MIKE SHAUGHNESSY
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Richard Dunn
Arriving on the heels of Randy Vataha, former Estancia High
standout Mike Shaughnessy rebuked college football’s old theory of
how much size matters to a player.
“Vataha’s play (at receiver) had broken down some barriers in how
you had to be a certain size and have a certain height and a certain
weight, otherwise they couldn’t use you,” said Shaughnessy, a wide
receiver and defensive back at Estancia (Class of ‘70) who became a
star receiver for Golden West College and later for Cal in the Pac 8
Conference at 5-foot-9, 160 pounds.
Vataha, a JC All-American at Golden West with a similar physique,
was two years ahead of Shaughnessy and became a star at Stanford,
where Mike White was an assistant coach. White was later hired at
Berkeley as the head coach -- just in time for Shaughnessy and the
comparisons to Vataha.
“We were kind of similar packages,” said Shaughnessy, who followed
Vataha’s brilliant Rustler career with All-South Coast Conference
accolades.
“I was just coming out of Golden West College when Randy Vataha
was just finishing (his career) at Stanford ... (Vataha) had played
real well in college and people expected me to be doing the same
things.”
After his two-year GWC career in 1970-71, Shaughnessy seemed all
but signed, sealed and delivered to Stanford, but White’s coaching
change from Stanford to Cal set in motion Shaughnessy’s commitment to
the Bears late in the recruiting season.
Shaughnessy did not become an All-American at Cal, but enjoyed an
excellent Pac 8 career that included receiving the conference’s
longest touchdown pass of the season (about 78 yards) from Bears
quarterback Steve Bartkowski in 1973, Shaughnessy’s senior year.
Following the touchdown, Shaughnessy did a back flip in the end
zone, keeping a promise he once made to his buddy, Cal center Kevin
O’Dorisio. “I’d been doing back flips in full pads (in practice) and
O’Dorisio (one of the Bears’ captains) had been bugging me to do it
in a game if I caught a touchdown, and sure enough, a couple of weeks
later, I caught this pass from Bartkowski,” Shaughnessy said. “I was
so tired at the end of the run, I barely made my back flip.”
Years later, longtime former NFL player and coach Howard Mudd, who
was Cal’s offensive line coach in ‘73, bumped into Shaughnessy and
relived the back-flip moment. “He said it was something he’d always
remember. He couldn’t believe it,” Shaughnessy said. “It was kind of
before all that end zone (celebration) stuff started going on.”
Perhaps Shaughnessy’s favorite highlight came in a home game
against Ohio State and Buckeye Coach Woody Hayes and Heisman Trophy
tailback Archie Griffin. Early in the game, Shaughnessy ran a reverse
and “got hammered” on the play, but later ran a reverse and threw a
touchdown pass to Steve Sweeney.
Prior to his collegiate career, Shaughnessy played on the lower
levels at Estancia until his senior year, when he was a two-way
starter and earned a spot on the South team in the Orange County
All-Star football game.
“I think I was actually a more polished defensive player at the
time, but I knew I wanted to be a receiver in college,” said
Shaughnessy, an All-Irvine League defensive back for then-Estancia
Coach Phil Brown in the autumn of 1969.
Shaughnessy, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of
Fame, was a football coach for 27 years, including the last six as
head coach at Golden West, before taking a sabbatical leave this
year.
After devoting most of his adult life to coaching and teaching,
Shaughnessy is ready to apply more of his keen insights to his own
three children: Patrick, 8, Kevin, 7, and daughter Kelly, 6.
Shaughnessy, 50, said he’s undecided about returning to the coaching
ranks.
Shaughnessy, who lives in Huntington Beach with his “wonderful
wife” Gabriella, said his wife has been very supportive throughout
his coaching career and will continue to do so if he chooses to
return to coaching.
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