CAL SHORES
As football legend would have it, Cal Shores of Estancia High was
an All-Madden Team candidate long before it was introduced to
television viewers.
Making the big tackles, showing gridiron savvy and sometimes
playing hurt, while leaving most of the spotlight for teammates, are
a few images of Shores under Eagles Coach Phil Brown.
A defensive lineman who once kicked PATs and field goals with a
broken right tibia to beat Fountain Valley, the 6-foot, 185-pounder
helped provide arguably the greatest goal-line stand in Estancia
football history.
It was the autumn of 1970. Estancia enjoyed its first winning
season (9-2), while setting a school record for victories in a season
that would last 19 years.
Shores, an All-Orange Coast Area selection, made the fourth-down
stop in the waning seconds to complete a goal-line stand against
Crestview League champion Orange in the Eagles’ first-round CIF
Southern Section 3-A playoff game, in which Estancia held on to win
the school’s first postseason contest, 19-14, at El Modena High.
“Probably the biggest highlight was our first CIF game, and the
first playoff game Estancia had ever played in,” said Shores, who
added that the Eagles’ quarterfinal matchup the following week
against top-seeded Bonita, featuring tailback Allen Carter, the CIF
3-A Player of the Year, was truly memorable despite the Bearcats’
15-14 win in pouring rain at Orange Coast College.
In the Eagles’ 21-19 victory over Fountain Valley in Week 8,
Shores iced it with his kicking, even though he had a broken tibia.
“Back in those days, you just taped it up,” he quipped.
Shores, a two-sport standout who also played baseball in former
Estancia Coach Ken Millard’s first season, played in the Orange
County All-Star Football Game as a defensive lineman and played two
seasons at Orange Coast with guys like Pat Sweetland (Costa Mesa) and
Alvin White (Newport Harbor).
Prior to arriving at Estancia, Shores attended rival Costa Mesa
his first two years of high school and lettered on the Mustangs’ 1968
football team as a sophomore kicker and outside linebacker. He was
classmates and teammates with Benny Ricardo, the future NFL kicker,
and the late Dan Quisenberry, one of baseball’s best relief pitchers
in the 1980s.
“My parents moved across town,” Shores said of the transfer. “We
were very poor. We used to live in an apartment, then my dad got a
house with a VA loan. He was a veteran from World War II and Korea.”
At Orange Coast, Shores moved to outside linebacker, and, by his
sophomore season, was starting for Coach Dick Tucker’s Pirates, who
finished 6-3 in 1972. “I just remember playing with a bunch of fun
guys,” said Shores, who sprouted to 6-1, 190 at OCC, then continued
his education without football at the University of San Diego, where
he joined former All-CIF Estancia teammate Lee Friedersdorf.
After college, Shores earned his teaching credential and returned
to his alma mater, and, for two years, was an assistant coach under
Jim Bratten. But that’s when Prop. 13 rattled the state’s education
pocketbook and Shores, among the last teachers hired, was among the
first ones let go by the school district. Shores has been an
insurance agent the last 25 years for Farmers Insurance.
Shores, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
lives in Mission Viejo with his wife and two children -- son Brett,
20, and daughter Katie, 14. Shores and his wife, the former Ann
Montano, were high school sweethearts at Estancia.
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