Brett Baker
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Bryce Alderton
Spending five-and-a-half months in Europe was beneficial, but Brett
Baker is glad to be back in familiar territory.
The 23-year-old Newport Harbor High star tailback, cornerback,
punter, kicker and kick returner flew back to Newport Beach Sept. 9
after spending nearly the last half year in Hanover, Germany, where
he played for the Hanover Musketeers, an American Football Club in
the German Football League.
The Musketeers went 7-2 and finished in second place out of six
teams, with Baker as the starting safety along with returning
kickoffs and punts. The Musketeers were supposed to play 10 games,
but one team ran out of money and had to fold, Baker said.
Baker, who holds the Cal Poly San Luis Obispo record for
single-season tackles with 115, also got his first crack at coaching
the defensive backs on the finer points of the game in Germany.
“I was really excited to see them get better,” said Baker, the
1997 Newport-Mesa District Most Valuable Player after racking up
2,993 all-purpose yards and nine interceptions in 13 games. “Seeing
the guys at the beginning of the season with their technique being
far behind reminded me of how much we take for granted [in the United
States]. We practiced every day in high school.”
Baker finished a stellar collegiate career with 304 tackles, third
on the school’s all-time list, to go with eight interceptions and a
36.4-yard average on 22 punts. He returned 28 punts with an 8.5-yard
average.
Baker said the biggest difference between football in the U.S. and
Europe is the time dedicated to practicing and training.
The Musketeers practiced for two hours, two days a week, a stark
contrast to the daily attention football receives in the U.S.
“Football is something that needs repetition,” said Baker, who
often found himself working out during the day before practices began
at 7 p.m.
There was also a five-and-a-half-week span when the Musketeers
didn’t play a game, allowing Baker the opportunity to tour the
European landscape. He welcomed the respite, but said it was
difficult returning to a football mind-set.
“You need to play football every week to get better at it, so it
made it hard for me,” he said.
Baker almost didn’t get the chance to play overseas. It was only
when the Musketeers’ starting quarterback quit after getting involved
in a brawl with a teammate that Baker got a phone call from Musketeer
coach Joe Roman offering the former Sailor a spot on the team. Dave
Brown, the linebackers coach at Cal Poly, had played in the GFL and
alerted Roman about Baker.
Roman called Baker around March 20. Five days later Baker was in
Germany.
“I was ready to go to Costa Rica to surf for three to six months,”
Baker recalled. “I talked with [Roman March 19] and had a plane
ticket for Costa Rica. But I had this feeling to wait [until March
20] and it turned into a blessing.
“It was a lucky deal for me.”
Pete Hogan, who finished his career at Colorado State last season
after starting at defensive end and a Newport alum, visited and
traveled with Baker and ended up playing two games for the
Musketeers.
“I introduced [Hogan] to [Roman] and he ended up starting two
games,” Baker said. “All the Germans liked Pete and I had a best
friend to travel with. It couldn’t have worked out better.”
Baker received roughly 500 euros, which he said is equal to about
$550 per week. He used that money on leisure since most of the hotel
room, food and car were already paid for by sponsors.
Some teammates paid to play, so Baker was fortunate.
“I was definitely lucky to have some of my own money and a credit
card,” Baker said. “But the money goes very quick when you are
traveling in Europe.
When Baker would stay in Hanover, he would save about $200 a
month. But he wouldn’t have traded in traveling.
“I saw Italy and every country around Germany at least once,” he
said.
Baker, who received his degree in agricultural business from Cal
Poly last December, is already working to pay off some of that debt.
He has begun to assist father, Jeff, at State Farm Insurance.
Baker said he wants to speak with Hogan in a few months to
determine if another year in Germany would be feasible.
“The offer is there and they want Pete to come back,” Baker said.
“It would be hard to go back with a full-time job. But it is a good
thing to have on the sleeve.”
For Baker, the opportunity to put the pads on in Europe allowed
him to continue playing a game that has given him so much.
“A lot of guys before me in college wanted to go to the NFL so
bad,” Baker said. “To see them do so much training and nothing
happens and they still are going for it ... I didn’t want to end up
like that. I had an offer to try out for the [Canadian Football
League], but that was too much for me.
“I didn’t go out there because I wanted to play in the NFL. I was
there to play, help the team, coach and be friends with the players.
[Football] is not something I need to play. I’m just blessed to be
playing, traveling and meeting some cool people.”
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