Marijon Ancich of St. Paul and Tustin High Schools. Ancich ranks #2 behind Bob Ladouceur of DLS HS in career wins. Lou Farrar played and coached at Charter Oak (Covina) for decades. Pretty sure he had over 320 career wins. Rollinson at MD HS has over 300 career wins.
Not Disputable: "The List" starts with Bob Ladouceur - Concord - DeLaSalle
His first season as head coach resulted in DeLaSalle's first winning season. His second season resulted in their first appearance in the California Prep Football State Rankings and began De La Salle's evolution into a perennial champion. From 1992 to 2004, he guided the team to 12 consecutive undefeated seasons, setting a national winning streak record for high school football of 151 consecutive wins—a record in US amateur sports matched only by the 159-game winning streak of Passaic High School in men's basketball, and the 459 match win streak of Brandon High School in men's wrestling.[1] Ladouceur was enshrined to the National High School Hall of Fame in 2001. His team has topped the USA Today rankings five times and he is a three-time coach of the year. He retired on January 4, 2013 with a career record of 399–25–3.[2] His .934 winning percentage is a record among coaches with 200 or more wins. Ladouceur is the all-time winningest coach in California high school football and has led the De La Salle program to numerous championships.
Cameron Colvin, former wide receiver for Oregon Ducks
T. J. Ward, defensive back formerly for Cleveland Browns, Denver Broncos and Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Terron Ward, Running back formerly with Atlanta Falcons, Arizona Hotshots and Salt Lake Stallions
Jackie Bates, Running back formerly with Kansas City Chiefs and San Jose SaberCats
Maurice Jones-Drew, running back formerly with Jacksonville Jaguars and Oakland Raiders
Kevin Simon, linebacker formerly with Washington Redskins, current scout for Cowboys
Matt Gutierrez, quarterback formerly with New England Patriots, Kansas City Chiefs, Chicago Bears, Omaha Nighthawks, Washington Redskins, St. Louis Rams, Arizona Rattlers and Kansas City Command
D. J. Williams, outside linebacker formerly with Denver Broncos and Chicago Bears
Doug Brien, placekicker formerly with San Francisco 49ers, New Orleans Saints, Indianapolis Colts, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Minnesota Vikings, New York Jets and Chicago Bears
David Loverne, guard formerly with New York Jets, Washington Redskins, St. Louis Rams, Detroit Lions and Houston Texans
Derek Landri, defensive tackle formerly with Jacksonville Jaguars, Carolina Panthers, Philadelphia Eagles, and Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Steve Alexakos, assistant line coach (1991–1994), guard for Denver Broncos and New York Giants
Amani Toomer, wide receiver formerly for the New York Giants and the Kansas City Chiefs
Aaron Taylor, offensive guard formerly for the Green Bay Packers
Demetrius Williams, wide receiver formerly with Baltimore Ravens, Cleveland Browns, Jacksonville Jaguars and Sacramento Mountain Lions
Ladoceur had no beef whatsoever with USC. One of his best-ever QB's, Mike Bastianelli, played Safety for the Trojans. As you may recall, Mike and Darrell Russell died in a car accident. (Ladoceur played at Utah and San Jose St.). Like many Catholic high schools....there is always the looming recruiting presence of Notre Dame (Mater Dei's Jon Huarte won MD's first Heisman at ND). However, Ladoceur has sent players to USC, Michigan, Miami, Cal, Oregon, San Jose St., etc etc, Ladoceur's DeLaSalle was 4-0 vs Rollinson's Mater Dei.
In the late 60's at a Trojan Club meeting while hosting many high school recruits and their coaches, Coach John Mckay referred to coach Van Hoorebeke as the greatest FB coach in high school, college or PRO football. Of course this was prior to coach Bob Ladouceur. Both were great!
Yes, I wasn’t trying to imply he had any animosity towards USC. I’m thinking he wasn’t overly impressed I was nothing more than SC fan coming through for a visit. Nice guy, not rude
Marijon Ancich of St. Paul and Tustin High Schools. Ancich ranks #2 behind Bob Ladouceur of DLS HS in career wins. Lou Farrar played and coached at Charter Oak (Covina) for decades. Pretty sure he had over 320 career wins. Rollinson at MD HS has over 300 career wins.
Not Disputable: "The List" starts with Bob Ladouceur - Concord - DeLaSalle
His first season as head coach resulted in DeLaSalle's first winning season. His second season resulted in their first appearance in the California Prep Football State Rankings and began De La Salle's evolution into a perennial champion. From 1992 to 2004, he guided the team to 12 consecutive undefeated seasons, setting a national winning streak record for high school football of 151 consecutive wins—a record in US amateur sports matched only by the 159-game winning streak of Passaic High School in men's basketball, and the 459 match win streak of Brandon High School in men's wrestling.[1] Ladouceur was enshrined to the National High School Hall of Fame in 2001. His team has topped the USA Today rankings five times and he is a three-time coach of the year. He retired on January 4, 2013 with a career record of 399–25–3.[2] His .934 winning percentage is a record among coaches with 200 or more wins. Ladouceur is the all-time winningest coach in California high school football and has led the De La Salle program to numerous championships.
National championships (11):
1994 (ESPN), 1998 (USA Today), 1999 (National Sports News Service), 2000 (USA Today), 2001 (USA Today), 2002 (USA Today), 2003 (USA Today) Calpreps 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
California State Bowl championships (5):
2007, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
CIF North Coast section championships (28): 1982, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012
Notable players and assistant coaches
Cameron Colvin, former wide receiver for Oregon Ducks
T. J. Ward, defensive back formerly for Cleveland Browns, Denver Broncos and Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Terron Ward, Running back formerly with Atlanta Falcons, Arizona Hotshots and Salt Lake Stallions
Jackie Bates, Running back formerly with Kansas City Chiefs and San Jose SaberCats
Maurice Jones-Drew, running back formerly with Jacksonville Jaguars and Oakland Raiders
Kevin Simon, linebacker formerly with Washington Redskins, current scout for Cowboys
Matt Gutierrez, quarterback formerly with New England Patriots, Kansas City Chiefs, Chicago Bears, Omaha Nighthawks, Washington Redskins, St. Louis Rams, Arizona Rattlers and Kansas City Command
D. J. Williams, outside linebacker formerly with Denver Broncos and Chicago Bears
Doug Brien, placekicker formerly with San Francisco 49ers, New Orleans Saints, Indianapolis Colts, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Minnesota Vikings, New York Jets and Chicago Bears
David Loverne, guard formerly with New York Jets, Washington Redskins, St. Louis Rams, Detroit Lions and Houston Texans
Derek Landri, defensive tackle formerly with Jacksonville Jaguars, Carolina Panthers, Philadelphia Eagles, and Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Steve Alexakos, assistant line coach (1991–1994), guard for Denver Broncos and New York Giants
Amani Toomer, wide receiver formerly for the New York Giants and the Kansas City Chiefs
Aaron Taylor, offensive guard formerly for the Green Bay Packers
Demetrius Williams, wide receiver formerly with Baltimore Ravens, Cleveland Browns, Jacksonville Jaguars and Sacramento Mountain Lions
Austin Hooper, Tight End for Cleveland Browns
Bailey Myers, Center for Dallas Cowboys
My high school football coach is in the City Section HOF. I dont think he ever knew my name. a real hard ass.