Story Poster

Chris Avery: A Sturdy Golden Bear to the End

March 14, 2018
87,929

Last year saw a passing of the torch from the founding publisher of Bear Insider, Chris Avery, to new publisher Greg Richardson with the sale of the website in July 2017. And now more recently, Avery, known to countless thousands of Bear fans as GreyBear, went to meet the sturdy Golden Bear in the sky, passing away after a series of physical struggles in recent years. He passed away in the same hospital he was born in on March 25, 1942 in Berkeley's Alta Bates Hospital.

Raised in Berkeley, Chris went on to graduate from Berkeley High School in 1960 and did both his undergraduate and graduate studies at Cal, as had so many of his relatives before him, graduating with a BS and MS in Chemical Engineering. His parents, Constance Iola Hannah Avery and Leslie Hart Avery, also attended and met at Cal in the 30s and were married on January 13, 1940 in Berkeley.  And Avery's Great Aunt Claire Adelaide Healy Hartley graduated from the University of California in May 1909 with a Bachelor of Science in Agriculture, before it became known as UC Berkeley.

Bear Insider
Avery strolls through Sproul Plaza in mid-60's as a student with lunch packed by wife Linda

Chris met his wife Linda (Larssen) in their freshman year at Cal at a campus ministry meeting, calling "dibs" on his future wife when pointing her out to a friend also in attendance. They were later married in 1965 in Woodland Hills, CA. Later came daughters Jennifer and Rachel as well as son-in-laws James and Brett and grandchildren, Cameron Avery, Everett and Colton.

Shortly after Rachel’s birth, Chris ventured off to India to launch his first of many enterprises and international adventures. A serial entrepreneur and early programmer, Chris was forever developing new and intriguing business ventures and escapades designed to both entertain and profit. 

Bear Insider
Chris and Linda Avery at wedding in 1965

Chris was a worldwide traveler, a musician, and deep lover of nature. He grew up visiting Mineral King, California, a precious gem of nature in the highest reaches of the Sierra Nevada, honoring the traditions begun by his great-grandfather Edwin Finley Hart, who took his daughter Elizabeth Rebecca Hart there as a girl. She was Chris’s paternal grandmother. In 1956, she purchased a cabin in the small mountain valley for her descendants. Chris carried on the family practice of bringing his own family to Mineral King every summer. It was one of his favorite places on Earth. 

As an adult, Chris continued to play cello and guitar, and spent many evenings playing folk songs around the campfire on his guitar with friends and family. He would periodically regale his family with tales of his nights playing gigs with two buddies in their band called “The McCloud River Trio.”

Chris built many quiet friendships and connections over his years. Across his explorations in wine and beer-making, traveling, studying politics, hiking in nature, running, cooking, and following sports (especially Cal sports), he connected with many kindred spirits, and had an impact on many lives.

In 2000, he and Linda purchased a property on the foothills of Mount Eddy near Mount Shasta, with the dream of creating a second Mineral King-like destination for their own extended family, much in the vein of his grandmother Elizabeth’s vision. 

Bear Insider
Chris and family at Sawtooth Pass

The genesis of Bear Insider was a Cal sports newsletter that saw many of the recipients join Cal's Fans Only website in the mid-90's. When the site went down for two weeks, Chris -at the time a web programer and website builder- decided to take the opportunity to start a website of his own where Cal fans could gather and share their passion for their Golden Bears, and Cyberbears.org was born on September 3, 1998.

The site thrived and saw continual growth in those early years, eventually moving to the Scout.com network for five years, where the site was rebranded as Bear Insider, then to the ESPN network in 2008. Eventually the site went back to being independent and is currently a part of a publishing group of dozens of Power 5 program websites throughout the country..

The legacy that Chris left with countless Cal fans though the Bear Insider community is profound. Over the past 20 years, the site has been the Cal cyber version of Cheers, where everyone knows your name. 

