Paul McDaniels, Millennium Hall of Fame
Those in the baseball industry are always talking about “making
adjustments,” an old cliche, perhaps, but also the epitome of one’s
survival in the game.
The higher up the ladder, the more scrutinized each pitch becomes.
Swings become smoother, infielders snag ground balls deep in the hole and
outfielders dive routinely to make catches.
In the case of Paul McDaniels, a former Boston Red Sox farmhand, he
pulled off an enormous adjustment at a time most scouts and coaches
consider to be the toughest transition period in one’s career -- the next
step after high school.
McDaniels, a standout catcher for Estancia High under Coach Ken
Millard and assistant Paul Troxel, shifted gears upon arriving at Orange
Coast College, where the sons of two ex-major leaguers, Mike Monday and
Dustin Wathan, were in front of him.
“It was a transition out of necessity,” said McDaniels, who realized
the offspring of Rick Monday and John Wathan weren’t in Costa Mesa to sit
on the bench, so he learned to play the outfield, a move that ultimately
advanced his career to the University of San Francisco and two seasons in
the minor leagues.
“It worked out perfectly,” said McDaniels, who played on the last
baseball team coached by Mike Mayne (1992) at OCC, then starred on Coach
John Altobelli’s first team in ‘93, when the Cinderella Pirates reached
the state Final Four and he hit .383 (62 for 162) and scored 52 runs,
both team highs.
Under Mayne, McDaniels said he “went from a child to a man in one
year,” but missed the idea of sitting in a crouch behind the dish,
wigwagging signs to the pitcher.
“You tend to let your mind go in the outfield, but the transition was
a lot easier on my body,” he added. “I didn’t have to soak in a hot tub
and then go ice after every game. My knees felt great and my whole body
felt great.”
A left-handed hitter, McDaniels didn’t follow the textbook plan of
pursuing a pro career after college. Instead, he stayed in school and
finished his finance degree at USF, then worked on the floor of the
Pacific Stock Exchange in downtown San Francisco.
Two years removed from back-to-back selections as an All-West Coast
Conference outfielder at USF, McDaniels was having “a great time, but had
a hole in my heart, because I knew I could still do something really well
and I wasn’t doing it.”
So McDaniels, through his baseball contacts, phoned scouts and rounded
up some informal tryouts. Harry Smith, an Oceanside-based scout for the
Red Sox, bit on McDaniels and signed him in the fall of 1997. By the
following spring he was in Fort Myers, Fla., reporting for duty.
McDaniels made Boston’s Class-A Michigan squad in the Midwest League,
one of baseball’s oldest leagues (established in 1947), but the
curveballs were even more wicked than McDaniels could remember, and by
June 1998, he was sent down to Class-A Lowell in the New York-Penn
League.
That’s where McDaniels enjoyed his minor league experience the most,
playing in a brand new ballpark, Edward Lacheur Park in Lowell, about 20
minutes outside of Boston. It was full almost every night and fans
“treated us like major league players,” said McDaniels, also a former
Estancia basketball standout on the Eagles’ State Division III
championship team under Coach Tim O’Brien in 1991, his senior year.
McDaniels, who batted .260 with a team-leading eight home runs in more
than 150 at-bats for the Lowell Spinners, returned to spring training
with the Red Sox this year. But there wasn’t room for a 26-year-old
outfielder from Class-A ball.
“It’s been a wild ride,” said McDaniels, who has started an e-commerce
business with former Estancia basketball teammate Mike Haas.
“There aren’t enough hours in the day to get done what we need to get
done, but it’s a real exciting time for both of us,” McDaniels said of
the fledgling company called FineSpun Technology in Costa Mesa (available
online at o7 www.finespun.comf7 ).
Winning the state championship in basketball with the guys he grew up
with is atop the highlight list for McDaniels, Estancia’s Athlete of the
Year in 1991, after earning first-team All-Pacific Coast League honors in
two sports.
In baseball, McDaniels batted .384 and .389, respectively, his junior
and senior years to lead the team.
In hoops, he was a three-year starter who switched positions (sound
familiar?) in ’91 from off guard to point guard, while taking on a larger
leadership role. He also played defense against the opposing team’s best
offensive guard.
“He’s got to be the stopper,” O’Brien said of McDaniels in the ’91
postseason.
McDaniels, Haas, Matt Fuerbringer, Torrey Hammond and Son Ly formed
O’Brien’s starting five as the Eagles won the state title.
McDaniels, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
celebrating the millennium, said his heart goes out to the families of
Troxel and Billy Nguyen, both of whom died this year and touched
McDaniels’ life.
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