Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

DONATION SEEN AS BOOST TO ‘THAT RANCHO PRIDE’

- ray.brewer@lasvegassu­n.com / 702-990-2662 / @raybrewer2­1

process, was the one the resonated most with the selection committee.

Rancho would be getting the much-needed facelift, everything from two new sets of Nike football uniforms, equipment for physical education classes, a scorer’s table for basketball and wrestling, and shot puts for the track and field team. The total grant wound up being $120,000, which brought 17,000 items — with Crawford making sure every team’s needs were included. Boxes loaded with the new equipment were delivered daily for about two weeks, which “was like Christmas every day,” DiOrio said.

“When we got the $1,000, we were high-fiving each other,” Crawford said. “That seems like a small amount, but for us, it’s not.”

Rancho officials last week had an assembly to celebrate the grant. Tables with the equipment were on display, and students were given the opportunit­y to try some of the gear. Crawford and DiOrio sense the haul has already piqued the interest in some to join a team.

That’s especially true for Rancho’s football program, whose struggles were so bad in 2014 the school decided to play an independen­t schedule with hopes of building the roster and breaking a 29-game losing streak.

They broke the streak but still aren’t competitiv­e. They haven’t won the “Bone Game” rivalry with Las Vegas in more than 20 seasons — and usually lose by the mercy rule of a running clock — and finished 2018 with just 17 players on the team.

But they have a new coach — and not just any coach. Leon Evans, who won playoff games coaching at Desert Pines and Centennial, took over earlier this month. More important, Evans is a Rancho High graduate and was part of the Rams’ 1988 state championsh­ip team. He knows firsthand that games can be won at his alma mater and is telling anyone willing to listen that it will happen again.

He’s so passionate about the school that he got a Rams’ football helmet tattooed on his shoulder in the mid-1990s, long before tattoos became trendy.

“This was the only school for people in North Las Vegas. This was our school,” he said. “There was pride because this was our neighborho­od. Winning football games was the expectatio­n here.”

At his first team meeting, 65 students attended, saying they were interested in playing.

The grant, which also produced helmets, pads, field gear and weight room equipment, surely contribute­d to the interest.

Some of Rancho’s other teams — baseball, softball, girls track and girls volleyball, for instance — have competed for championsh­ips in recent years. Most of them, though, are comprised of students in Rancho’s aviation and medical magnet program, not from the neighborho­od.

Those families, many of whom qualify for free and reduced lunch, aren’t able to afford joining a team. Others simply don’t participat­e because they are working to help make ends meet at home.

“You definitely have to get creative (with budgets) because we don’t get some of the community support that (other Las Vegas) schools do,” DiOrio said.

The grant process called for applicant schools to submit a video showing what needed to be updated. For Rancho, that was easy because it lacked so much: The soccer scoreboard isn’t functionin­g, football practice jerseys are ripped and some teams didn’t have enough balls for practice. What they did have that was serviceabl­e was severely outdated.

“We told the kids to find things that need repair, find things you’d like to see better at the school with athletics,” said Jason Flener, who heads the Rancho video production program.

The new gear brings new hope. Sure, looking better and feeling better won’t immediatel­y equal wins, but administra­tors know it’s a step in the right direction. And, most important, it gives students a better high school experience.

Soon, especially if Evans has his way, Rancho will again threaten for championsh­ips and restock the trophy cases.

“We want everyone around here to have that Rancho pride,” Crawford said.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R DEVARGAS ?? Rancho High football coach Leon Evans, a 1989 alumnus, shows off his Rams tattoo.
CHRISTOPHE­R DEVARGAS Rancho High football coach Leon Evans, a 1989 alumnus, shows off his Rams tattoo.

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