Los Angeles Times

Braves prove too much in a Trinity showdown

- ERIC SONDHEIMER ON HIGH SCHOOLS

For a spring high school football season that will have no playoffs and no ring ceremonies, you can always count on the best league in California, the Trinity League, to put on a show. The coaching is just too good and the athletes too fast, too strong and too talented not to provide drama and excitement.

Friday’s matchup of St. John Bosco taking on Anaheim Servite on a cloudless, cool evening in Bellflower enabled the select few in attendance and the many others watching on television or via the internet to enjoy a cherished sports moment.

It was a couple of hours of real distractio­n from life’s worries and concerns of the pandemic.

It had every chance to be the best game of the early spring season with real bigboy football. In week three, with both teams coming in 2-0 and the offenses scoring points in bunches, expectatio­ns were high. And by game’s end, everyone was treated to a back-and-forth classic.

St. John Bosco won 38-28 in an entertaini­ng second half that featured players you’ll be seeing playing on Saturdays in the coming years.

No one was more impressive than the younger brother of Clemson quarterbac­k DJ Uiagalalei.

Just call him Baby Gronk because Matayo Uiagalalei, a 6-foot-5, 263-pound sophomore tight end, caught touchdown passes of 27 and 12 yards and also had a sack on defense.

His fourth-quarter touchdown catch on fourth down when he was one-on-one against 6-1 Noah Avinger changed the game. His size and hands were just too much to stop.

Also starring for the Braves was running back Jabari Bates, who rushed for 172 yards and came up with a 10-yard run on fourth down with two minutes left to sink the Friars’ comeback hopes. That set up a 15-yard touchdown run from Michael Hayes to clinch the win.

St. John Bosco hadn’t lost to a team not named Santa Ana Mater Dei since the 2015 season. Coach Troy Thomas, wearing his customary allwhite long sleeve dress shirt, tie and black pants, was the last Servite coach to beat the Braves in 2011 and has finally reloaded the Friars’ roster with enough talent to be a real threat since returning as coach in 2018.

And what a thrill it must have been for Thomas in the second quarter when his son, Houston, a junior running back, ignited a Friars drive by breaking off runs of 19 and 16 yards before finally scoring on a three-yard run.

St. John Bosco continued to alternate quarterbac­ks Pierce Clarkson and Katin Houser every other series, and for the first time, neither could get into an effective rhythm.

The only first-half points for the Braves came from a 43-yard field goal from Andre Meono in the first quarter.

The third quarter saw the game pick up drama. Clarkson and Hauser each directed scoring drives for a 17-7 lead. Uigalelei caught his 27-yard touchdown pass from Houser and Chedon James caught a four-yard touchdown pass from Clarkson.

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? SERVITE WIDE RECEIVER Tetairoa McMillan leaps high but can’t haul in a pass while being covered by St. John Bosco cornerback Jahlil McClain.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times SERVITE WIDE RECEIVER Tetairoa McMillan leaps high but can’t haul in a pass while being covered by St. John Bosco cornerback Jahlil McClain.

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