NICK SCHAUMBURG
- Share via
Richard Dunn
Even with three championship rings from his collegiate football
playing days, Nick Schaumburg still never played a down before high
school, unless you count an occasional pearl dive along one of
Newport Beach’s best breaks.
A typical Newport Beach kid who grew up surfing, Schaumburg never
considered playing organized football until his freshman year at
Corona del Mar High, then enjoyed high-flying success in the gridiron
trenches and later a modest career at Colorado State.
“Actually, I surfed way before I ever played football,” Schaumburg
said. “I pretty much grew up (surfing) and just ended up playing
football in the ninth grade because all my friends did it. Jeff
Bogdan made me do it. He was the (offensive) guard right next to me.
He’s one of my best friends. He made me play football. And then I got
a scholarship. Now I’m done with football and still surfing.”
In the case of Schaumburg, who pass protected and opened holes for
celebrated double-threat Sea King quarterback Josh Walz in the fall
of 1995, he came equipped with size (6-foot-4, 260 pounds) and a
surfer’s athleticism, which often goes unnoticed in the greater
sports world. It was a lethal combination quickly recognized by
former CdM head coach Dave Holland, an offensive line guru.
“It was definitely a new thing for me as a freshman,” said
Schaumburg, whose first tour of duty was at defensive tackle, before
moving to the offensive line his sophomore year. “I didn’t really
feel I had the hang of it until my sophomore year, then I started
getting more comfortable. Then, I guess by my senior year, I was
playing all right.”
Schaumburg, a two-time first-team All-Sea View League selection by
the Daily Pilot (1994-95), lined up with fellow all-leaguers Richy
Nichols and Tim Goode to help the Sea Kings’ offense score a
school-record 322 points in the ’95 campaign.
Also a two-time All-Newport-Mesa Daily Pilot Dream Team member,
Schaumburg was a primary cog in the Sea Kings’ run to the CIF
Southern Section Division V semifinals, in which a valiant comeback
effort fell short in a 21-16 loss to Servite at Cal State Fullerton
as Corona del Mar finished 9-4. It was the third-highest victory
total in the school’s first 34 years of varsity football, topped only
by the school’s back-to-back CIF title squads of 1988 (11-3) and ’89
(12-0-2).
An All-CIF Division V performer at tackle, Schaumburg used his
strength, quickness and imposingly long arms to keep opposing
defenders off CdM ballcarriers. CdM offensive line coach Pat Kelly
once said Schaumburg was the best pass protector he had ever coached.
It wasn’t long before every school in the Western Athletic
Conference started knocking on Schaumburg’s door, and, based on the
Colorado State Rams’ success, he signed with them over Fresno State,
Arizona, UNLV and virtually every WAC school.
Switched to tight end after his redshirt year, Schaumburg saw
plenty of action in his career, mostly as a blocking tight end. Once,
in fact, his block against Air Force sprang teammate Cecil Sapp on a
long touchdown run. “My parents said they isolated me [in television
highlights later that evening] and put a circle around me,” said
Schaumburg, who caught one pass at Colorado State.
Schaumburg, the son of two school teachers (father Gary and mother
Suzanne), played on CSU teams that captured two Mountain West
Conference titles and one WAC championship.
“Both my parents are in teaching and I think I could see something
in football and teaching [in my future],” said Schaumburg, the latest
honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall of Fame. While deciding on a
career path, he said he also wouldn’t mind working in the surfing
industry.
Since leaving Colorado State two years ago, Schaumburg has spent a
summer traveling and backpacking throughout Europe and taken surfing
trips to Costa Rica and Panama. “My dad’s getting on my (butt) that
it’s taking so long [to enter a full-time career],” he quipped.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.