Pries gives back
Golden memories, hearty laughter and the exhilaration of
expectation filled the banquet hall Saturday night at the Hyatt
Newporter for the inaugural Corona del Mar Baseball Hall of Fame
induction dinner.
But with the swiftness of one of his overpowering fastballs, Jeff
Pries, who joined Matt Keough and Ty Harper, as well as the CIF
Southern Section 2-A championship team of 1981, as the first
inductees, imposed a sudden and poignant silence over the estimated
gathering of 150 early on in his acceptance speech.
“This is wonderful and haunting at the same time,” said Pries,
whose storybook prep career in both baseball and basketball secured
his place in the pantheon of Newport-Mesa athletics. After graduating
in 1981, he pitched three seasons at UCLA and was drafted in the
first round by the New York Yankees. But arm trouble, including a
torn rotator cuff in 1989, limited his promising career to five minor
league seasons.
He was 20-0 as a pitcher in three varsity seasons as a prep,
including 9-0 as a senior. He also played shortstop en route to CIF
2-A and Sea View League Player of the Year honors, the latter a
repeat honor.
Former CdM baseball coach Tom Trager said Pries was so gifted that
had he chosen to be a position player as a professional, instead of
pitch, people would now be comparing World Series MVP Troy Glaus to
the 6-foot-4 Pries.
He averaged 21 points and 10 rebounds as a senior basketball star,
leading the Sea Kings to the CIF 3-A crown. Former basketball coach
Paul Orris, in his third decade teaching at the school, considers
Pries the best athlete to ever wear the nautical blue.
“This is great for me and it’s hard for me,” Pries continued. “But
this is an opportunity to celebrate one of the greatest times in my
life, playing with great guys (at CdM). We had a magical team.”
Now a pastor to young couples at Mariners Chuch in Irvine, Pries,
who lives in Turtle Rock with his wife and four kids, still feels the
pull of diamond dreams.
“I was riding the life cycle a few weeks ago during the playoffs
when they showed the 10 greatest moments in baseball history,” he
said. “I almost got emotional. It got me thinking that nothing moves
us in life like God and sports; the friendship, the competition, the
joy of winning and the sadness of losing. These (current and future
players) need sports. We know it, if they don’t. Do they need that
(motioning to a model of the proposed stadium project for which
proceeds of the $100 per-plate affair are headed)? Probably not. But
something like that shows kids we care about them and we want them to
have great things.
“People need to see kids high-fiving, playing and running. Kids
are doing great things in sports. I would have loved to have made it,
so I could write a big check for something like (the stadium). I’d
liked to have made it so I could give back; to have a way I could
touch lives. But that didn’t happen.”
With his eloquence, Pries showed he can still touch lives, perhaps
more deeply than he moved those who saw him play. I’m not among those
fortunate enough to have watched him compete, but having heard his
words Saturday night, you can’t convince me he hasn’t “made it” in
the biggest game of all.
*
However serious his message, Pries left them laughing with the
following, er, tribute to his mother.
“My mom used to cook me steak and eggs before every game,” he
recalled. “Who knows how good I could have been if my arteries
weren’t three-fourths clogged.”
*
Walt Harper, who introduced his son, Ty, the catalyst for the 1999
CIF Division IV championship team and the holder of most Newport-Mesa
career hitting records, also delivered some poignant words.
“My son’s career in baseball challenged me to be a better person,”
said Walt Harper, who coached Ty’s youth teams, still coaches CdM
teams in offseason leagues, and follows his son, now a Pepperdine
senior, by attending virtually all of his home games, as well as
several on the road.
*
Dan Grigsby, lifelong friend and former CdM teammate of Keough,
introduced him with several stories of the former major league
pitcher’s athletic prowess.
Grigsby said he saw Keough both punt and throw a football 70
yards. He also caught one no-hitter, two one-hitters and a pair of
two-hitters during Keough’s senior year in 1972 and said Keough
received scholarship offers to play football in college, though he
never played a down at CdM.
Pries later vouched for Keough’s legend, noting one Sea King
teammate regularly chided him with the humbling reminder: “You’re no
Matt Keough.”
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