Al Muniz, Newport Harbor
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Don Cantrell
Al Muniz is one of the finest football guards ever to come out of
Harbor High and Orange Coast College.
Muniz, a 1949 graduate of Newport Harbor, is the brother of the late
Manuel Muniz, a second-team All-CIF selection at tackle off the
championship ’42 grid team at Newport and the brother of Joe, a two-year
veteran at Harbor in 1943 and ’44.
He was also named first string All-Eastern Conference once in the
early 50’s and had been highly praised by the late Johnny Owens, the
early day OCC defensive coach.
“I always liked Johnny Owens,” Muniz said. To him, Owens was a solid
and fair-minded coach.
Looking back and noting that Muniz played through three head coaches
in high school and one in junior college, he was asked to name the one
who impressed him most over the years.
In response, Muniz said, “Al Irwin. He was the kind of man you wanted
to play your heart out for.”
By the time Muniz had cleared Orange Coast College, he had been
offered ample scholarships and 20 letters came from different colleges,
which included Washington State, Oregon State, Oregon, Tulsa, Fresno and
San Jose State. After considerable thought, he chose not to advance to a
major college.
One of his greatest performances in high school was the night his ’48
Harbor High team almost defeated St. Anthony of Long Beach, the defending
CIF champion, which starred future All-American fullback John Olszewski
and All-CIF quarterback Bill Mais. Both tired of Muniz exhausting them in
rugged line play.
He was a 250-pound guard with power and quickness. Few could defend
against him consistently.
Muniz also spent 10 years helping Costa Mesa youth with his coaching
in Pop Warner football. He once helped his brother Manuel with his youth
coaching in Santa Ana. His two top players were his son, and Isaac
Curtis, who went on to star at Santa Ana High in the backfield, and at
end for the Cincinnati Bengals.
Muniz later helped coach the Costa Mesa Comanches six years (the 9-11
age group) and the Costa Mesa Caballos (the 12-12 age group) four years.
He played on one championship team that still prompts amusement. It
was the Future Farmers of America basketball team. It was the Future
Farmers of America basketball team at Harbor High in the late 40’s and he
was the sixth man.
Over the years, Muniz was one of the grid team’s most admired players
at all levels, and today he finds himself in a similar position with his
induction into the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating the
oncoming millennium.
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