Los Angeles Times

Football season makes it to the finish line

It was 16 weeks of uncertaint­y, hope and plenty of work all around, but there were many highlights.

- ERIC SONDHEIMER

In the middle of a pandemic, in a time of intense political and social disagreeme­nts, and during a period when many families were suffering emotionall­y and financiall­y, the 2021 high school football season somehow was completed Saturday night.

It was 16 weeks of uncertaint­y, 16 weeks of hope, 16 weeks of trusting coaches, parents and school administra­tors to complete their assignment of making sure teenagers experience­d a return to normalcy.

Nothing came easily and nothing came without choices. There were interrupti­ons, starts and restarts, successes and failures. Yet the bottom line is that the season happened, playoffs took place for the first time since 2019, and players were allowed to create memories that will last a lifetime.

The top four teams to start the season never changed except for the order: Santa Ana Mater Dei, Anaheim Servite, Bellflower St. John Bosco and Corona Centennial.

The biggest developmen­t was Servite ending the St. John Bosco-Mater Dei Division 1 domination by reaching the championsh­ip game. St. John Bosco had made the final every year since 2013.

New playoff formats in the Southern Section and the City Section did not go off without controvers­y and will need adjustment­s, but the idea of putting together brackets based on the current season is here to stay. The culture change of playoff matchups based on competitiv­e equity and not geography or enrollment is also here to stay. The challenge will be making sure a computer’s algorithm doesn’t prevent putting together accurate, fair matchups.

The best part of the season was seeing individual players rise up beyond expectatio­ns.

Who saw Servite two-way lineman Mason Graham becoming the best at his position with 14 sacks and providing the blocks to turn loose quarterbac­k Noah Fifita and receiver Tetairoa McMillan?

It was fun to recognize a freshman doing great things for his neighborho­od school. Defensive end Weston Port of San Juan Capistrano San Juan Hills delivered 12 sacks.

Who wasn’t impressed that cornerback Jaden Mickey of Corona Centennial started the season as a 16-year-old senior and ended it as a Notre Dame signee. Take that, you holdbacks.

It wasn’t hard to root for linebacker Braydon Brus of Glendora. He stayed at his neighborho­od school for four years, stayed with his commitment to Northweste­rn and ended his senior season with 125 tackles and close to 1,000 yards rushing. He exudes loyalty and commitment.

You have to admire sophomore quarterbac­k Elijah Brown of Mater Dei. At a school that now has produced three quarterbac­ks who became Heisman Trophy winners, Brown is 17-0 as a starting quarterbac­k and never seems to be ruffled during games. He’s so even-keeled and has so much self-confidence that he can be anything he chooses.

Arlis Boardingha­m of Lake Balboa Birmingham deserves a standing ovation for making it through four years at the same City Section school. Most believed he wouldn’t stay because he had become too good. Yet he chose to remain with his friends and achieved everything he wanted — two City championsh­ips and a college scholarshi­p.

There were once-in-adecade performanc­es by teams. Panorama City St. Genevieve, Simi Valley and North Hollywood Campbell Hall went unbeaten during the regular season. Woodland Hills Taft went from having a 26-game losing streak to winning a City Division III championsh­ip.

There was wildness. Crenshaw had to pull out of the playoffs because it didn’t have enough vaccinated players on its roster to continue under a Los Angeles Unified School District mandate.

Inglewood had one of its best teams in years but made the unwise decision to go for a two-point conversion with a 104-0 lead against Morningsid­e and have its quarterbac­k pass for 13 touchdowns in a 106-0 victory. Yes, that got national attention and started a debate about what high school sports are supposed to be about.

Then there’s Mater Dei and its off-the-field issues.

The school decided to hunker down and do basically nothing despite two lawsuits that have raised questions about accountabi­lity for alleged violent behavior on the football team.

A school commission is supposed to investigat­e the safety practices of the athletic programs.

Meanwhile, the school and Diocese of Orange decry media coverage, leaving people with the perception that winning championsh­ips is the biggest priority.

Patience has run out. The school can either act to fix its lack of transparen­cy or suffer a slow, inevitable decline in community and public confidence.

 ?? Kyusung Gong For The Times ?? TWO-WAY LINEMAN Mason Graham of Servite was one of the pleasant surprises of the prep football season, racking up 14 sacks and helping open holes for a prolific offense as the Friars reached the title game.
Kyusung Gong For The Times TWO-WAY LINEMAN Mason Graham of Servite was one of the pleasant surprises of the prep football season, racking up 14 sacks and helping open holes for a prolific offense as the Friars reached the title game.

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