Los Angeles Times

PLAYOFF BAN FOR NARBONNE FOOTBALL

City Section rules the team used ineligible players and will miss 2019-20 postseason­s.

- By Eric Sondheimer

Five-time defending City Section Open Division football champion Harbor City Narbonne learned Friday that it has been banned from this year’s playoffs as well as the 2020 playoffs and must vacate its 2018 City title because of rules violations.

School administra­tors were informed at 3:22 p.m. of the sanctions but did not inform coaches until after the City Section, the governing body for sports in the Los Angeles Unified School District, released informatio­n to the media at 3:45 p.m., leaving players to find out via Twitter and angering coaches who were trying to prepare the team for a final regular-season game against visiting Wilmington Banning.

Then, at 5:15 p.m., as the junior varsity game was being played, Banning varsity players were told to stay on their bus until LAUSD officials decided if the game against Narbonne should be played.

It was supposed to be senior night for the Gauchos. District officials decided to cancel the game out of safety concerns and de

clare it a no contest, Narbonne interim coach Joe Aguirre said. Players began hugging one another in the weight room, returning equipment and saying goodbye.

Narbonne went from 9-0 to 0-9 because the City Section determined that multiple players on this year’s team were ineligible. There was a dispute late Friday between the administra­tion and coaching staff about which players were ineligible. Coaches wanted to prevent those who were ineligible from playing against Banning but administra­tors refused to identify the players to the coaching staff.

LAUSD announced Oct. 8 that Narbonne had used an ineligible player last year. The City Section ruled Narbonne will have to forfeit seven games from the 2018 season and vacate its Open Division title. The program was put on probation through the 2022-23 school year.

The Gauchos were considered heavy favorites to win another Open Division title. A recruiter from Alabama was at the coaches’ office Friday afternoon as players glanced at their smartphone­s seeking informatio­n and while music blared in the weight room.

The sanctions were handed down on the eve of the City Section playoff seeding meeting. Narbonne’s absence creates a wide-open, eight-team Open Division with all of the teams capable of winning the title.

The seriousnes­s of the investigat­ion became apparent when longtime coach Manuel Douglas announced he had been temporaril­y reassigned on May 31. He said the district alleged he interfered with an investigat­ion. Douglas filed a lawsuit against the LAUSD in September.

There’s expected to be an exodus of Narbonne underclass­men, and supporters of schools around the Southland have already made inquiries, according to one Narbonne coach.

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