Doug Stuckey
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Bryce Alderton
Doug Stuckey can finally take a sigh of relief.
After a year in which he got married, attended about 10 weddings
and moved into a new home in Irvine, the former Newport Harbor High
kicker who went on to play at Oregon State University is finally
starting to settle in at his new job as a regional marketing
consultant for a banking chain.
Stuckey, 28, and wife, Molly, celebrated their first wedding
anniversary two weeks ago and will welcome their second canine in
February. The couple, which has a five-month-old yellow Labrador
retriever named “Sunny,” plan on adding a Weimaraner to the mix.
“We are just trying to catch our breaths,” said Stuckey, the
public affairs director for the Newport Beach Chamber of Commerce for
five years before leaving last March to take his new position.
“It’s fast paced and I’m learning a tremendous amount in a lot of
different areas,” Stuckey said.
He has also begun to pass on knowledge of a different variety --
that of a kicker.
Last year Stuckey coached two high school kickers on the
techniques of the trade and hopes to spend more time instructing
players this year.
“I like doing it for them,” he said.
Stuckey was a senior on the 1992 Newport team that played in the
CIF Southern Section Division IV championship game against Irvine at
Orange Coast College, Harbor’s first appearance in a CIF title game.
Irvine won, 30-8, but Stuckey -- the Orange County leader with 12
field goals that fall -- still has fond memories of the magical run.
“The game that stands out was when we beat CdM [28-21] in the
semifinals,” Stuckey said. “We were tied going into the last [1 1/2
minutes] and [Newport] was driving down the field. Coach [Jeff]
Brinkley asked me where I would like to kick the ball from. It got to
third down and he told me to go do it. But we ended up breaking the
run open [junior tailback Wade Tift scampers 30 yards] to score a
touchdown. It was so exciting, so intense.
“My senior year made it more special ... to end on a high note,”
Stuckey said. “It was just fun to say I was a part of that team,
which was able to achieve so much. The group of guys had chemistry
and no one expected that much from us.”
Stuckey earned the starting kicking job as a true freshman at
Oregon State and also punted for two years for the Beavers. The
transformation from playing in front of 500 fans in high school to
50,000 in college is an experience Stuckey won’t soon forget.
“I learned it takes a time commitment to [play college sports] and
manage time well to be involved with football and get decent grades,”
he said. “I couldn’t mess around. Getting things done was the key to
succeed.”
Stuckey graduated in four years from Oregon State with a speech
communication degree and began working for then-Assemblywoman Marilyn
Brewer before he was hired by Chamber President Richard Luehrs.
He lived in Costa Mesa for six years before he and Molly moved to
Irvine in October.
Stuckey recently spoke at the funeral of his late grandmother,
Judith Stuckey, who was 101 when she died Jan. 1 of pneumonia.
“It was more of an upbeat type of thing ... a celebration of
life,” Stuckey said. “To get to that age is special.”
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