Catchup up With: Rich Nichols
- Share via
Barry Faulkner
Rich Nichols, who left Corona del Mar High as football royalty,
learned soon enough the plight of a pigskin peasant at Southern Methodist
University.
But, after enduring injuries, oppressive heat, losing seasons and a
turnover in coaches that rendered him a virtual depth-chart outcast, the
former Sea King standout wound up getting all he wanted out of his
collegiate experience.
“I had some fun, but looking back, it was more of a character building
thing,” said Nichols, who returned to Newport Beach after graduating in
May with a mechanical engineering degree. He now works for an
Irvine-based environmental engineering firm.
“In general, I liked the school. I made a lot of friends and I got to
see some different places traveling with the team, including two trips to
Hawaii and another to New Orleans.”
He also wound up starting his junior and senior seasons at center and
offensive guard, overcoming what he termed prejudicial treatment from
coaches who replaced those who had recruited him, after his freshman
year.
“SMU is having a pretty bad year again this year (3-6 through Nov. 17)
and they just fired the coaches,” Nichols said. “I was kind of happy
about that.”
There was, initially, little joy on the football field for Nichols,
who, woefully undersized at 220 pounds, suffered a knee injury early in
his inaugural two-a-days.
“I was out there with a lot of 300-pounders and some guy rolled on my
leg,” Nichols recalled. “But, I think getting hurt was actually a
blessing in disguise, because I was able to sit around all year and eat
pizza to gain some weight.”
More sitting followed the next two seasons, as he played only on
special teams.
The new coaching regime, eager to promote its own recruits, barely
acknowledged his presence, Nichols said.
“There were some blowout games where everyone got in the game but me.
I guess you could say me and the line coach didn’t see eye to eye.”
But, entering his junior campaign, Nichols said he developed a sense
of urgency and bulked up to 275 pounds.
“I basically figured this was my once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to do
well,” Nichols said. “I really started dedicating myself, because I
wanted to prove those coaches wrong.”
Nichols’ hard work paid off as he beat out the center who had started
in front of him the previous two seasons. But, when that player’s move to
guard went poorly, the coaches flip-flopped the two players, forcing
Nichols to learn a new position at midseason.
Nichols returned to center his senior season, a 3-9 campaign during
which he played through a pair of torn knee ligaments.
“When the season was over, I had surgery on my knee and I had really
lost my will to play,” he said. “I hung it up and I have no regrets.”
He holds many more fond memories of his prep playing days, when he was
a three-year varsity starter who earned All-CIF laurels as a senior.
That senior season of 1995, Nichols was the middle man on a vaunted
five-man blocking unit labled the Five Crowns. He also earned first-team
All-Sea View League and All-Newport-Mesa District recognition while
helping the Sea Kings come up just 2 yards short of a CIF Southern
Section Division V semifinal victory over Servite (they fumbled at the
Friars’ 2 marching toward a go-ahead TD in the closing minutes). CdM
finished 9-4 that fall, a record bettered only by back-to-back section
championship teams of 1988-89 in the school’s 40 varsity seasons.
Nichols capped a solid prep shot put career by reaching the CIF State
preliminaries the spring of ‘96, before heading off to Dallas to test his
mettle with the Mustangs.
Since returning to Newport, Nichols has reconnected with several of
his former high school teammates and friends, including fellow Five Crown
Tim Goode, with whom he rooms in a place near the beach.
He also enjoys spending time with his family and is looking forward to
a bright career as an engineer.
“I’m ready for another challenge,” he said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.