Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Success didn’t come easy or early

Rememberin­g humble beginnings at Bishop Gorman

- By Ron Kantowski Las Vegas Review-Journal Contact Ron Kantowski at rkantowski@reviewjour­nal. com or 702-383-0352. Follow @ronkantows­ki on Twitter.

When it comes to high school sports, the assumption in Southern Nevada and beyond is Bishop Gorman has always had the best of everything.

Let Frank Nails, coach of the school’s first championsh­ip football team in 1970, offer evidence to the contrary.

“We would practice at night because it was so hot, and we had to get parents to pull their cars up to our little field behind the school and turn their lights on so we could practice,” said the Southern Nevada Sports Hall of Famer.

His star player was quarterbac­k David Humm, although Gorman didn’t win its first state football title until the left-handed passer had moved on to Nebraska.

Gorman, which opened in 1954, was Nails’ first head coaching stop. There were times he thought he should have kept on going.

“It was just a small school, period. We had three teams on a little football field at the back of the school that was just 90 yards long. On a good day we had maybe 500 kids in the building and that included the ninth grade,” Nails said about less than modest facilities that ultimately figured in his decision to leave Gorman for Western and then Las Vegas High, where the football field is named for him.

But Dave and Chuck Gerber were able to build on Nails’ initital success at Gorman. The brothers took turns coaching the Gaels and led them to five state titles during the 1970s and early 1980s.

Gorman was slightly more successful in basketball during its fledgling days, winning small-school state championsh­ips in 1962 and ‘63 before winning the first two of its 20 big-school Nevada titles in 1978 and ‘79. The basketball facilities were only slightly better than those for football at the old school on Maryland Parkway.

“Their gym had a stage at the east end of the court. That’s all you need to know,” said Al La Rocque, the former dean of Southern Nevada basketball coaches whose Durango teams often engaged Gorman in classic encounters in the old bandbox that had only a few rows of bleachers.

“Seven on each side,” said Mike Adras, who played on two state title teams at Gorman and coached the Gaels to two more during the late 1980s. But the cramped confines made the tiny gym a tough place to play.

“When I was coaching there (local broadcaste­r) Seat Williams would come in and do broadcasts. He dubbed it ‘The House of Glory,’” Adras said with fondness.

The way he remembers it, Gorman “was never really all that good in sports besides the big ones, football and basketball.”

The record book pretty much supports him. Boys basketball (22 state titles), football (17) and girls tennis (19) are the only sports in which Bishop Gorman has collected double-digit state championsh­ips.

Adras, who after leaving Gorman would become an assistant under Ben Howland at Northern Arizona and then lead the Lumberjack­s to the NCAA Tournament as head coach, said he drove past the site of the old Gorman High School building during the pandemic when the streets were eerily quiet.

“I cried because there’s nothing there. It’s just an old vacant lot now,” he said.

 ?? Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images ?? L.E. Baskow
Frank Nails coached football at Bishop Gorman before settling at Las Vegas High, where the field is named after him.
Las Vegas Review-Journal @Left_Eye_Images L.E. Baskow Frank Nails coached football at Bishop Gorman before settling at Las Vegas High, where the field is named after him.

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