Keith Samuels, Millennium Hall of Fame
Richard Dunn
Nestled comfortably these days on his desert ranch with three
horses outside of Tucson, Ariz., former Corona del Mar High quarterback
Keith Samuels remembers the nights when he didn’t feel quite so safe.
In what CdM football coach Dave Holland termed “the dive series,”
Samuels was the cornerstone of the triple-option threat, while teaming
with receiver Karl Killefer as a record-setting passing tandem.
As a 6-foot, 155-pounder, Samuels preferred to drop back and throw the
ball rather than serve as a human blocking sled.
“I’d hand off to our fullback, Bob Ferraro, or pitch it to our
tailback, Matt Cox, or keep the ball,” Samuels said. “But on every play,
the quarterback gets killed, and here I was a finesse passing machine.”
Samuels, a Daily Pilot headliner as the “Sea Kings’ slick southpaw” in
1970, seemed to get his wish most of the time as he threw for over 135
yards in seven of CdM’s nine games.
In an era when the ball stayed mostly on the ground, Samuels was
slightly ahead of his time averaging 140 passing yards a game, including
an unheard-of effort of 272 aerial yards against powerful Fountain
Valley, a controversial 26-21 loss in which the Sea Kings (3-6) never
recovered emotionally.
“That (loss) really tore us apart,” Samuels said.
An All-Orange Coast area selection in football and baseball as a first
baseman for Coach Tom Trager, Samuels had the most fun on the gridiron
his senior year when CdM defeated Costa Mesa, 45-12, as the Sea Kings
“aired it out” with 153 passing yards, while Samuels completed 9 of 16
throws.
“My fondest memory is the relationship I had with (Killefer),” Samuels
said. “He had incredible hands and ran crisp patterns. He always got open
and he always caught the ball. And, amazingly enough, he always got
yardage after the catch. Not bad for a slow white guy from Corona del
Mar.”
That autumn, Samuels completed 84 of 176 passes for 1,252 yards. It
was before the Daily Pilot kept receiving statistics, but Samuels
estimated that Killefer caught 40 of the tosses for over 800 yards.
“We started to click our junior year, then our senior year we really
had a blast,” Samuels said. “I’ve never had a situation before in
athletics where two people could read each others’ minds.”
CdM, which opened the ’70 campaign with high expectations, ended the
season with two losses.
In his junior year, Samuels said the highlights were beating Edison,
19-0 -- “I don’t think Edison has been shut out since,” he quipped -- and
hooking up with Killefer on an 81-yard touchdown pass against Loara. At
the time, it was the longest scoring pass in CdM history, and, to that
point in Week 7, the longest play Loara’s defense had given up in 1969.
In 1970, Samuels and Killefer were All-Irvine League selections for
CdM along with guard Tim Bandel, tackle Alec Ramsey and defensive back
Jeff Reichert.
“(Killefer) and I were joined at the hip,” Samuels said. “My theory
was, when all else failed, just throw it to Karl.”
After Killefer, John Miles and Shields Richardson were Samuels’ next
two targets.
But perhaps most significant in Samuels’ senior year was meeting
Estancia songleader Margie Campbell, who he started dating and eventually
married.
They both went to USC, where she became a songleader for the Trojans,
while Samuels tried to play football and baseball as a walk-on (both
attempts failed).
Samuels, however, didn’t like sitting in the stands at USC football
games when his girlfriend was down on the field. So he joined her and
became USC’s Yell King.
“I did it almost on a lark,” Samuels said. “This was a way to get into
the games and hang out with the guys I’d gotten to know on the team.”
Samuels was given his sweater, microphone and megaphone, and, “in
front of 15,000 drunken students at the Coliseum,” led the yells. “Not
cheers -- yells,” he said.
“I had the privilege of attending every home and away game in the 1973
football season, I didn’t have to play on the team but I traveled, I
didn’t have to practice but I’d get to go to the games and be on the
sidelines, and I was hanging out with all the titans of California,” he
said, referring to the college president and other big wigs who would
enjoy a close association with the Trojans.
That year, Samuels was named to the six-member International
Cheerleading Foundation’s NCAA All-American squad.
“I was really into crowd motivation and humor,” said Samuels, who,
these days, still sparks a fire under people.
Samuels, who has been married to Margie for 26 years, is vice
president and senior consultant for The Center for Sales Strategy in
Tucson, specializing in management and sales consulting for radio and
television stations around the world.
Samuels, the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame,
has been in Arizona for seven years, after 11 years in Seattle.
He has a 16-year-old daughter, Samantha, who enjoys competing in
equestrian and painting horses.
“We live the usual ranch life,” said Samuels, who added that his jaw
still cracks from the blows he received as CdM’s quarterback three
decades ago.
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