Brad Green, Millennium Hall of Fame
From his earliest snaps in Pop Warner to the fierce trenches of the
Pac 10, Brad Green could always be found front and center on the
gridiron.
“I never played anything else (except center),” said Green, a former
Estancia High, Orange Coast College and USC standout, who blocked for
Heisman Trophy winner Charles White in the Trojans’ famed Student Body
Right.
“I guess (center) is all I could do. It just seemed like that’s where
they always put me. I know my left from my right.”
Born for the position with his size (6-foot-2, 250 pounds), speed,
quickness and balance, Green could trap and pull, feats usually
accomplished only with smaller centers. “When you have a lot of weight up
in the shoulders, (pulling and trapping are) hard to do,” Estancia
football coach Ken Kiefer once said.
Green, 6-1, 215 in high school, was an All-CIF Southern Section 3-A
selection his senior year with the Eagles, then played two years at
Orange Coast, where he was a member of Coach Dick Tucker’s 1975 JC
national championship team.
According to OCC annals, a year later Green was voted to the JC
All-American team, “but, to be honest with you, that’s news to me,” said
Green, who was Orange Coast’s Most Valuable Player in ‘76, but still
disputes his All-American distinction.
Green, now a nine-year Newport Beach police officer, signed with USC
after being heavily recruited by Cal for two years, and redshirted his
first year with the Trojans in 1977.
In 1978, when USC captured the national championship, Green started
the Trojans’ first four games. But in Week 5, he tore the anterior
cruciate ligament in his right knee against Arizona State and never fully
recovered.
It was Oct. 14, 1978, and the only loss USC would suffer that season
as the host Sun Devils upset the Trojans, 20-7, before 70,138 at the
Fiesta Bowl in Tempe.
“Some idiot center went down (with a torn ACL) and we lost our
continuity, and then lost the game, so that’s my claim to fame,” said
Green, whose replacement was largely responsible for five fumbles at the
exchange with quarterback Paul McDonald. “People lost money on that game,
because they all bet on USC winning.”
The Trojans defeated Alabama in Week 3, 24-14, at Legion Field in
Birmingham, Ala., with Green snapping to McDonald and playing alongside
All-American offensive guards Pat Howell and Brad Budde, while Anthony
Munoz played tackle and would later be named the NFL’s all-time greatest
at that position by Sports Illustrated. (Keith Van Horne was an
All-American for USC the following year with Green, before heading to the
NFL.)
By 1978 season’s end, Green was undergoing a grueling rehabilitation
program while the Trojans were voted a share of the national title by the
coaches. The sportswriters’ poll tabbed Alabama as year-end No. 1. “I
still don’t understand that -- we beat them,” Green said.
In two years (1978-79), the Arizona State upset was USC’s only loss.
In ‘79, Green had lost a step because of the knee injury and,
subsequently, his starting role.
“I learned to play smarter, but I was never quite the same,” said
Green, who played a lot his senior year, and, “had fun, anyway.”
Green’s old Estancia teammate, outside linebacker Larry Hall, started
for UCLA when the White-led Trojans defeated the Bruins in 1978, 17-10,
and ‘79, 49-14. “I’d just think to myself before the snap, ‘Oh, Larry,
here it comes ... Student Body Right,’ and you have no idea,” Green said.
“I remember being on the line and looking over at Larry, knowing this
whole line will be working to pull around the corner, and he didn’t
know.”
There was little anybody could do in those years to slow down USC’s
vaunted attack, which always featured the biggest and best offensive
linemen Coach John Robinson could find.
Cal, Stanford and Arizona State were recruiting Green the heaviest out
of Orange Coast. Bill Walsh (Stanford) and Frank Kush (ASU) came to his
house, but when Green visited the USC football offices and one of the
coaches flashed a Rose Bowl championship ring in his face, he kindly told
the others thanks, but no thanks.
“Two years of recruiting by Cal went down the tubes,” said Green, who,
in the autumn of ‘78, was one of eight Trojans that season to undergo
knee surgery.
Green, whose Estancia teams struggled in 1973 and ‘74, going a
combined 4-13-1, said he was fortunate to get an opportunity to play at
USC. “I got to USC because of a good work ethic, but those guys (Munoz,
Budde and Van Horne) got there because they were incredibly talented.”
Green, however, enjoyed his OCC years the most.
“I never really learned how to pass block, or do anything like that,
until I got to Orange Coast,” he said. “George Mattias was a great coach.
He actually taught me the techniques of pass blocking and that became one
of the better things I did when I got to USC. Those (USC) coaches taught
me nothing new, nothing that I hadn’t already learned from Coach Mattias.
“It was fun playing at USC, but the most fun I ever had was at Orange
Coast.”
Following his USC career, Green had tryouts with the Rams and Houston
Oilers, but his right knee put him in a tough spot. “I couldn’t do the
things I used to do with reckless abandon,” he said.
After college, Green worked in the aerospace business and operated an
athletic club. At age 34, he changed careers and became a cop, following
his dad’s footsteps. “I didn’t really think about (becoming a police
officer) much -- until unemployment moved me in that direction, but I’m
glad for it,” said Green, who worked the last several years as a
detective on the vice squad, and is now back in the car.
“You can’t be one thing forever,” added Green, a member of the Daily
Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, celebrating the millennium.
Green, a black belt in kung fu who teaches self-defense at the Golden
West College police academy, lives in Mission Viejo with his wife, Terri,
and three daughters: Kara, 15, Tayler, 10, and Paige, 8.
“It’s just a real honor to be included in this Hall of Fame,” Green
said.
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