Los Angeles Times

Taft’s Bristow makes the right moves

Senior quarterbac­k’s improvemen­t and willingnes­s to speak up lead to City title.

- ERIC SONDHEIMER ON HIGH SCHOOLS

There were 54 seconds left in the City Section Division III championsh­ip football game on Friday. Woodland Hills Taft trailed Panorama 20-19 and was ready to try a two-point conversion. Jeff Kearin, who has been coaching for decades at the college and high school levels, thought he had the perfect play.

Yet, his quarterbac­k, senior Wellington Bristow, told him during a timeout, “I don’t like it.”

Said Kearin: “I had a play that we always used and always worked but hadn’t practiced in two weeks. By the grace of God, they called timeout.”

After Bristow objected, Kearin said, “I don’t like it, either.”

“We both said, ‘Let’s run naked play action,’ ” the coach said. “He put us in a formation we had never done before.”

Then Bristow rolled left, saw there was no open receiver and proceeded to run, pushing away a defender, to reach the end zone for a 21-20 victory. A team that had a 26-game losing streak in August is now a City champion.

Call it the Miracle on Ventura Boulevard.

“I’ll be damned, he pulled it out,” Kearin said. “He muscled himself into the end zone. He stiff-armed this guy. If he did it on the street he would be put in jail.”

Who is this 17-year-old quarterbac­k who had the courage and gumption to question his coach before pulling off a Hollywood ending?

Bristow is 6 feet 3 and 165 pounds. He gets all A’s on his report card and his father is a professor at USC. He has played three sports at Taft. He joined the football team as a sophomore receiver. He switched to quarterbac­k when he was 145 pounds and “assessed” he needed to get bigger, stronger and better. He built his own weight rack during the COVID-19 shutdown. He broke his collarbone during the spring season. Even though Taft suffered defeat after defeat by as much as

66-0, he never thought of quitting.

“I think as sad as it was that we lost like that, we learned not to take losing in such a bad way,” Bristow said. “We lost so much we built a bond as teammates rather than what was on the scoreboard. We knew we could come to practice next week, get better. We knew not to take it in such a hard way because there’s always a next game coming up.”

Kearin was hired as Taft’s new coach just weeks before the season. There was turmoil and uncertaint­y.

“I was really hurt,” Bristow said. “I didn’t just lose my head coach, I lost my quarterbac­k coach. I never thought of quitting because I was too fond of my teammates, but it was very hard. It was a tough time for me and as a quarterbac­k trying to lead guys without a head coach.”

Kearin, a former head coach at Cal State Northridge, Loyola and St. Monica, was quick to organize. The Toreadors ended a 26-game losing streak in the second game of the season against Van Nuys. They made the Division III playoffs as the No. 1 seed. Now they’re preparing to play in the CIF state championsh­ip Division 7-A bowl game on Dec. 11 with a trip to face San Francisco Balboa.

Bristow’s intelligen­ce and work ethic serve him well. He admits his lack of strength and quarterbac­k skills needed vast improvemen­t.

“I did assess that was a problem and had to gain weight and I also assessed I wasn’t a good quarterbac­k,” he said. “I couldn’t throw a slant route at the start of the pandemic. It’s about knowing where you’re at and going from there. I had to build a weight rack to get stronger and go to the park with my family to get better.”

Kearin said what Bristow has accomplish­ed is inspiring.

“He weathered the storm,” he said. “It’s unbelievab­le. I have to believe a lot of it is upbringing. I hold him to a pretty high standard and he’s able to take my completely irrational criticism at times. But he called the winning play.”

 ?? Eric Sondheimer Los Angeles Times ?? TAFT HIGH quarterbac­k Wellington Bristow holds the City Section Division III championsh­ip trophy.
Eric Sondheimer Los Angeles Times TAFT HIGH quarterbac­k Wellington Bristow holds the City Section Division III championsh­ip trophy.

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