Chris Quinn, Millennium Hall of Fame
- Share via
Richard Dunn
A well-mannered gentleman off the playing surface, Chris Quinn was
Corona del Mar High’s toughest character in the middle of all the blood
and guts during championship football and basketball seasons.
As a power forward in basketball, Quinn was the enforcer on the floor
for CdM Coach Paul Orris’ CIF Southern Section Division IV-AA
championship squad in 1992-93.
And, as a tight end and linebacker in football, Quinn may have
personified Coach Dave Holland’s teams the most in the autumns of 1991
and ’92.
A fundamentally sound three-year varsity player, Quinn was a bruising
blocker with good hands on offense, and a bone-crushing tackler on
defense. As a junior, he was named a first-team All-Sea View League
linebacker.
In 1992, Quinn was a star on both sides of the football, leading the
Sea Kings (8-4-1) to one of their most memorable campaigns in school
annals.
In a season which produced the famous Battle of the Bay II, Quinn was
an All-CIF Division IV and first-team all-league selection at tight end,
catching 31 passes for a team-high 440 yards and three touchdowns.
Quinn, who spent a lot of time blocking for Corona del Mar running
back J.R. Walz, caught a 22-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Matt
Evans for the first score in CdM’s 17-0 Sea View League victory over
Newport Harbor in Week 5 of the ’92 season.
The Back Bay schools would meet again in late November in what is
considered the greatest of all Battles of the Bay, a classic CIF Division
IV semifinal, won by the Tars, 28-21, which will forever be known in
local lore as Battle of the Bay II.
“Just being a part of it was really special, and with the Daily Pilot
(coverage) and playing against your friends (at Newport), it was great,”
Quinn said.
Holland, in his second-to-last season that year at CdM, put Battle of
the Bay II at the top of the then-31-year series, despite the loss.
“That will go down in history as the best CdM-Harbor game. For what
was at stake (a CIF finals berth), and the way both teams played so hard,
it was the best,” Holland said in the aftermath.
The 6-foot-2 Quinn continued the momentum of his football success on
the basketball court, where he posted up, rebounded, played strong
defense and averaged 11.3 points per game his senior year as the Sea
Kings captured their first CIF championship under Orris (following trips
to the CIF 3-A finals in 1989 and ‘90).
Quinn, the key inside element to CdM’s title run, played hoops with a
football player’s mentality, but stayed out of foul trouble and enjoyed a
soft touch around the basket, serving as the ideal complement on the
floor to featured swingman Todd Merriman and point guard Dan MacMillan.
“It was great to play with guys you’d grown up with and were still
friends with, and then being able to accomplish the goals we talked about
when we were playing basketball as kids at the (Harbor Area) Boys Club,”
said Quinn, who earned second-team All-CIF Division IV honors in 1993,
pulling off a rare double as an All-CIF pick in the two major sports.
Quinn, MacMillan, Merriman and Eli Wendell, et al, defeated visiting
St. Bernard, 47-46, in a thrilling CIF IV-AA championship game at
Estancia.
“It was tough playing in the league we played in with Woodbridge,
Tustin and Santa Margarita,” Quinn said. “But playing those (larger)
schools really prepares a small school like Corona del Mar to be able to
compete in CIF. We were a fourth-place team in the Sea View League, but
we could’ve been a first-place team in any other league.”
Quinn went on to play football at Orange Coast College, where he
started for two years at tight end and played on kickoff and punt teams
because of his ability to streak downfield with reckless abandon and
deliver jaw-cracking blows.
As a freshman, Quinn was OCC’s leading receiver in 1993 with 22
catches for 335 yards as Coach Bill Workman’s Pirates (8-3) played in
their third postseason bowl game in four years, beating visiting Antelope
Valley, 26-14, in the Orange County Bowl.
In 1994, Quinn was OCC’s co-captain, finishing his two-year career
with 47 receptions for 724 yards and five touchdowns.
“I think I just played to the speed of the game and had the smarts to
do it, and I definitely had good coaching,” the modest Quinn said of
athletic career.
Only three months after his sophomore season at OCC, Quinn was
seriously injured in an automobile accident in Feb. 1995, spending 1 1/2
weeks in the hospital.
After deciding his football career was over, Quinn refocused on
academics and attended UCLA, where he majored in communications.
The latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame, Quinn has
been a walk-on basketball coach at Santa Monica High the last five years.
Quinn, who lives in Brentwood, works in sales for a software company
in Pacific Palisades and moonlights for radio station XTRA as a sports
correspondent. He’s 26 and single.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.