Shane Foley, Millennium Hall of Fame
With a rocket launcher for a throwing arm, a team-first attitude
and glittering Hollywood looks, Shane Foley played the perfect supporting
role at USC.
At a time when the Trojans had a cast of star quarterbacks to read the
lead scripts, Foley would wait anxiously on the sidelines and prepare for
any on-camera time available after Rodney Peete and Todd Marinovich.
“I don’t want to sound like sour grapes, or say I was a political
victim, but some things that happened I’ll never understand,” said Foley,
who ended his USC football career with broken promises and few
explanations.
Foley, who has appeared in daytime soap operas and national television
commercials, was the darling of Newport Harbor High’s glory teams of the
mid-1980s, setting an Orange County record for career passing yards
(5,364), which would later be topped by Marinovich (Mater Dei and
Capistrano Valley).
The 1985 CIF Central Conference Player of the Year, Foley guided Coach
Mike Giddings’ Sailors to the Sea View League co-championship and a berth
in the CIF semifinals, completing 220 of his 352 passes (62.5%) for 3,043
yards and 30 touchdowns his senior year.
“Being a quarterback and playing in a sophisticated system for guys
like Coach Giddings was fantastic,” Foley said of the pro-style offense
installed by Giddings, who has operated an NFL scouting business for
several years, and, from 1982 to ‘85, coached Newport Harbor to a 34-12-3
record and three Sea View titles.
“Because of the business he has, we actually were able to watch
offenses like Joe Montana and the 49ers; I was able to look at film like
that and study those type of offenses and sophisticated schemes, and (he)
was allowing me to audible. In 1985, I think we were doing some things on
the high school level that were pretty sophisticated.”
One of the most sought-after quarterbacks in the nation, Foley chose
USC over Arizona and Stanford. Larry Smith, Arizona’s head coach at the
time, recruited Foley hard, but finished second in the derby. The next
year, USC Coach Ted Tollner left and Smith replaced him.
Whether that had any bearing on how Foley was later treated in the QB
rotation in 1990 will probably remain a question mark, and the class-act
Foley prefers to say nothing publicly to tarnish the Trojan family. But
there’s no secret about the controversy.
Marinovich encountered some problems off the field and was benched by
Smith more than once. Foley made the most of his playing time as a Trojan
-- twice earning Player of the Game honors -- but several USC beat
writers at the time wondered why he didn’t get more snaps.
Foley, a 6-foot-2, 191-pound prep star who was voted Newport Harbor’s
Male Athlete of the Year in 1986, took pride in working hard and not
complaining. But an example of the injustice occurred in the first game
of the ’90 season in the Kickoff Classic against Syracuse at Giants
Stadium in East Rutherford, N.J.
Marinovich was scheduled to start as a redshirt freshman, but Foley
was told by Smith that he would play in the first half. Instead, Foley
never saw the field. “I didn’t complain about it, but it was tough,”
Foley said. “It was a situation that happened on more than one occasion.”
Some reporters speculated that Foley was such a team player that Smith
might have used him to motivate or inspire Marinovich, who would become
the No. 1 draft choice of the Raiders.
In Foley’s junior year in 1989, he took his first snaps as a USC
quarterback in Week 2 against Utah State, a 66-10 victory for the
Trojans, whose defense that year featured Junior Seau, Mark Carrier and
Scott Ross, while Brad Leggett and Brent Parkinson anchored an offensive
line for Marinovich.
Foley, who earlier in his career volunteered to play on the kickoff
team so he could travel and be a part of the team, threw a touchdown pass
and ran for another score against Utah State at the LA Coliseum.
The next week against Ohio State in a nationally televised game, the
Trojans fell behind early, 3-0, and Marinovich came out with an injury
during a USC drive.
Enter Foley.
“Brad Leggett, our center, said in the huddle, ‘Foley’s in. We’re
going to go right down and score,”’ he said.
With the Trojans at midfield, Foley stepped in and the offense didn’t
miss a beat. Foley directed the offense inside the Ohio State 10-yard
line, and, when it was third and three, he begged for a pass play.
Foley got his wish, then faked on a play-action pass and caused the
Buckeye defense to bite, before finding tight end Scott Galbraith in the
end zone to put USC ahead.
Foley gained the confidence of the Trojan coaching staff, but
Marinovich’s injury was suddenly healed and the redheaded southpaw was
back on the field. In fact, Marinovich got hot and the Trojans waxed Ohio
State, 42-3.
Foley’s senior year was highlighted by Week 8, when he started at
Arizona State in a must-win situation for USC, which was 5-2 at the time
and coming off a home loss to Arizona. Marinovich was suspended for a
game and Smith turned over the reins to Foley, who led the Trojans to a
13-6 win in rowdy Tempe with his father, Mike, and Giddings looking on in
the stands.
“I think that game kind of helped to make up for all the bad times he
had (at USC),” said his grandmother, Norma Foley, who raised him in high
school.
Foley’s father is a former USC football player, while his grandfather,
John, played at St. Mary’s during the school’s powerhouse years. His
uncle, Steve, played at Newport Harbor and Stanford in the 70s.
He grew up in Los Angeles, but his family moved to the desert when he
was 12. By the time high school rolled around, Foley, an excellent
athlete and top junior high quarterback, relocated to Newport Beach to
live with his grandparents and attend Newport Harbor.
“I was fortunate to have grandparents to do that, and that was pretty
amazing of my mom, to allow her only child at 14 years old to move away
from home,” said Foley, who spent summers in Newport Beach growing up and
even worked out at the high school.
“My Uncle Steve had been a Newport Harbor football player, and I knew
a lot of people down at Newport Harbor,” added Foley, whose younger
brother, Joe, is a third generation football Tar.
Foley, 31 and single, works in the real estate industry when he isn’t
acting in soaps or commercials. The former John Wayne Memorial
Postgraduate Scholarship Award winner, who roomed with Marinovich on the
road, is a member of the Screen Actors Guild and represented by the
William Morris Agency.
Foley, one of Newport Harbor’s all-time greats, today enters the Daily
Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating the millennium.
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