Boys basketball: State of distinction
Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - The newsprint is beige around the edges and
memories have been blurred by a decade of everyday bustle. Most of the
pictures, patches and plaques have been packed away by Mom and contact
with one another has become mostly a matter of random chance.
But today, 10 years to the day the Estancia High boys basketball team
won the CIF State Division III championship with an 82-72 triumph over
Washington High of Fremont at the Oakland Coliseum Arena, the
accomplishment echoes loudly through the rarefied air of Newport-Mesa
prep athletic lore.
Not before, nor since, has a Newport-Mesa school captured the ultimate
basketball prize. And the odds against another state crown grow longer in
the current landscape, in which talent pools filter annually to seemingly
the same high-profile programs, both public and private. Indeed, the
homespun wonder of one unit progressing from community playgrounds to the
grand CIF arena stage, has become as likely as a “Hoosiers” sequel.
“I’ve learned to appreciate them more with each passing year,” said
Tim O’Brien, whose five-year coaching tenure with the Eagles (1987-88
through 1991-92) included an astounding 27 postseason games. “It’s the
standard by which I measure all my teams.”
That team, those golden Eagles, were nothing if not standard. Without
a single future four-year college basketball player and lacking imposing
size -- a pair of spindly 6-foot-5 frontcourt players surrounded by a
rotation of 6-footers -- O’Brien’s squad gained no psychological quarter
in pregame layup drills.
But, maniacally competitive, artfully aligned and individually adept
and unselfish, the defending CIF Southern Section 3-AA champions went
29-5, won the Pacific Coast League, lost in the 3-AA section title game,
then beat three section champions in five days, all away from home, to
reign supreme among California’s Division III schools.
“It was definitely a lifetime moment,” said Torrey Hammond, a 6-5
senior starter in ‘91, who saved one of his four double-figure scoring
outputs for the 64-40 Southern California Regional final win over Pomona.
The victory propelled Estancia to Oakland and avenged a 48-45 loss in the
Southern Section final to the Red Devils, a week before at the same Los
Angeles Sports Arena venue.
“It’s become like a fish story,” said Jeff Hokanson, a senior super
sub in ‘91, who dropped a season-high nine points and 11 rebounds on
Fremont, then hosted the team party later that night, after the Estancia
contingent flew back to Orange County. “You know, we probably say we beat
teams by a lot more than we did and all the guys we played against have
grown much bigger.
“But, in the end, it’s something nice to have. I think we all
appreciate it more now than we did then. It’s still something we think
about and talk about, unlike pretty much everything else that happened
during high school.”
O’Brien, who went on to coach seven years at Orange Coast College,
before moving to Irvine-based Northwood High which will enter its second
varsity season with its first senior class next year, recalls much of
what happened between the whistles that special season. But the
reflections he savors most are a string of smaller moments that escaped
the spectators’ gaze.
“It was all the little things they did away from the court that made
the difference,” O’Brien said. “They hung together all the time.”
LINE DRAWN IN THE SAND
Among countless bonding experiences were weekly offseason beach
football games at Newport’s 42nd Street.
“If you thought we were competitive at basketball, you should have
seen the 1991 Estancia Eagles playing football,” said Paul McDaniels, a
senior point guard in ’91. “It was supposedly touch football, but you
could really bend the rules. There was a lot of tackling going on. The
competitiveness in those games was unbelievable. It would be the seniors
against Tim and the rest of the guys. We threw every once in a while, but
we usually ran right at Tim. He’d throw three guys to the ground, then
down the guy with the ball. Easing up wasn’t in his vocabulary.”
Recalled Hokanson, “We’d sit around during the day and draw up plays.
We’d be trying to run the option and everything. But, just like most of
the stuff we did together, it was so fun because we were all such good
friends.”
O’Brien said the football sessions were, at once, a conditioning tool,
a bonding exercise, and sheer, unadulterated fun.
“I had more fun watching the seniors bicker with one another in the
huddle before every play,” he said. “They were always so competitive.”
COMPETING AS ONE
Though consistently cutthroat and combative, O’Brien and his players
said there was never any unhealthy competition for the spotlight.
“Accomplishing what that team did isn’t always about putting the best
players on the court,” O’Brien said. “None of our guys went on to play at
four-year schools, but they were very steady players. (Starters) Mike
Haas and Son Ly later played a year for me at OCC, and guys played other
sports in college. But they grew up together and they really cared about
one another.”
McDaniels, who along with Haas started a multimedia Internet company
they now run in Aliso Niguel, said their strong friendships, and
O’Brien’s guidance, combined to create a unified front on the court.
“Most of us had been playing basketball together since we were 10
years old,” McDaniels said. “We knew where each other would be and we
knew our limitations. And Coach made sure everyone knew their roles.
“I didn’t jack up 20-foot jumpers, because that was Mike’s game, not
mine. And I didn’t try to make any flashy drives along the baseline,
because that was Sonny’s thing. Torrey and Matt knew we needed them to
score inside, rebound and block shots and everyone who came off the bench
knew what they needed to do to contribute.