People have come and gone from the site over the years, yet many remain as big a part as ever of the great community that our very own GreyBear built with his vision and passion for his Cal Bears.

His legacy will never be forgotten.

A sturdy Golden Bear he will forever be.

Bear Insider

Discussion from...

Chris Avery: A Sturdy Golden Bear to the End

2,706 Views | 9 Replies | Last: 2 yr ago by puget sound cal fan
wvitbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Truly sad. He would go to concerts I recommended. I am a musician too at times. Know he appreciated good music but didn't know he played the guitar.
BearBint
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I didn't know Chris in person, but found him a courteous WBB board moderator, always quick to help and improve the site, never bragging about Cal or himself but clearly a devoted Old Blue. Sad that he's no longer among us.
DenBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Chris was one of the finest people I have ever met. He was genuine, without being a pushover. Tremendous talents in many ways. He will be missed so much.
HoopDreams
How long do you want to ignore this user?
I never met GreyBear in person, but when ever he came on the board I got the sense he was a good guy
I certainly thank him for this Cal sports community. Still the best of all the boards.
Rest in peace
MoragaBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Staff
For those that missed the slideshow tribute added later to the story, here it is:

pearbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Staff
Thanks for the lovely tributes to Chris, MB.
pearbear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Staff
It's taken me a while to be able to sit down and write this...



Chris Avery gave us all, through this forum, the opportunity to be part of a community of Cal fans.

But for me, he also gave the opportunity to write, and to bring attention to women athletes, and for that, I'm forever grateful.

I'm sure I've shared this story before, but it seems appropriate to tell it again here...

I went to Cal as an undergrad, and those years shaped me and my identity in profound ways--as a person of color, a gay man, an advocate for others, to name just a few. It was also at Cal that I got into college sports: while I followed all teams generally, I first became a fan for women't volleyball. Then women's basketball came next.

Years later, when I was an elementary school teacher, I discovered cyberbears (the precursor to Bear Insider). Back then, it was novel and fun to be exchanging ideas and bond with other Cal fans anonymously. Plus it gave me a respite from my stressful job. But I found that almost no one was talking about women's sports at Cal on the boards, so I (and a few others, in tacit agreement, it seemed) began to post about women's basketball. Our posts would get lost in the shuffle, and it seemed that very few people other than ourselves were reading them.

But apparently Chris Avery was reading them.

Chris reached out to me and said he would like to provide more coverage to women's sports at Cal and asked if I would like to write about women's basketball. He said that the death of wbb player Alisa Lewis (from meningitis, mid-season in 2004) helped him realize that he wanted to do more to highlight women athletes and their sports. So of course I signed up, eager to support his vision.

From the very beginning, Chris was so supportive of me and my writing. But I was also a complete novice, so Chris sent other writers/staff to help me (shout out to Ted Lee and Jim McGill!). And when I learned the ropes, he quickly allowed me the autonomy to publish my own articles. I will always be grateful for that trust. Chris also encouraged me to cover sports other than women's basketball--we had a memorable trip together to cover the women's volleyball Final Four--but he also understood my need to balance other responsibilities.

Over the years, Chris remained steadfast in his support of women's basketball, despite the fact that coverage did not make financial sense for Bear Insider, as the overwhelming bulk of the business/traffic is still around football and men's basketball. Long after the women's team had reached national relevance (Top 25 status) and thus was getting more coverage from other media outlets, he kept us on the beat; it would have been easy for him to pull back, to say "There's plenty of coverage now." Instead, he continued to find ways for us to cover big events like the NCAA Tournament, and of course the Final Four in New Orleans!

So, to the chorus of tributes and appreciations here, I'll add my own: Thank you Chris, for believing in a novice writer and providing me the opportunity to learn and grow. And most of all, thank you for believing in and championing women athletes and women's sports.


Viet
puget sound cal fan
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Thanks to Chris and you, Viet.
Refresh
Page 1 of 1
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.