Los Angeles Times

Thank the lawyers for super-team era

- ERIC SONDHEIMER ON HIGH SCHOOLS

Let the hype and excitement begin. Unbeaten Santa Ana Mater Dei (8-0) and Bellflower St. John Bosco (8-0), ranked No. 1 and No. 2 in the nation, are set to play Friday night in a much-anticipate­d, nationally televised Trinity League game.

For one week, USC, UCLA, the Rams and Chargers will take a back seat to high school football.

It’s the fourth consecutiv­e year these two have separated themselves from the 582 other footballpl­aying schools in the CIF Southern Section. St. John Bosco defeated the Monarchs in the 2016 Division 1 final, and Mater Dei defeated the Braves in the last two finals.

How did this domination happen? Credit great coaching, great players and great administra­tive support, but you also can thank lawyers for helping ignite the current state of affairs.

In November 2012, the Diocese of Orange and Mater Dei reached agreement to settle a 2-year-old lawsuit against the Southern Section that alleged unfair treatment and discrimina­tion against Mater Dei athletes.

“This was never about money,” Mater Dei’s attorney, Jerome Jackson, said at the time. “It was about fairness.”

The Southern Section had declared ineligible a Mater Dei football player and water polo player, both of whom had transferre­d. More than $109,000 in attorney fees was spent by the CIF in defending the Southern Section. The settlement launched an all-out CIF retreat.

Among the consequenc­es: Months earlier, in an effort to reduce legal fees, the CIF went from a oneyear sit-out period for transfers who had not moved to about one month. It helped reduce appeals for hardship waivers, saving more money. Later came removal of language designed to prevent athletes from transferri­ng for sports reasons. All changes were approved by membership schools.

Also affecting the environmen­t was pressure from the state legislatur­e to encourage school choice among parents. The CIF didn’t want the legislatur­e to intervene, so rules were loosened.

What it has led to is Mater Dei and St. John Bosco engaging in an all-out race for talent that has left everyone else far behind. As one football fan wrote on Twitter, “USC and UCLA problem is, they don’t recruit as good as MD and St. John Bosco.”

Roger Blake, the former executive director of the CIF, said, “I used to worry about the coaches recruiting. I don’t think it’s as big an issue anymore as parents recruiting and parents shopping. It has created super programs.”

Southern Section commission­er Rob Wigod insists he does not believe the lawsuit settlement was “connected in any way” to the rise of Mater Dei and St. John Bosco. “The Archdioces­e of Orange County lawsuit was focused on the concept of athletic motivation as an aspect of CIF Bylaw 510,” he said in an email. “They believed there was an inconsiste­nt applicatio­n of that provision in that bylaw and felt it should be eliminated.”

But the transfer changes clearly opened the door to super teams. Mater Dei, which went 17 consecutiv­e seasons without winning a Division 1 title until 2017, has won the last two bolstered by players from all over Southern California. Transfers have filled key spots after the Monarchs took in an all-star group of freshmen in 2016 from the Inland Empire and elsewhere.

St. John Bosco was the first to come up with the idea of making inroads to youth football players by holding camps and creating seven-on-seven youth teams. Mater Dei eventually adopted the St. John Bosco model. Distance is no longer an obstacle for players, who are traveling more than one hour from their neighborho­od schools. There are van pools, ride-sharing services, metro trains and hitching a ride with assistant coaches.

In simple terms, they’ve become all-star teams that are no longer capable of being upset. Mater Dei used to occasional­ly lose to Carson, La Puente Bishop Amat and Mission Viejo. That will not happen now. The Monarchs and Braves have assembled elite coaching staffs with top assistants and the kind of roster depth that keeps them successful in spite of injuries.

This is the state of high school sports. There will be a sold-out stadium Friday night. The Fox Sports West commentato­rs will be gushing about the college-level talent on the field. Fans will debate who’s No. 1, then look ahead to the Nov. 30 rematch in the Division 1 final at Cerritos College.

Then everyone can turn to basketball, where twotime defending Open Division champion Chatsworth Sierra Canyon has five transfers to replace last year’s starting lineup that featured five transfer students.

Hail the lawyers, because they helped create the super team era.

 ?? Michael Owen Baker For The Times ?? MATER DEI and St. John Bosco, which have met in the Southern Section Division 1 final each of the last three seasons, face off again Friday night as the top-ranked teams in the nation.
Michael Owen Baker For The Times MATER DEI and St. John Bosco, which have met in the Southern Section Division 1 final each of the last three seasons, face off again Friday night as the top-ranked teams in the nation.

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