For the past five football seasons, locals have been spoiled,
watching hometown hero Jeff Garcia quarterback the San Francisco
49ers.
For the past five football seasons, locals have been spoiled, watching hometown hero Jeff Garcia quarterback the San Francisco 49ers.

Every Sunday, hundreds of local supporters would hop in their cars, pick up their friends and head north to Candlestick Park, where they’d tailgate outside for hours before entering the stadium to cheer on the pride and joy of the garlic capital of the world. Others would sit down in front of their television set, invite some friends over and root for their hometown team and its hometown quarterback.

That all changed on Tuesday when the 49ers put Garcia, who played at Gilroy High, Gavilan College and San Jose State University, on waivers after the two parties could not agree on a contract restructuring.

San Francisco released the 34-year-old Gilroy native and three-time Pro Bowl selection to the NFL ’s free agency list, staving off an immediate $500,000 pay-out. Garcia was under a $36 million, six-year deal.

The immediate reaction from Garcia’s biggest fans was disappoint-ment.

“I’m a season ticketholder, and I won’t be renewing them,” said long-time friend Chris Ordaz, who coached Garcia at Gilroy High School and has followed his career ever since. “I like the 49ers still, but a lot of what’s been fun about it is going and socializing with all the Gilroy people and watching Jeff. It has just been really fun for everybody.”

Ordaz was Jeff’s quarterback coach his junior season of high school in 1986, and even back then the red-haired, undersized slinger was not the projected starter. According to Ordaz, the incumbent starter did not make grades that year, and Garcia slid into the starting role.

“We ended up with Jeff. The coaches were like, ‘He’ll have to do,’ and he ended up doing real well,” said Ordaz, who played for Jeff’s father, Bobby Garcia, at Gavilan College when Jeff was the ball boy. “I remember going out there (to practice), and I hadn’t seen Jeff in a while. I saw him throw the ball and said, ‘I don’t think we have anything to worry about.’ ”

Ordaz recalled Garcia throwing about 17 touchdowns that season despite missing the last few games due to injury.

Mustang baseball skipper Clint Wheeler grew up with the Garcia family in Gilroy, playing street football with the future NFL quarterback when they were little kids. Wheeler played with Jeff on the Gilroy High football team in the winter of 1987. “That guy’s always worked hard and always been a guy who people were never confident in,” said Wheeler, who was Jeff’s wide receiver in high school. “He always proved everybody wrong.”

The two Gilroyans also played together under Bobby Garcia on the Gavilan College football team in the winter of 1989. “He was always confident in himself. He was never the fastest guy, never had the strongest arm, but he was a late bloomer. He kept getting stronger and stronger,” Wheeler said.

At Gavilan College, the Garcias and the Rams won a bowl game in Gilroy, upsetting the state’s No. 3-ranked team Solano College, 54-10. Wheeler, a defensive back on the team, remem-bered Jeff passing for at least four touchdowns and receiving MVP honors.

John Garcia was the defensive line coach for Gavilan when Jeff played there, and Bobby was the head coach. “I’m the one he gave the headaches to in practice because he can run, throw and everything. He was hard to tie down,” said Garcia, who works with Gilroy Community Services. “He is very self-motivated and very dedicated. He has a knack and a nose for the game, and he knows how to perform under pressure.”

Like other Gilroyans who were well versed about the Niners’ salary cap problems, John Garcia was not surprised by Tuesday’s decision to release Jeff, but he’s sure there are still more years left in the tank. “I really think that it’s best for Jeff. Jeff is going to be happy. He’s going to make things happen. It’s going to turn out good for him,” John Garcia said. “He’s accomp-lished things that nobody would have ever thought he would, other than himself, the people close to him, and Bill Walsh was the biggest of all who knew and knows he will still do it again.”

Once he made it to the big time, Garcia never forgot about his garlic roots, returning to the community for book readings to grade school kids, heading up the Hispanic Scholarship Fund and establishing an annual golf tournament in his name to benefit the football programs at Gilroy High School and Gavilan College. “He never forgot where he came from,” Ordaz said.

After breaking his leg in his senior year of high school, Jeff Garcia did not get any offers from major college football programs. Instead he went the junior college route and got a chance to play for his dad and with friends he grew up around. He then went on to play at San Jose State University, where, despite being named MVP of the Shrine Bowl his senior season, he went undrafted.

Garcia spent five seasons in the Canadian Football League, where he capped of his brilliant career with a Grey Cup Championship and MVP award in 1998.

Garcia finally got his shot in the National Football League after impressing the 49ers in a workout and signing as a free agent in February of 1999. He took over the starting role the following season for the Niners at the twilight of Steve Young’s career and played the position with passion – just like his predecessors.

In his first full season as the starter, Garcia broke the single-season passing record, throwing for 4,278 yards. He was second in the NFL with 31 touchdowns, which was the fifth 30-touchdown season in team history with John Brodie (30 in 1965), Joe Montana (31 in 1987) and Steve Young (35 in 1994 and 36 in 1998). Garcia was named to the Pro Bowl the following year and became the first quarterback in team history to throw for more than 30 touchdowns in back-to-back seasons.

After losing to the Green Bay Packers in the division playoffs in 2002, the next season, Garcia stepped it up even more, earning another Pro Bowl selection, but, more importantly, winning a playoff game. Garcia orchestrated a 24-point, second-half comeback to lead the 49ers to a thrilling 39-38 victory over the New York Giants.

His unbelievable come-back was forgotten, as well as his three Pro Bowl seasons, when the Niners finished 7-9 overall last season. Garcia was first asked to take a huge pay cut, then released.

But his hometown fans are sure he’ll land on his feet somewhere in the NFL.

“I think he’d look good in black,” said Wheeler of the possibility of Garcia going to the Oakland Raiders. “I just want him to go somewhere where he has the best opportunity to end his career.”

Previous articleFron Page 3-2
Next articleBig rally sparks home win for Acorns
A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here