Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame: Dan McDonough, Newport Harbor
Barry Faulkner
Dan McDonough’s job with a Costa Mesa-based management consulting
firm calls for him to help his clients’ businesses operate more
efficiently.
Somewhat ironic, one might say, for a guy who spent a noteworthy high
school and college football career as a human wrench in the gears of
opposing teams’ offenses.
A three-year varsity performer at Newport Harbor High and the starting
senior middle linebacker on the 1994 unbeaten CIF Southern Section
Division V champions, McDonough took his knack for creating inefficiency
to St. Mary’s College, in the San Francisco suburb of Moraga.
But the physical toll of being a catalyst for carnage -- nerve damage in
his neck and shoulders -- prematurely ended his playing career halfway
into his junior season with the Gaels.
“It started with stingers (a shooting pain in one’s neck, somewhat
similar to that experienced by striking the funny bone) and got to the
point where I would lose complete sensation in my arms for hours at a
time,” McDonough said.
McDonough, a 6-foot-2, 220-pound two-year starter for the I-AA program,
said giving up football became the obvious solution to his condition,
which still generates periodic stiffness and headaches.
“When I was playing, if I turned my head really fast, I’d get a stinger.
That made my decision to quit really easy.”
There was nothing easy about trying to move the ball with the former
All-CIF, All-Sea View League and All-Newport-Mesa District standout
patrolling the middle.
Mobile and hostile, the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame honoree roamed
sideline to sideline as the Tars’ primary run stopper. He also saw spot
duty at tight end.
In the CIF title game victory over Servite, McDonough intercepted a pass
at his own 8-yard line with 1:05 left in the third quarter, helping the
Sailors maintain a 14-9 lead.
“It was the only interception of my career, so it was nice it came at an
opportune time,” McDonough said.
The Friars took a 15-14 lead on a touchdown with 4:08 remaining, only to
be overcome by a 38-yard scoring toss from Harbor quarterback John
Giordani to Mike Freeman with 2:27 left. From there, McDonough and the
defense cemented the win, which gave the school its first section crown
in 64 varsity seasons.
McDonough graduated with honors with a degree in finance last spring and
immediately returned to Orange County to take his current position.
“Right now, I’m just focused on learning as much as I can at my job and
seeing where that takes me,” said McDonough, 23 and single. “I use a lot
of the things I learned playing football at Newport Harbor,
professionally.”
McDonough, who attended several games during the 1999 CIF Division VI
championship season, said he still takes great pride in being a part of
the Harbor football program.
“When you stop playing, you kind of graduate into a bigger family -- the
whole Newport Harbor community.
“I have a lot of memories and a few stand out. But, most of all, I just
enjoyed hanging out with the guys. We all had a good time together and
everyone laughed and had fun.”
McDonough said he occasionally gets together with former teammates, as
well as Sailor products from succeeding years, to play a friendly game of
touch.
“It’s mainly guys just going out, throwing the ball around and having
fun,” he said.
Sometimes the postgame discussion turns to this season’s title run (a
13-0-1 season) and how it affects the ’94 team’s place in Sailor history.
“I think 14-0 is enough to set us apart,” he said. “We’ll take the 14-0.
Even if another team matches that, we’ll always be able to say we did it
first.”
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