Tom Kitchens, Millennium Hall of Fame
Richard Dunn
What is pure football, and is there such a term?
If you talk to former Newport Harbor High two-way lineman Tom
Kitchens, he’ll give you an answer, and it might go something like this:
“In high school, we had this great pro coach (Mike Giddings) and he
ran things like a professional system. He was the conductor and he ran a
tight ship, but there weren’t all these athletes getting big salaries. It
was purely about the game, purely about the experience and socialization,
which I think is a tremendous part of team sports, especially at that
age.
“None of this other stuff matters. You won’t find that in a college or
pro football program today.”
For Kitchens, high school football was more than earning All-CIF
Southern Section Central Conference as an offensive tackle for the
Sailors in the fall of 1984.
“I don’t think I’d be where I am today if it wasn’t for high school
football and getting involved with that,” said Kitchens, an imposing
6-foot-6, 237-pounder who stacked up against some of the best linemen in
the business, and is now a C-141 pilot and captain in the U.S. Air Force,
stationed at McChord Air Force Base in Tacoma, Wash.
“(Giddings) kind of took up the job (as head Newport coach in 1982) as
a hobby, to tell you the truth,” Kitchens added. “I had not had a better
coach at any level. (Giddings) was a pro football coach who was doing
this for the love of the game, because he thought it would benefit us,
and, of course, it did.
“But it was the socialization thing ... I thought that was an
important thing about football. You get together a bunch of guys, and, in
a way, it’s a little like a military indoctrination with the two-a-days
in football ... You learn to do things with other folks, you have that
team ethic drilled into you.”
Kitchens was one of Newport Harbor’s outstanding linemen, along with
Mike Beech and Jason Nedelman, in the Shane Foley-Fritz Howser era as the
Sailors shared the Sea View League championship with Saddleback in ’84
and finished 9-1-2 overall after an upset loss to Sunny Hills in the CIF
Central Conference quarterfinals.
A two-year starter, Kitchens was one of five finalists for the ’84
John Gust Athletic Scholarship, an annual Newport Harbor award selected
by the coaches and based on players’ desire, dedication, enthusiasm,
self-sacrifice, improvement, responsibility and excellence.
A first-team All-Sea View League defensive lineman by the Daily Pilot,
Kitchens was a first-team all-league choice by the circuit’s coaches on
the other side of the ball on a Giddings squad that also featured wide
receiver Ho Truong and defensive back Tom Spangler.
As a junior, Kitchens played tight end -- “although they never threw
the ball to me,” he quipped -- and defensive tackle as Newport Harbor
produced a Sea View League title and 8-3-1 record, also reaching the CIF
Central Conference quarterfinals.
“I’d say Mike Giddings the coach was one of the more important things
about my experience,” Kitchens said. “He was so great for younger guys,
those of us developing and getting into our adult years.”
Kitchens went on to play junior varsity football and rugby at the Air
Force Academy, then continued his athletic career as a self-described
“scrummy,” a rugby term for “one of the bigger guys who interlock and
compete over the ball ... the backs are the faster guys and they tend to
do a lot of opening field running, like in football. I was a total
scrummy in both football and rugby.”
His experience in football’s two-a-day summer practices helped groom
Kitchens for an 11-month pilot training program after graduating from the
Air Force Academy.
“You eat, breath and sleep nothing but flying,” said Kitchens, who
took up his wings in 1990.
Kitchens became disgruntled with a desk job for a few years, before
going back up in the sky in 1995.
Kitchens, the latest member of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame to
be honored, is engaged to be married and lives in downtown Seattle.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.