Obituary: Bucko Shaw dies of liver cancer
- Share via
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - David “Bucko” Shaw, honored in the inaugural year
of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame in 1999 to celebrate the
millennium, died of liver cancer Sunday.
According to his brother, Bob, he passed away quietly at the home of
his friends, Mark and Laurie Keyes.
Shaw was a star on the 1974 Newport Harbor High Sunset League
championship football team, which set a school record for victories in a
season as Coach Bill Pizzica’s Sailors finished 10-2.
That season, Shaw, a first-team all-league strong safety, returned an
interception 100 yards for a touchdown against Loara.
Shaw, at 5-foot-8, 170 pounds, was a pass-protecting left tackle his
junior year for quarterback Steve Bukich, who later played at UCLA, in
1973 as the Tars shared the Sunset title. He switched to safety his
senior year and earned All-Orange Coast area and All-Orange County
honors.
“Back then, every team in the Sunset League was just a battle and
almost every game was a nail-biter,” Shaw once said.
Shaw later coached at Newport Harbor as a defensive coordinator under
Mike Giddings, helping the Tars win three consecutive Sea View League
championships from 1983 through ’85.
Along with an unforgettable nickname -- given to him by his brother,
Bob -- Shaw was always the “undisputed life of any party,” his brother
said. “Someone casually asked him what he did (for a living). He
scratched his chin, thought a minute, then said, ‘You know how a golf pro
shows people how to play golf? Well, I show them how to have a good
time.”’
Any night in Newport Beach were live music was playing, locals would
spot him suddenly appearing on stage for his unique rendition of “Surfin’
USA.”
When interviewed for the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, Shaw said he
would often sing the Beach Boys tune for last call at the Cannery
restaurant.
“In the last years of his life, he turned a lot of his
over-indulgences around, largely thanks to his friends,” Bob Shaw said.
“His former teammate and lifelong friend, Tommy Bozacas, got him into his
church and Tommy’s father, John, got him into his Newport Athletic Club,
where he was a daily feature.”
His brother added: “He had an enormous appetite for life and fun and
wanted everyone else to join in. He loved loud bars, race tracks,
surfing, the Three Stooges and being with his hordes of friends.
“The hundreds of people who will gather on a peninsula beach this
weekend for his memorial services will not just be thinking about
football, (but) they will be remembering a great guy, a great friend ...”
When Shaw’s sister, Sandy, was a Harbor cheerleader, he once said his
“first idols were Newport Harbor football players” in the early 1960s,
when he could look out his bedroom window and see Davidson Field.
Shaw was single and 44.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.