Thousands memorialize fallen star
Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - In forms of expression as unique and varied as the ways
he touched so many, approximately 3,000 family, friends, teammates,
coaches, teachers, classmates, rivals and community members gathered
Wednesday at Newport Harbor High School’s football stadium to celebrate
the life of Andre Stewart.
The record-setting senior running back, beloved by more for his warmth,
determination, style and charm than for his athletic talent, was killed
early Sunday morning when the car he was driving crashed into a guardrail
on the Pomona Freeway. He was 18.
From the podium directly in front of the Davidson Field bleachers, where
thousands watched Stewart rush for a school single-season record 2,404
yards and score 26 touchdowns to help the Sailors win the CIF Southern
Section Division VI championship last fall, dozens spoke glowingly of the
shy but engaging young man, embraced by this community upon arriving from
San Jose before his freshman year.
Music, cheers, applause, tears and laughter also punctuated the almost
90-minute ceremony.
But Stewart’s mother, Sonja William, in the street vernacular her son, an
amateur rapper, frequently used to communicate with peers, may have
captured the overriding sentiment of the sprawling mourners best.
“My baby was da bomb! Our baby was da bomb!” said William, her arm
interlocked with that of her husband, Dariel William, Stewart’s
stepfather.
Sonja William, with whom senior Mike Tunney, Stewart’s teammate and
weightlifting partner, said Stewart had the closest bond, related the
“mother’s intuition,” which awakened her from her sleep at 3:30 a.m. on
Mother’s Day, the exact time the accident occurred.
She also detailed the love and pride she held for her son, whom she
always regarded as special.
“I didn’t brag about him, but if I had a picture of him out at work and
other people commented on him, I would educate them,” William said. “He
made all of us so proud.”
Stewart’s stepfather, who noted “there’s no better place we could do this
today,” acknowledged his son’s passion for football and his devotion to
his teammates.
“We were Andre’s family, but he had a stronger family, which was those
guys over there,” he said, gesturing to the football team, assembled in
chairs adjacent to the podium, wearing their home blue jerseys.
Stewart’s No. 2 jersey was placed in front of the makeshift midfield
memorial, which included notes, photos, an autographed team football, and
other mementos.
“Sometimes I thought Coach (Jeff) Brinkley was his father,” William said
jokingly.
Finally, his stepfather offered: “If you never saw Andre play football,
you missed something.”
Brinkley, and assistant coach Mike Bargas, praised Stewart’s football
talent, as well as his progress off the field.
“As a player, he brought spirit into the competitive situation,” Brinkley
said. “The tougher the game, the more Andre gave of himself.
“He came to us as a shy, uncomfortable freshman and became a confident,
outgoing senior. We always say if we can improve a little bit each day,
big things can occur. Andre was on that road.”
Bargas called Stewart a vibrant, strong-willed soul, who will be
remembered for his personality, his character and his smile.
Brian Moore, Stewart’s uncle, thanked the Sea View League and CIF for
“providing a stage for Andre to dance on.”
Seniors Andy Kalanz and Robert Cole, as well as Tunney, spoke on behalf
of the football team.
Tunney said that when they were freshmen, Andre told him they would be
CIF champions as seniors.
“It wasn’t a half-hearted promise, not a ‘what if?’ or a dream. It was a
guarantee he put his stamp on. We did win that championship and Andre
became the greatest rusher to ever come through here. We celebrate that
to this very day.”
Cole, a 300-pound offensive tackle known to Stewart and his teammates as
“Big Daddy,” fittingly recalled a sign posted over the door of the
school’s weight room.
“The sign says, ‘How do you want to be remembered?’ ” Cole said. “I’m
comfortable in the way he’ll be remembered. This stadium was like a
second home to us. This place is where he truly shined.”
Pastor Earle Craig, who presided over the ceremony and whose sons Brad
and Morgan were Harbor teammates of Stewart’s, said, “Knowing Andre was
something we all came to enjoy. Those who knew Andre loved his (colorful)
clothes, his shoes, his style, and his classic greeting: ‘Yo, dawg.’ ”
Several other family members, including his father, Tim Stewart, and his
half-brother, Lamar William, a Newport Harbor freshman who escaped
Sunday’s crash with only minor injuries, also expressed their love for
Andre. They all said how they’ll miss him, but will remember and love him
always.
Moore spoke of Stewart’s mischievous childhood in San Jose, but how his
family always knew there was an inherent goodness behind that smile.
“Andre wanted to know, growing up, that he was a good person who was
well-liked,” Moore said. “He now knows, eternally, that he was a great
person who was loved.”
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