Los Angeles Times

For longevity, Price simply can’t be beat

- ERIC SONDHEIMER ON HIGH SCHOOLS

Ron Price is a walking, talking legend in Southern California. Across seven decades and some 60 years, Price has been coaching football.

He was on the same fields with City Section coaching Hall of Famers Chris Ferragamo (Banning), Jack Neumeier (Granada Hills) and Gene Vollnogle (Carson) and players John Elway, Rod Martin and Warren Moon. He was the health teacher for Washington Prep’s Paul Knox while at Hamilton and coached against Venice coach Angelo Gasca when Gasca was a high school quarterbac­k. He’s been a head coach at Crenshaw, Palisades and Fairfax. He started as an assistant coach in 1961 at Brentwood Military Academy and now is an assistant coach at St. Monica in Santa Monica.

“This will be the last decade and could be the last year,” he said. “When you’re 84, you’re like all the great athletes — day to day. I feel great. As long as I can do it, I’ll do it.”

Coaching the offensive line has been Price’s specialty. Coaching anything has been his lifelong passion.

“I’ve always enjoyed it,” he said. “It’s always been fun. It’s what I wanted to do from the time I was a teenager.”

Many years ago his father, who was a doctor, questioned his profession­al pursuit while living in Chicago. His dream was to coach the Chicago Bears.

“He used to look at me and laugh. He said, ‘The only Bears you’ll ever be coaching will be in a zoo.’ ”

Price has been coaching so long that a couple of players at St. Monica are sons of former players he coached. St. Monica head coach Geoff McArthur played for him at Palisades.

Gasca said of Price’s seven-decade coaching stint:

“An incredible accomplish­ment. He’s an amazing person who I greatly admire and respect. I competed against his teams as a high school player. Competed against him as a coach. Then had the fortune to work with him for many years. I’m better for it and so are the lives of all the people whose lives he touched. An icon.” Best vs. best With apologies to Texas and Florida, the best high school football game of the 2020-21 school year will take place Saturday night at Santa Ana Stadium when Bellflower St. John Bosco (5-0) plays Santa Ana Mater Dei (4-0) to decide the spring Trinity League championsh­ip.

If St. John Bosco coach Jason Negro and Mater Dei coach Bruce Rollinson could combine their teams and take them on the road to face any and all challenger­s, they’d be unbeatable.

The lines are big, powerful and mobile. The running backs are fast and big-play weapons.

The quarterbac­ks are young but future college players. The secondarie­s are aggressive and fearless.

It has all the makings of another classic game. The last one between these schools saw St. John Bosco roar back from a seemingly insurmount­able 28-5 deficit in 2019 to win 39-34 in the fourth consecutiv­e Southern Section Division 1 final involving the two schools.

For this game, Mater Dei’s defense will present a lot more problems for the Braves’ quarterbac­k duo of Pierce Clarkson and Katin Houser. It’s probably a good situation that St. John Bosco is alternatin­g quarterbac­ks every series, because that gives the Braves options to take advantage of each quarterbac­k’s strengths.

The big clue about which team will win should come early. It’s going to be about which team can run the ball most effectivel­y to open up the passing game.

So break out the popcorn on Saturday night, lay back on the couch at 7 and turn on Bally Sports West. You can hear Petros Papadakis and Greg Biggins raving about how many future five-star recruits are in the game. Golf round of the year Joshua Koo, a 16-year-old junior at Cerritos High, shot a final round of 10-under-par 62 to win the two-day Toyota Tour Cup junior golf tournament in Palm Desert on Sunday. He had eight birdies and an eagle.

“I hadn’t been hitting that well recently and was working on my putting,” he said. “That day everything clicked.”

 ?? Price family ?? RON PRICE, left, is an assistant under St. Monica coach Geoff McArthur, who he coached at Palisades.
Price family RON PRICE, left, is an assistant under St. Monica coach Geoff McArthur, who he coached at Palisades.

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