Kevin McClelland, Millennium Hall of Fame
Regardless of one’s speed, strength and savvy, the violent nature
of football can end the career of even the game’s best players.
Kevin McClelland (Newport Harbor High) wasn’t ready to give up the
sport, but after three concussions during his redshirt freshman season at
Boise State, it was time to reevaluate his life.
A member of the Big Sky Conference All-Academic team in 1987,
McClelland, a bone-crushing 6-foot-2, 235-pound linebacker with
aspirations of playing in the NFL, was forced to stop the helmet bashing.
“It was one of the most difficult decisions I’ve ever made,”
McClelland said of terminating his collegiate football career, after
experiencing post-concussion syndrome.
“It took me a long time to get over that decision ... several years.
But I felt like it was the best thing I ever did. It was so eye-opening,
because I was so narrow-minded about one thing and one thing only, and
that was football. Once I was past (the post-career depression), I had
more balance in my life and I started to focus on family, friends and
education.”
Considered an excellent athlete under Newport Harbor football coach
Mike Giddings, McClelland was a three-year varsity performer who started
on both sides of the ball his junior and senior years.
The Sailors won Sea View League championships all three years
McClelland suited up (1983 through ‘85). Giddings used him on offense at
backup quarterback, fullback, tailback and tight end, but McClelland
preferred ripping into ballcarriers and made All-CIF Southern Section
Central Conference as an outside ‘backer in the autumn of 1985, when the
Tars also featured quarterback Shane Foley (USC) and wide receiver Mark
Craig (Long Beach State).
“What made me believe (in a pro football future) is that, when I was
in high school and college, I had size,” McClelland said. “I did not
necessarily have the quintessential linebacker speed, but I had speed, a
solid understanding of the game and I could hit and hit well.”
As a senior, McClelland rushed for 385 yards in 77 carries and caught
55 of Foley’s passes for 577 yards, scoring nine touchdowns -- five
receiving, four via the ground -- as the Tars finished 10-3 and reached the CIF Central Conference semifinals. But the Sailors two years earlier
made a bigger impact.
“From my point of view, the greatest team Newport Harbor ever had was
in my sophomore year (fall of ‘83),” said McClelland, who was called up
to the varsity that season as an insurance policy for running back Steve
Brazas.
“A lot of what Coach Giddings taught was very instrumental to a lot of
peoples’ success,” added McClelland, whose Sailor teams went 27-7-3 in
three years. “Giddings brought in a formalized standard of football to
the table.”
McClelland earned a full scholarship to Boise State, at the time a
Division I-AA school where he played linebacker and tight end.
Before arriving in Idaho, McClelland was the Defensive Player of the
Game in the 1986 Orange County All-Star football game at Orange Coast
College, a 28-13 victory for the South, which also included Foley.
McClelland intercepted a key pass late in the first half and
contributed several important tackles on third down for the South. The
North, with its vaunted backfield of Ray Pallares (Valencia) and Chuck
Weatherspoon (La Habra), was stuffed in the first half for a combined 17
rushing yards as McClelland made his presence felt.
“That was a very defining moment,” said McClelland, an easy choice for
All-Sea View League honors that year.
McClelland, who didn’t play football until the seventh grade, played
basketball and baseball at Newport Harbor and excelled in all three
sports -- until he decided to concentrate on football year-round.
“I enjoyed hitting people, getting down on the ground, getting back up
and getting back to the huddle,” he said of his first Pop Warner
experience.
McClelland’s career, however, was cut short because of head injuries.
“It’s kind of a sad (story) in terms of sports, but on the flip side,
(retiring from football early in college) was the best thing that ever
happened to me,” McClelland said. “We all wanted to play sports forever.”
These days, McClelland owns a software development company that he
launched 2 1/2 years ago with a business partner called Global Resource
Corp., based in Irvine.
McClelland, who received his business degree from San Diego State,
lives in Mission Viejo and is single. But the latest honoree in the Daily
Pilot Sports Hall of Fame to celebrate the millennium is hopeful of
marriage to Nikki.
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