Steve Kraiss, Millennium Hall of Fame
Richard Dunn
In a career filled with glamour and tragedy, Estancia High’s Steve
Kraiss is lucky to walk and talk about it.
An outstanding multiple-sport athlete with size and touch, Kraiss
experienced the depths of sorrow and thrills of victory.
A two-way varsity football starter at fullback and defensive end as a
sophomore for Estancia Coach Ed Blanton in 1979, Kraiss entered his
junior year as the Eagles’ captain and inside linebacker with All-CIF
Southern Section potential.
But, in the second game of the 1980 season against Laguna Hills,
Kraiss broke his neck, a compression fracture of the C-5 vertebrae, and
was paralyzed for three days.
“I couldn’t move my arms or legs,” Kraiss said. “I was totally
conscious.”
Kraiss received several get-well cards and letters from opposing
schools, and, after three of the longest days of his life in intensive
care, a miracle happened and Kraiss was able to move again.
“I had it going, but that (injury) ended my football career,” said
Kraiss, who believed he was slated for a football scholarship and could
play on the same level as Edison’s Rick DiBernardo (Notre Dame) and Mater
Dei’s Kennedy Pola (USC), the area’s top linebackers at the time.
Remarkably, Kraiss was running on the basketball court not long after
the injury, and that same junior year earned a starting spot on Coach
Larry Sunderman’s celebrated hoops team, which finished 19-9 and played
in the CIF 3-A semifinals at the Los Angeles Sports Arena, where the
Eagles lost to Tustin.
Kraiss, who would eventually get drafted by the Baltimore Orioles as a
corner infielder even though he didn’t play baseball at Estancia, was
part of a stellar basketball contingent his senior year in 1981-82, when
Sunderman’s Eagles (22-5) shared the Sea View League championship and
advanced to the CIF 3-A quarterfinals.
In the second round of the CIF playoffs against Foothill, Kraiss won
the double-overtime thriller with a buzzer-beating desperation shot from
the far corner.
With no one to pass to, and at least two Foothill players surrounding
him, Kraiss heaved a prayer that flew over the backboard from behind and
somehow found its way through the net in front of a packed gym at Villa
Park High, providing one of the most incredible finishes in Estancia’s
storied basketball history.
Kraiss also dabbled in volleyball at Estancia, but after high school
realized if he had any future in sport, it would be in baseball.
In 1983, Kraiss played baseball at Southern California College (now
Vanguard University) and was named the team’s most improved player, then
transferred to Orange Coast College, where he redshirted in ’84 and
played first base in ’85.
Following a solid campaign for Coach Mike Mayne’s Pirates (19-6-1,
14-10 in the South Coast Conference and tied for third), Kraiss was
selected in the seventh round by the Orioles in the June 1985 free-agent
draft. Kraiss batted .316 (48 for 152) with four home runs, 30 RBIs and
38 runs scored in 36 games for OCC.
“I signed (with the Orioles) that year,” said Kraiss, who not only
recovered from a broken neck and became a prep basketball star, but
became a professional baseball player without having played in high
school.
His path to the minor leagues was a bit unusual, but his quick exit
wasn’t.
The Orioles assigned Kraiss to Bluefield, W. Va., of the Appalachian
League, where he ended up at third base because of an injury to Craig
Worthington, a future major leaguer.
Kraiss started strong, batting about .270 for the Baby Birds and
displaying an ability to hit for power. But, in a game against the
Wytheville, Tenn., Cubs, Kraiss injured his left shoulder on a headfirst
slide into second base and it hampered his play the rest of the summer.
Kraiss returned to the lineup only a few days after hurting his
shoulder, but then was plunked on the wrist by a 90-mph fastball and
again was forced to sit.
After the season, Kraiss came home and underwent rotator-cuff surgery,
then was released by the Orioles.
“That was it,” Kraiss said of his brief pro baseball career.
Kraiss, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
returned to SCC to attend night school, while working during the day.
“That’s what I’m most proud of,” Kraiss said of the bachelor’s degree
he earned from SCC, where his father, Wayne, was the school president for
20 years before retiring last year.
Kraiss, now the national sales manager for Precision Optical in Costa
Mesa, lives in Huntington Beach with his wife, Kerry, and three children:
daughters Kelsey, 11, and Kendall, 10, and son Kale, 4, who throws right
and bats left.
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