Mike Camp, Millennium Hall of Fame
Richard Dunn
Since heading off to Colorado State on a football scholarship,
former Estancia High multi-sport athlete Mike Camp has remained in the
land of mountains aplenty.
With his family in tow, Camp returns to Costa Mesa every summer and
surfs with his dad, while exposing his two children to Orange County’s
waves.
Then, it’s back to Englewood, Colo., where mountain biking,
snowboarding, camping, hiking and skiing await in the great outdoors.
“I never came back (to Orange County to live),” said Camp, a former
tight end at Colorado State. “Basically, I just decided I really enjoy
the mountains and the lifestyle out here. But we make sure to come out
every summer to get our beach fix.”
Once a strapping 6-foot-3, 225-pounder, Camp was the pride of Estancia
(circa 1978) in football, basketball and track and field, then became one
of the finest tight ends in Orange Coast College history.
A two-year starter at Colorado State in 1980 and ‘81, Camp quickly
became a fan favorite in Fort Collins, catching a game-winning, 19-yard
touchdown pass to beat rival Wyoming with four seconds left and cap a
thrilling home victory for the Rams.
“(The play) was designed to go to me, (and) I knew I’d better catch
the pass or otherwise I’d be run out of town,” Camp said. “If I missed
this pass, I might as well keep running west.”
Splashed on the Sunday front page of the Denver Post and highlighted
on all the Denver-based television news broadcasts, Camp suddenly found
stardom, or vice versa.
“That was a nice thing to have been a part of, when I caught that
winning touchdown pass,” said Camp, who didn’t pursue a pro football
career because of his limited size and speed.
As a tight end and wide receiver at Estancia, Camp was a first-team
All-Orange County and second-team All-CIF Southern Section Division I
selection, while also starting for two years at defensive end.
“There’s nothing more a guy can do as a receiver,” then-Estancia
football coach Jim Bratten said prior to the 1977 All-CIF voting. “(Camp)
plays inside and outside, he’s a great blocker and makes clutch catches.
He caught the ball when it had to be caught ... and he’s our best
blocking lineman. He could have been an all-league tackle the way he
blocked.”
Camp, listed as a first-team All-Century League wide receiver in the
autumn of ‘77, caught 41 passes for 588 yards his senior year as Estancia
(6-3-1) earned a CIF Southern Conference playoff berth as the league’s
No. 3 representative, losing to Riverside Poly in the first round.
Of Camp’s six touchdown catches, three were game-winning receptions.
In basketball, Camp could run the floor with anybody and also post up.
A two-year starting forward, he helped Estancia win the Century League
championship his junior year in 1976-77 as the Eagles, with Pete Neumann
and point guard Ray Orgill, went 21-6 in Coach Dave Carlisle’s final
year.
As a senior in Coach Larry Sunderman’s first year, Camp led the Eagles
to an 18-8 mark and a second straight trip to the CIF 3-A playoffs, a
season in which John Carrido and Jim Price were among the Eagle stars.
In track and field, Camp set school records in the shot put and
discus, the latter of which he still holds at 156 feet 8 inches. It is
one of the oldest marks (22 years) on the track and field record board on
a wall inside the Estancia boys gymnasium.
“I was fortunate to have great support from my parents (John and Pat),
and to have them being at all the games certainly played a large part in
any success we enjoyed,” said Camp, who played football and basketball at
Estancia with his younger brother, Tony (circa 1980), while his sister,
Susan, was also a big fan.
As an OCC tight end, Camp completed his two-year career with 51
catches for 543 yards, including his sophomore year in 1979 when he led the team in receiving (35-384).
Camp graduated from Colorado State with a degree in business
marketing, the springboard to his next move in the commercial real estate
business.
These days, Camp is senior vice president at CB Richard Ellis in
Denver, a large commercial real estate firm where he has been for 17
years.
Camp, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, lives
the Rocky Mountain suburban life with his wife of 11 years, Pam, and two
children: Andrew, 8, and Allison, 6.
“They’re active in all sports, including skiing and snowboarding,”
Camp said of his two kids.
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