Neumann recalls 50 years
ROGER CARLSON
There’s a lot of talk, it seems, about 50 years ago ... 1955.
McDonalds and Disneyland arrived during the peaceful lull between
Korea and Viet Nam and Dwight David Eisenhower was in the midst of an
eight-year run as our President.
Somewhat concurrently were the exploits of a Newport Harbor High
graduate named George Yardley, who was playing for the Fort Wayne
Pistons when he took time out to attend the Sailors’ sports awards
banquet for the 1954-55 basketball team.
Up stepped Yardley to the dais and in his inimitable style,
presented the George Yardley Trophy to the Sunset League’s Most
Valuable Player, a senior named Paul Neumann.
Paul Neumann, the little 5-foot-3 eighth-grader who had once met
the 6-5 Yardley at a local basketball camp, who would go on to play
for basketball coach Jules Gage in all four of his high school years.
Paul Neumann, who would follow the footsteps of Yardley with a
brilliant four-year career at Stanford before hooking up with the
Syracuse Nationals in the National Basketball Association. Like
Yardley in 1950, Neumann would be named to Stanford’s Basketball Hall
of Fame in 1959.
Paul Neumann, the son of a minister, who stepped away from a post
as Howie Dallmar’s assistant at Stanford and virtually melted away
locally after joining the “Overseas Crusades,” now called “OC
International.”
“I had really wanted to coach college basketball,” said Neumann
from his home in North Carolina. “But after my senior year in
college, I had gone with a team called ‘Venture for Victory,’ then it
became ‘Sports Ambassadors.’
“That experience started the ball turning and I realized I would
have more influence [in a much larger arena].”
It was a big jump considering he had been Dallmar’s assistant for
two seasons after exiting the NBA when a college coach’s “staff”
consisted of that one assistant coach.
It all began somewhere around 1951 when as an eighth-grader his
friend, Denny Fitzpatrick, introduced him to Rod MacMillian at the
Harbor Area Boys Club. He still fondly remembers MacMillian, “who
drove us everywhere.”
A year later he was a 5-5, 94-pound freshman on the Dee basketball
team at Newport.
What a youth team they must have had at the Boys Club in the early
‘50s considering the starters at Newport in 1954 were Fred Nesbitt,
Bill Inloes, Bill Roush, Bill Wetzel and Neumann. Another standout
was Bill Kelter.
Neumann and Bill Wetzel were joined the next season by Eddie Pope,
Fitzpatrick and Frank Navarro. Also big contributors: Paul Lorentzen
and George Schuit.
The 1953-54 team won the Sunset League and posted a 17-4 overall
record, defeating Redlands, 32-31, before bowing to Mt. Carmel.
“Paul was about the most complete player that I’ve ever seen,”
recalls Wetzel, now retired after a career at Estancia High, first as
the varsity basketball coach and in the long run as assistant
principal.
“He was so explosive to the basket, he controlled the game. You
just won’t find anyone who was more solid than Paul,” said Wetzel.
Fitzpatrick, who would eventually star for California and was the
Bears’ team MVP, remembered Neumann as “Probably the best guard in
the Pacific Coast Conference for 10 years -- either way. He was
really a great player,” in a Daily Pilot article announcing
Fitzpatrick as a Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Famer.
The same Pilot Hall of Fame credentials were applied to Neumann.
Fitzpatrick led Cal to the NCAA championship in 1959, besting
Jerry West and West Virginia in the final.
Also on that Cal squad was former Corona del Mar High and Orange
Coast College Coach Tandy Gillis, whose best moments came a year
later as a senior.
The Sailors’ 1954-55 edition went 13-6 and tied for second in the
Sunset League, failing to make the playoffs when only champions were
invited. Nevertheless, it was Neumann who was named the league’s MVP,
and it was the 6-1 Neumann who was given a grant in aid to Stanford,
where he finished his college education with a bachelor of arts
degree in psychology and followed it up with a master’s in secondary
education.
While he began his career at Newport on the Dee basketball team,
he advanced to the Bees as a sophomore and then spent two years with
the varsity. His sophomore year was split between basketball and
football, but he gave up the latter, recognizing the physical
pounding one takes in football.
“Jules Gage was a very positive influence in my life,” said the
very amicable Neumann.
At Stanford he spent his first year on the Indians’ freshman team.
He was second-team all-conference as a junior and a first-team choice
as a senior.
Drafted by Syracuse in the fourth round, he passed up the NBA
initially, preferring to return to school. He played amateur
basketball in San Francisco for one season and in New York the
following year in an industrial league.
“I figured my basketball career was over,” said Neumann. “But Alex
Hannum of Syracuse [who was involved in the industrial league] said
there was an opening at the guard spot at Syracuse because Dick
Barnett had jumped to the ABA.”
So Neumann, with a wife, Nancy, and two sons, Eric and Mark, spent
the next two years at Syracuse before the team was sold to
Philadelphia, where itbecame the original Philadelphia 76ers. Two
other children would follow, Cynthia and Daniel.
A year earlier, the Philadelphia Warriors with Wilt Chamberlain
moved and became the San Francisco Warriors.
Neumann spent a year and a half in Philadelphia before being
traded to San Francisco where he was a Warrior for the next two and a
half seasons.
His sixth and final year in the NBA (1966-67) found San Francisco
in the playoffs after winning the Western Division. The Warriors
eliminated the Lakers with Elgin Baylor in three and the St. Louis
Hawks with Bob Pettit and Lenny Wilkens in six before bowing to the
76ers in the finals, also a six-game series (4-2).
“I told Nancy if she’d marry me I’d show her the world,” recalled
Neumann. Without a doubt, he’s a man of his word.
They were resident missionaries in Indonesia and the U.S. before
spending eight years in the Philippines, then four years in Argentina
and four more years in Germany. With his basketball programs and
missionary work there has been some 60 countries listed in the
family’s visa over the past 35 years.
“It was very satisfying,” said Neumann from his home in Apex,
where he has been enjoying the last two years in a somewhat
“tentative” retirement.
“I just came back from Kyrgyzstan [just west of China], a very
strong Muslim country where there was a coup,” said Neumann, who has
enough memories to fill a small library.
Learning their customs and languages was an issue in itself and
Neumann recalls making some very quick moves to avoid rocks being
thrown at him in Sumatra.
He coached the first Christian team in China in 1980 with games in
Shanghai and Xian, among other cities.
“In the Philippines, basketball is the No. 1 sport,” said Neumann.
“They would be barefoot and tack up a basket on a palm tree and
they’d love it.”
Once in Colombia the residents made a court and basket, then
measured the basketball and made the rim just big enough for the ball
to squeeze through. “You had to go up and lay it on the rim [before
pushing it through],” said Neumann. “It wasn’t that bad because they
only had it about eight feet high.”
One of Neumann’s best-loved achievements came in 1993 when he
joined the Russian Ministry of Education that was established in
1991.
Neumann came aboard two years later, presenting the Bible
Orientation of the conferences, then taught several plenary sessions.
Today a lot of his time is devoted to keeping track of the kids
... Cynthia in Hershey, Pa., Eric, who is retiring from the Navy at
Camp Lejeune, N.C., Daniel in South Carolina, and Mark in Livermore,
Calif., as well as his nine grandchildren.
And, there is a plan to return to Newport Beach in October when
the ’55 Sailors celebrate their 50th reunion.
“I really hope to be there for that,” said Neumann. “I’ve never
been to one of Newport’s reunions (because of assignments).”
A lot of other people are hoping, too.
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