Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame: Maureen McLaren, Newport Harbor
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Barry Faulkner
A look back at the athletic career of 1992 Newport Harbor High
graduate Maureen McLaren is best done through kaleidoscope eyes.
But the eclectic tastes of this former three-sport prep standout, who
went on to win six NCAA team championships in two sports at Stanford, are
hardly limited to sports.
It would surprise many that the 26-year-old San Francisco resident now
teaches high school history, a subject she abhored her early years at
Harbor.
Those familiar with this tall and talented former Tar, however, would be
less aghast to learn McLaren speaks longingly of becoming a firefighter,
or, perhaps, chasing some Stanford chums into the rush for Internet
riches being mined in her virtual back yard.
“Education facinates me, but I’m still kind of figuring things out,” said
the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Famer. “I’m still young and there’s tons
of stuff going on. I like to keep my options open.”
Routine has never been a concept associated with the 6-foot McLaren, who
doesn’t so much rebel against the status quo, as embrace the serendipity
of life.
She said she hated basketball in junior high, but went on to become a
three-time all-league center and Orange County All-Star Game MVP in the
sport.
She resisted the regimen of club volleyball, even quitting one season,
only to relent when the doors to Stanford would open only if she
showcased her skills her senior club campaign.
She held no such ambivalence toward swimming, where her talent was,
perhaps, most transcendant. The sport, which she said saved her
collegiate athletic career, remains the “soulful” staple of her fitness
routine, and will be for life.
It was volleyball, however, for which she is most associated. A middle
blocker, she earned All-Sea View honors four times and was the league’s
Co-MVP as a senior. She was All-CIF Southern Section in Division 5-A as a
junior and a senior and was the MVP of the Orange County All-Star match.
After the aforementioned return to the Orange County Volleyball Club,
which she helped win national age-group titles in eighth and 12th grade,
she ventured to Palo Alto on a volleyball scholarship.
“Stanford was always my No. 1 choice,” she said. “I always sounded really
cool and my parents went there.”
The former Sea View League Female Athlete of the Year immediately took to
Stanford’s atmosphere of achievement, making lifetime friendships.
“The people are what stays with me most from my time at Stanford. They’re
all still my best friends. They’re the reason why I still live in the
area.”
Athletics were somewhat less fulfilling, at least individually.
She played a reserve role on the 1992 NCAA champion volleyball champions,
beginning what she termed a “difficult saga.”
She started at middle blocker and outside hitter as a sophomore, but wear
and tear from nearly a decade of year-round competition took a toll on
her knees and forced her to the sideline.
“My knees completely went bad,” she said. “I was taking gnarly pain pills
so I could practice and I couldn’t even feel my knees. That got a little
scary, and I decided that wasn’t something I should be doing if I wanted
to walk up stairs when I was 40.”
The Cardinal won another NCAA crown her junior season, but she never
again cracked the lineup.
She swam an All-American time (56.21) to finish second in the 100-yard
backstroke at the CIF 3-A finals her senior year at Newport, and was
encouraged to continue at Stanford.
She did not qualify for the NCAA championships her freshman year, but did
so the next three, helping the Cardinal win four straight national
titles.
She as 11th in the 100-meter backstroke and 12th in the 200 back as a
sophomore, then made the consolation final in the 100 back at the NCAA
championships as a junior.
As a senior, she finished second in the 100 and seventh in the 200
backstroke at the NCAA meet.
“Without swimming, my career as a college athlete would have been a much
sadder story,” McLaren said.
She obtained her degree in American studies and is in her second year of
teaching at Woodside High, just outside San Francisco.
She said much of her inspiration to teach came from Harbor volleyball
coach and history teacher Dan Glenn. She also credits former Tars
basketball coach Shannon Jokosky as a valued mentor.
“She’s one of the best athletes we’ve ever had,” Glenn said of his former
star.
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