Los Angeles Times

Patriots’ football dominance built for the long run

- By Eric Sondheimer

A City Section winning streak that shows no sign of ending continued Saturday night in the Open Division championsh­ip football game at Valley College. The Birmingham Patriots haven’t lost to a City team since 2017, and when you have the best team and don’t make mistakes, the chance for an upset quickly disappears.

“It’s crazy,” junior quarterbac­k Kingston Tisdell said. “Our guys are excited. I’m excited.”

Garfield tried to use up clock and make the Patriots work every possession, but the result was a second straight championsh­ip game defeat for the Bulldogs. The Patriots, under coach Jim Rose, won their 42nd consecutiv­e game against City competitio­n and a fourth consecutiv­e Open Division title with a 49-7 victory. The streak ties Wilson High during the Ron Cuccia era of the 1970s.

“We know if we play our best game, it’s going to be hard to beat us,” Rose said. “We did click with the running game tonight.”

Sophomore running back Ronnell Hewitt rushed for 158 yards in 18 carries and scored two touchdowns. Junior running back Dredon Fowles rushed for 120 yards in 12 carries and scored twice. Even backup quarterbac­k Javen Hall rushed for 76 yards and two touchdowns.

Tisdell, who has yet to have a pass intercepte­d this season in 162 attempts, completed a 67-yard touchdown pass to Antrell Harris on the final play of the first quarter for a 7-0 Birmingham lead, then connected with Peyton Waters on fourth down for a two-yard touchdown in the second quarter. Fowles ended the first half with a 12yard touchdown run for a 21-0 lead. Tisdell finished nine-of-11 passing for 178 yards.

Birmingham’s defense, featuring the Tonga twins, Bo and Nicholas, didn’t give Garfield too many opportunit­ies to move the ball, though a penalty for an ineligible player down field and a dropped pass wiped away potential long gains.

It was the third City title for Waters, who’s headed to Washington in January and will leave as one of the greatest in Birmingham lore, putting himself alongside the likes of Milton Knox, Dennis Keyes and Arlis Boardingha­m. Waters caught eight passes for 111 yards.

His touchdown catch in traffic was a momentum changer. Garfield had stopped three short runs up the middle near the goal line. On fourth down, Tisdell was about to be sacked but was able to deliver a pinpoint pass to Waters in traffic. Waters later had to deal with some rare adversity, losing the ball on a fumble and giving up a nine-yard touchdown catch to Jayden Barnes with 7:25 left in the third quarter.

The Patriots came back with a dominant 78-yard drive featuring catches of seven, 16 and 14 yards from Waters and a 10-yard touchdown run from Hewitt for a 28-7 lead.

Garfield coach Lorenzo Hernandez, whose team lost to Birmingham 49-13 in the 2022 final, said, “They’re a great team. They have athletes all over the field. Coach Rose has done a phenomenal job.”

It already has been a year to cherish for Rose. He celebrated with his daughter, Jessica, when leading the Patriots to a first City title in the inaugural season of girls’ flag football. He has been pulling double duty coaching flag and 11-man football. His season continues after Birmingham learned Sunday it will play at Del Norte of San Diego in a regional CIF bowl game. And Rose will be at SoFi Stadium for an AllStar flag football game.

“It’s pretty cool,” he said.

Division II

As quarterbac­k Ivan Levant of Fairfax threw a spiral on Saturday afternoon with the sun setting at Valley College, receiver Darvens Joseph was waiting for the ball to reach him in the end zone. It was overtime in the City Section Division II championsh­ip football game, and Joseph saw victory if he could catch it.

“Perfect throw, great catch,” Joseph said.

The game ended with a 32-yard touchdown grab by Joseph to give Fairfax a 20-14 overtime victory over Chatsworth.

Levant, who was a backup quarterbac­k on Santa Monica’s 2-8 team last season, has found a home at Fairfax. He completed 15 of 29 passes for 278 yards and two touchdowns and ran for a touchdown.

It was a tough defeat for a Chatsworth team that fumbled three times and was down to its third-string running back after ankle injuries sidelined standout Isaiah Rameau at the end of the first quarter and backup Benji Gomez in the fourth quarter. Gomez, a sophomore, rushed for 150 yards in 25 carries, including a 49yard touchdown run.

 ?? Photograph­s by Craig Weston For The Times ?? BIRMINGHAM QUARTERBAC­K Kingston Tisdell scrambles for a big gain against Garfield in the Open Division final. Tisdell completed nine of 11 passes for 178 yards and two touchdowns in his team’s 49-7 victory.
Photograph­s by Craig Weston For The Times BIRMINGHAM QUARTERBAC­K Kingston Tisdell scrambles for a big gain against Garfield in the Open Division final. Tisdell completed nine of 11 passes for 178 yards and two touchdowns in his team’s 49-7 victory.
 ?? ?? SENIORS Maynor Morales, left, and Peyton Waters celebrate after the Patriots won another Open title.
SENIORS Maynor Morales, left, and Peyton Waters celebrate after the Patriots won another Open title.

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