Mark Nebeker
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Richard Dunn
At his Costa Mesa High 20-year reunion, Mark Nebeker remembers
talking to former football teammates, and, after a few sodas, the
details would grow.
They would recall the down, how much time was left, what play was
called and the result. Nebeker has no such recollection of numbers,
statistics and scores. But he does remember his bone-jarring hits at
middle linebacker.
“I’d love it when some wide receiver or tight end would run
through the middle with his arms up,” said Nebeker, the Mustangs’
defensive leader in the fall of 1974.
Middle linebackers have always had a reputation -- the reason,
perhaps, they’re playing the position in the first place. When
Nebeker was growing up -- prior to becoming one of the
hardest-hitting, most intense middle linebackers in school history --
there were always references to being “like a middle linebacker.” In
other words, if you were the toughest, scariest, baddest dude on the
block, you were the Dick Butkus.
“Wide receivers and quarterbacks play the game for a whole
different reason than inside linebackers,” Nebeker said. “I played to
hit, and go head to head with people.”
Nebeker, who said his middle-linebacker mentality is still very
much a part of his life in business as a guy who can get tough
projects completed, was the centerpiece of Coach Tom French’s defense
in ’74. It was French’s first year at Mesa and one of the first
things he did was move the third-year varsity performer to defensive
tackle. But the Mustangs gave up 53 points in their first two games
(both losses to Foothill and Mission Viejo) and Nebeker was switched
back to inside ‘backer, where he thrived the rest of the season as
the entire defense was designed around him.
“Anybody who plays linebacker likes to have that inside spot,”
Nebeker said. “It’s you controlling the defense. You get to call the
defensive plays. It’s just a ton of fun.”
Nebeker, an All-Century League performer and third-team All-Orange
County selection his senior year, does remember, in his junior year,
taking on former Santa Ana Valley star running back Myron White and
giving him his best shots, despite Valley’s 40-14 romp over the Mustangs.
“We got killed, but I can remember almost being in a daze in that
game because it was so intense,” Nebeker said. “I was seeing those
holes (White) was running through on the line and then stepping in
those holes and taking him head one ... there were times I’d hit him
and take him down and he’d get up and go ‘Great stick.’ And we’d help
each other up.”
Nebeker, who enjoyed hitting his opponent hard on the game’s first
play to set the tone and make him feel he’s in for a long night, said
“You don’t just take people down. You squeeze their lower back until
their eyes get big and then you actually pick them up and drive into
them and take them back. You want him to have doubts about coming
into you.”
Nebeker, a member of the South team in the 1975 Orange County
All-Star football game, also played guard on offense, until his
senior year, when French stripped the idea of two-way starters.
Nebeker played under Coach John Sweazy his sophomore and junior
years.
The Costa Mesa Male Athlete of the Year in ‘75, Nebeker was also a
standout heavyweight wrestler. He was told his future was brighter in
wrestling than football, but Nebeker wasn’t that interested in
pursuing wrestling in college, mainly because of the countless
training hours a wrestler puts himself through before finally getting
to a match that could last only seconds.
“I didn’t actually like wrestling. It was more of a different
athletic thing to do at that point,” said Nebeker, who compiled a
30-3 record his senior year with 13 pins.
Nebeker played football on Orange Coast College’s national
championship team in 1975, attended a two-year Mormon mission in
Taiwan, then returned to the gridiron at OCC for the 1979 campaign,
his final year of competitive football.
These days, Nebeker is a project management consultant for defense
(what else?) companies like Lockheed, which hired him recently to
train many of its employees. When there are sticky issues between
government and corporate officials, references have been made about a
company “needing a middle linebacker to come in here and get our
stuff tighter,” he said. “Sometimes, you refer to it as a smoke
jumper, because you beat down a fire and then go look for other fires
to beat down. I believe that’s true -- once a linebacker, always a
linebacker.”
Nebeker, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of
Fame, is single and lives in Tustin. He has been a competitive
cyclist for about 12 years.
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