JASON QUINN
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Steve Virgen
These days, Jason Quinn is a difficult person to watch basketball
with.
He’s always analyzing the game and he’s always looking for ways to
improve the team, as if it were his. But that’s just Quinn. He
usually immerses every fiber of his being into his work. Take, for
instance, his high school days, when the former Costa Mesa resident
was a star point guard for the Mater Dei High Monarchs.
“Basketball is in my blood and I love the game,” said Quinn, who
now coaches the defense for the Mater Dei boys basketball team. “I
love watching it and I love watching the Lakers. I’m always the coach
and the strategist, so I don’t know if I’m much fun to watch the game
with. I will always be a coach. I just think that’s what I’m supposed
to do. I feel I’m in the right spot, especially for right now. I feel
that I’m supposed to be at Mater Dei coaching.”
When Quinn was in high school, he seemed to be the perfect fit for
the Monarchs. In the 1989-90 season, he directed Mater Dei to a CIF
state championship. Along the way, he made an improbable game-winning
three-point shot with 1.8 seconds left that lifted the Monarchs past
Long Beach Poly, 46-45, in the CIF Division I Southern California
regional final.
“It was a shot from the baseline about 22 feet out,” Quinn said.
“I just flung it up there. I was trying to get fouled and get to the
free-throw line. I got fouled and people said the shot curved and
just went through the net. I didn’t know how to react. We went up by
one, so I intentionally missed the free throw.”
Quinn said he remembers laughing after the game when the team
watched the tight contest on video. Before his free throw and during
a timeout, Quinn was seen shouting at his teammates telling them that
the game was far from over.
“We had unbelievable cohesiveness and camaraderie on that team,”
Quinn said. “I knew without my team, there is no way I could do
anything. And with them, I honestly believed we were going to be beat
anybody. No matter who was out there, the O’Bannons at Artesia or
anyone else, we believed we would win.”
Quinn played three years of varsity basketball at Mater Dei, yet
he acknowledges only two when he started at point guard during his
junior and senior years.
There are many memories Quinn holds dear, but when he’s asked to
talk about those days, he thinks about losing his last game his
junior year, but coming back to help his team win the state title and
go 34-1 his senior year.
“We lost to St. Monica in the state quarterfinals my junior year
and that sticks with you the whole year,” Quinn said. “My senior
year, we had a goal and we achieved that. Everyone expected us to win
state that year. There was excitement and we felt like, ‘Wow, we did
it.’ There was so much pressure to win at Mater Dei. It was such a
relief.”
Quinn said he remains in touch with his former teammates. He also,
obviously, remains in close contact with Mater Dei Coach Gary
McKnight, who has been a huge inspiration and has taught Quinn how to
motivate players.
Motivation and determination is what kept Quinn in the game. His
love for playing basketball dwindled after high school. He went from
Vanguard University to Orange Coast College, then realized coaching
would be his route.
“When I hung up the tennis shoes in 1993, that was one of my most
difficult decisions,” Quinn said. “Basketball was my life. I would
play everyday. I am so glad I became a coach. It was still a way for
me to be involved with basketball. I love it. I love watching tape. I
love trying to find other team’s weaknesses. I found a new love for
the game of basketball.”
Quinn, 31, who is single and lives in Huntington Beach, is the
latest honoree of the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame.
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