Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame: Shorty Scheafer
Steve Virgen
If baseball is truly America’s pastime, it’s because of people like
Conrad “Shorty” Scheafer. Shorty produced a slice of America with youth
baseball in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Along with his friend Luke
Davis, Scheafer coached the Harbor Area baseball program in the 1960s,
and it’s on this week Shorty is recognized as a Daily Pilot Sports Hall
of Fame honoree.
Scheafer, born Feb. 13, 1926 in Danville, Ill., stood 5-foot-3, and on
a good day, 5-4, thus the nickname, Shorty. He was hardly ever called
Conrad.
Shorty’s love for baseball began in Illinois and he carried it over to
California when he and his family moved there. The Scheafers resided in
Costa Mesa since 1958, when Shorty began to work for the Costa Mesa
County Water District.
His family would consist of wife, Isabella, four boys, Fred, Mike, Tom
and Frank, and one girl, Theresa.
The four brothers also took up the love for baseball and eventually
played for the Harbor Area baseball program.
There was a time, Tom and Mike Scheafer remember, when Shorty and
Davis coached a Pepsi-Cola baseball squad that entered a nationwide
tournament with the division area winner advancing to competition in
Hawaii. Newport Harbor High standout Chris Thompson and current Costa
Mesa High football coach Dave Perkins were on the team.
Shorty’s squad nearly moved on to Hawaii, but they had their division
area semifinal win taken away from them after opposing coaches learned
the Pepsi-Cola team used sawed off bats.
“We ended up getting booted out of the tournament,” said Mike
Scheafer, who was the team’s batboy. “We probably could have went to
Hawaii. My dad was also really big with the Harbor Area baseball program.
He always made an effort to coach. He just spent a lot of time with us.
When I had my first son. We coached him together. My dad was always there
for the kids. It wasn’t so much that we won championships, because I
don’t remember us winning championships. But we always enjoyed the sport.
The winning wasn’t always that important.”
Aside from coaching, Shorty, a U.S. Marine, also worked as an umpire.
His voice and aura always stood taller than his body frame and when he
took to the diamond he took charge, Tom Scheafer described.
He was firm, yet he still came off as a gentle man.
“He was the nicest guy you would want to meet,” Tom Scheafer said. “If
he told you to jump, you would jump. He wasn’t strict. He would do
anything for any kid.”
Shorty also visited schools in the area and delivered speeches about
water. And, also at the schools, he dressed up as Santa Claus.
“I still have his old Santa Claus uniform,” Mike Scheafer said.
At the Costa Mesa County Water District, Shorty, with an attractive
personality, developed lifelong friendships, including with Ray Perry,
whose son, Art, is now a golf coach at Estancia High.
“He was always coaching and helping the youth,” Art Perry said of
Shorty. “He always attended the Estancia High events and he was an Orange
Coast College sports follower. He was the president of the Lion’s Club.”
Shorty’s desire to coach and teach youth especially benefited his own
children. His love for baseball and the importance of teamwork are values
his sons pass on to their children. For Tom Scheafer baseball was family
and it was fun.
“We used to play wiffle ball,” Tom Scheafer said. “The window would
break once a week. If it was a rock you didn’t want to tell Dad, but if
it was wiffle ball it was OK. My dad, he threw a baseball even before he
walked.”
Shorty’s passion was a big reason for the success and unity of the
Harbor Area baseball program.
Conrad “Shorty” Scheafer was 66 when he died after heart problems in
1992.
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