“We were very well coached and we reacted very well to Tim’s coaching.
We had a synergy that went way beyond what normal high school teams have
and a lot of that should be attributed to Tim O’Brien. And we all got
along, which, I think, had a lot to do with why we succeeded.”
Hokanson, a Cardiff resident, agreed.
“We were the kind of team that didn’t look very good getting off the
bus,” Hokanson said. “We had some good athletes, but we were more of a
good unit. It was fun going against teams with guys who outsized us and
were even better athletes and beating them.
“I wonder, sometimes, how someone would feel about being on teams that
went 3-30 in high school. Luckily, we’ll never know.”
THE PERSONALITY PROFILES
Hokanson, largely recognized as the group’s social secretary, was
asked to relate some insights into the character of the teammates who
made up the primary playing rotation.
*On McDaniels, who averaged 8.8 points per game: “I think Paul was the
leader. He was quiet in the way he led, but everyone looked up to him. He
was another guy who went out of his way to make sure everyone would get
together and do things off the court.
“Basketball-wise, he was our best athlete. He had speed, strength, the
whole package. It was important to have that from our point guard.”
*On Haas, a 6-1 shooting guard who averaged 13.3 points, including
career-high 32 in the SoCal regional opener at San Diego Section champion
Ramona and 27 in the state title game: “He was our ego, the spice of our
team. He was never afraid to shoot with the pressure on. Love him or hate
him, he brought he kind of confidence every good team needs.”
*On Fuerbringer, a 6-5 junior center who averaged 16.2 points and went
on to earn All-CIF honors and become an Orange County All-Star: “I would
say he was our glue, because he was so consistent. I don’t ever remember
a time when he got disciplined for not showing up to play. When the
pressure was on, he never let off the gas. He also had a lot of athletic
ability.”
*On Ly, a slashing 5-11 forward who averaged 12.5 points and whose
quickness made him a valuable defender: “He was pure energy. He didn’t
speak up a lot, but he just never got tired. His skills came a long way
in high school and he matured late in his career. He’s the one guy who
probably still plays the most basketball and has the most game. He’s a
freak of nature who will probably be running circles around other guys
when he’s 60.”
*On Hammond, who averaged 5.0 points: “He had a big body and he always
played hard. He was physical inside and we needed that. He was never
concerned about how many points he scored, which is the kind of guy every
team needs. Coach O’Brien was really good about keeping guys like Torrey
going by giving them a lot of positive feedback. (O’Brien) was as happy
for a guy who took three charges, as he was for the guy who was filling
it up.”
*On himself, who led the bench brigade: “I took pride in D-ing up.
Whether I wanted to score or not, I knew concentrating on anything but
defense would not bode well for my playing time. I was usually the guy
guarding the biggest, tallest guy on the other team, stepping on his feet
or grabbing his shorts. But I was just glad to be a part of it.”
*On Tim Leonard, a 5-10 senior reserve guard: “He’s still a great
friend of mine and another big contributor. He came off the bench and
consistently handled the tempo. He could have been the starting point
guard at a lot of schools.”
*On Tim Pieper, a 5-10 senior reserve: “He was happy to come in and be
an offensive sniper, or just grind it out on defense.”
Hokanson said the remaining bench players all worked hard in practice,
but he singled out Albert Huang, a 6-0 senior, as being particularly
intense at virtually every workout.
SUCCESS BEYOND THE COURT
Though most of the team’s future basketball experiences involved
intramurals or pickup games, it did produce professional athletes in
three other sports.
McDaniels, who hit one of the biggest home runs in Estancia history as
a freshman to key a stunning CIF playoff upset of La Quinta, went on to
play baseball at OCC and the University of San Francisco.
He played two seasons professionally as an outfielder in the Boston
Red Sox organization, for the single-A Lowell (Mass.) Spinners and the
Battle Creek-based Michigan Battle Cats.
Fuerbringer went on to become a four-time volleyball All-American at
Stanford, where he won one national championships and wound up becoming
the all-time kills leader for the Cardinal.
He has played professionally on the beach, as well as indoors and
currently is playing indoors in Spain, after two seasons in Vienna,
Austria.
Leonard accepted a tennis scholarship to Texas Christian University
and later played professionally on the satellite tour.
Beyond athletics, Hammond is currently finishing dental school at Loma
Linda University.
McDaniels obtained a degree in finance from USF, while Haas graduated
from Arizona and Hokanson, a sales representative for a large
pharmaceutical company, earned a law degree from UCSB.
Ly is working with the disabled, according to Hokanson, who also said
Leonard has owned his own business since hanging up his racquet.
O’Brien said he still hears from his former players periodically and
has yet to hear anything but good news.
Whether another Newport-Mesa high school team makes similar news on
the court, remains to be seen. But, thanks to the 1990-91 Estancia Eagles, March 16 should always remain an anniversary date to remember.
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