard and he earned the respect of everybody who ever knew him and he left a legacy that will go way beyond his time spent in Orange Coast,” Tony continued. “I don’t know how you can not want to live a life like that.”
OCC has set up theAltobelli Family Memorial Fund, and at least twoGoFundMe campaignshave also beenset up for the family.
source: people.com