Los Angeles Times

Mater Dei dominates, takes Open Division title

Monarchs finish 12-0 but the program faces questions in offseason.

- By Eric Sondheimer

It was a Saturday night to cherish for Santa Ana Mater Dei sports fans. The evening began with the announceme­nt in New York that quarterbac­k Bryce Young, class of 2020, had won the Heisman Trophy, becoming the third Monarch to win college football’s most prestigiou­s award. Then, at Saddleback College, the Monarchs completed an unbeaten football season to win a mythical national title with a 44-7 victory over San Mateo Serra in the CIF state championsh­ip Open Division bowl game.

From late August, when Mater Dei (12-0) started the season traveling to Texas and routed Duncanvill­e, to a cool, cloudless final evening in December, when the Monarchs showed their superiorit­y on both sides of the ball, there have been few teams capable of offering a challenge. Powerful offensive and defensive lines, a sophomore quarterbac­k who’s 17-0 as a starter and skill position players with speed and talent separated the Monarchs.

USC-bound running back Raleek Brown had touchdown runs of one, three and 15 yards. Quarterbac­k Elijah Brown completed 18 of 25 passes for 243 yards and two touchdowns.

The domination began early against outmanned Serra (11-2), the Northern California representa­tive that took a charter plane to the Southland. Elijah Brown connected with Cooper Barkate in full stride for a 78yard touchdown. Then Malaki Te’o returned an intercepti­on 21 yards for a touchdown for a 14-0 lead. Then Tanner Williams stripped the ball and Joshua Hunter recovered it on the Serra three. Raleek Brown scored on a one-yard run for a 21-0 lead.

The strength of Mater Dei’s defense has been its agile, quick linebacker­s. David Bailey, a Stanford commit, and Te’o use their speed to fill holes and aggressive­ly attack ball carriers. They’re consistent tacklers and rarely make mistakes. They’ve been that way for four months.

“The defense is the best I’ve ever seen,” Serra coach Patrick Walsh said.

And Elijah Brown’s play just adds to a storied quarterbac­k history at Mater Dei with two years of high school left. “I got to see him develop and adapt through my eyes and the sky is the limit with him,” Barkate said. “He’s only going to get better.”

Mater Dei has been experienci­ng a talent surge, helping explain how it has won state bowl championsh­ips three times in the last five years under coach Bruce Rollinson, who has a 32986-2 record in 33 seasons. But Rollinson’s program has come under scrutiny for offthe-field issues. For two weeks, there have been revelation­s in court documents from lawsuits about Mater Dei football players engaging in violent behavior, leading to the school and Diocese of Orange trying to counter the allegation­s with promises of an investigat­ion into safety practices and a commitment from school president Father Walter E. Jenkins that “all aspects will be handled consistent­ly and in accordance with the core values of our institutio­n.”

It was on the eve of the Southern Section Division 1 final that the family of a former football player filed a lawsuit alleging he suffered a traumatic brain injury in a locker room hazing incident last February in which players punched each other. Another lawsuit came to light from a 2019 incident in which football players allegedly attacked a Mater Dei basketball player off campus.

Rollinson declined to comment. The offseason begins with uncertaint­y as to where things are headed.

Attendance for five bowl games held at Saddleback College was 13,923, including 9,203 for three games on Saturday.

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