Los Angeles Times

Preps key for regional outlets

- By Tom Hoffarth

John Hefner, installed this month as the executive producer of Fox Sports West and Prime Ticket, has a clear understand­ing of the importance of the regional sports network’s ongoing partnershi­ps with keeping the Clippers, Angels, Kings and Ducks engaged and satisfied.

Pause to note that the Dodgers, Lakers, Sparks and Galaxy were once vital tenants there as well, forcing the creation of a second channel, but all have since taken their business elsewhere.

But focus for a moment on the 23rd season of the network’s high school football season, with a Mater Dei-Corona Centennial matchup Friday in Santa Ana featuring the preseason No. 1- and No. 3-ranked teams in the state by MaxPreps.com, with Mater Dei top-ranked in the country.

Hefner’s connection to that package’s creation as a 30-year-old production manager when FSW2 (now Prime Ticket) launched in 1997, collaborat­ing with Student Sports representa­tives Garry Paskwietz and Andy Bark, provides a perspectiv­e few others remaining at the network have in terms of the growth and durability of that package.

“We probably didn’t know what we were getting into or the challenges we would have when we first started,” Hefner said from the downtown L.A. offices last week, having just left a run as Fox Sports’ vice president of regional production for the NBA. “But from the first game we did to where it’s grown, it’s one of the most unique things we do in this region, a labor of love that stands out as a community event. To see it from the start to now is really gratifying to me.”

That first game featured Mission Hills Bishop Alemany, with sophomore quarterbac­k Casey Clausen, against running back Justin Fargas and Notre Dame of Sherman Oaks. There was immediate pushback by high school coaches who feared the network was profiting from the players, not recognizin­g the exposure it was giving them. “There was an educationa­l process for us, and them, about what it all meant,” said Hefner, noting a turning point came on Oct. 6, 2001, when No. 1 nationally ranked Long Beach Poly played host to No. 2 Concord De La Salle in a televised contest he helped arrange and was so important that a 2003 book captured it in “One Great Game: Two Teams, Two Dreams and the First Ever National Championsh­ip High School Football Game.”

That game also sparked ESPN’s interest in national high school games, including basketball contests later that year featuring LeBron James.

Also note: ESPN has Mater Dei as part of its national high school football package this fall, slotted for a Sept. 27 appearance when it follows the Monarchs to Washington, D.C., to face St. John’s.

Current technology advancemen­ts, which include the network’s ability to stream online four additional games on its Fox Sports Go/PrepZone platform, provide a stark contrast with the primitive production abilities at the start. Hefner notes that they could only accommodat­e airing games from a small number of CIF Southern Section school sites that had clearance to send microwave signals to the antennas at Mt. Wilson. Satellite feeds and IP streaming, as well as schools’ increasing ability to produce their own feature packages through their educationa­l media classroom programs, have expanded the network’s collaborat­ive process.

Consider that this is a package that has thrived so long that Carson Palmer and Maurice Jones-Drew competed in the Fox Sports West 2 Game of the Week or were part of the Prep Spotlight features, went on to heralded college careers, had long runs in the NFL and are now retired.

“Our high school football coverage is in our network’s DNA,” said FSN/Prime Ticket senior vice president and general manager Lindsay Amstutz. “Everyone has a connection to the high school experience as we have for more than 20 years, and it’s really something special.”

The high school football and basketball package has been a fruitful training ground for talent such as Hefner.

Aside from the fact that new Clippers TV play-byplay man Brian Seiman used to call high school games, the likes of Brad Zager, Micah King and Steve Dorfman were prep game producers. Zager, after producing Dodgers games for FSW2, has become executive producer/ executive vice president and head of production and operations for all of Fox Sports. King is the Fox Sports West overall coordinati­ng producer. Dorfman has been producing Kings games the last 11 seasons.

John Jackson, the primary game analyst since the package started, continues recovery from a stroke suffered last Christmas. Prime Ticket will have Greg Biggins work as the game analyst in the booth with Sam Farber and Chris Rix on the sidelines. Jackson plans to appear on air at halftime most Fridays, including the Mater DeiCentenn­ial opener at the Santa Ana Bowl where former colleagues such as Petros Papadakis, Chris McGee and Bill Macdonald have been invited to come on air and celebrate not only Jackson’s return, but also the establishm­ent of the Garry Paskwietz Player of the Game Award, which will pay tribute to the recruiting expert contributo­r who died this year.

 ?? David Kawashima For The Times ?? NATIONALLY top-ranked Long Beach Poly against No. 2 Concord De La Salle in 2001 was a watershed.
David Kawashima For The Times NATIONALLY top-ranked Long Beach Poly against No. 2 Concord De La Salle in 2001 was a watershed.

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