Sports
It will be running vs. passing in City Section Division II championship game

Running back Isaiah Moreau of Chatsworth and quarterback Ivan Levant of Fairfax stood side by side Tuesday morning taking a friendly photo at the City Section championship breakfast in Lake Balboa. Of all the City Section championship football games set for this weekend, the contrast in styles between Chatsworth and Fairfax in Saturday’s 2 p.m. Division II final at Valley College should be most pronounced.
Moreau has surpassed 2,000 yards rushing. Levant had a 616-yard passing performance in the playoffs and has reached 3,273 yards passing and 42 touchdowns. Each player loves what he does.
“I just like the run,” Moreau said. “They pass almost every time.”
They were friendly, personable and offered mutual respect. Levant is more than a football player. He’s an A student, artist and teenage entrepreneur with his own shoe line through LA Gear and clothing line. He hand-paints sneakers. He hopes to one day run his own company.
The rematch
Not long after Birmingham’s 49-13 win over Garfield in last year’s Open Division final, Birmingham coach Jim Rose told Garfield coach Lorenzo Hernandez, “We’ll see you next year.”
And sure enough, it will be Birmingham facing Garfield on Saturday at 7 p.m. at Valley College. Garfield has spent a year getting stronger trying to be ready for the rematch.
“Each team has grown a lot,” Rose said. “I expect them to be better. I expect us to be better.”
Hernandez said playing two Marine League schools in the playoffs, San Pedro and Gardena, has hopefully prepared his team for Birmingham’s physical play.
“We have to be as physical as they are,” Hernandez said. “They were far more physical. I think these kids should be battle tested in terms of physicality.”
Birmingham has a 41-game winning streak against City Section schools. The record is 42 held by Wilson High during the days of Ron Cuccia at quarterback.
Banning goes for title No. 13
Banning has won 12 City Section football titles, and No. 13 could come Friday night when the Pilots face Crenshaw in the 7 p.m. Division I final at Birmingham.
The Pilots have relied on quarterback Robert Guerrero all season. Also a standout pitcher in baseball, the senior has passed for nearly 2,300 yards and 18 touchdowns and rushed for 13 touchdowns.
Jordan star
David Sandy is trying to give L.A. Jordan its first City title since 1979, when the Bulldogs face Washington Prep in the Division III final on Friday at 3 p.m. at Birmingham.
Sandy, a junior, has rushed for 2,578 yards and 35 touchdowns. He has strong ties to Jordan. It’s the high school his father, mother, aunts and uncles have attended. The one person who doesn’t go to Jordan is twin brother Isaac, who plays for King/Drew.
Washington Prep has overcome the firing of its coach after an 0-4 start to reach the final. He was replaced by basketball coach Jovante King, whose first call was to ask Hall of Fame coach Paul Knox to return to the program. Knox is the offensive coordinator.

Sports
Dolphins ‘Hard Knocks’ shows emotional moment Jaelan Phillips tore Achilles: ‘No f—ing way, bro!’

Miami Dolphins budding star pass rusher Jaelan Phillips was enjoying a breakout season when he entered MetLife Stadium to face the New York Jets on Black Friday. But he left the field prematurely with a season-ending Achilles injury, one that was captured by HBO’s and NFL Films’ cameras for “Hard Knocks.”
As you’d expect in that moment, raw emotion was all over Phillips’ face as he came to terms with what happened on the turf in real time.
Phillips was having a great game prior to going down, securing a sack and four tackles, two of which were for losses. But he was looking to finish strong and padding those stats in what became a blowout victory for Miami.
Jaelan Phillips of the Miami Dolphins is carted off the field after being injured during the New York Jets game at MetLife Stadium on Nov. 24, 2023, in East Rutherford, New Jersey. (Rich Schultz/Getty Images)
But when he went to burst off the line of scrimmage, something Phillips said he’s done 1,000 times before, he immediately felt a pop in his right ankle. Phillips hit the deck and that’s when everything started to set in.
“I think my s— popped,” Phillips told a teammate, as he was mic’d up for the game. “My Achilles. I think my Achilles popped bro.”
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“No, no, no, you’re all right,” the teammate responded.
As Phillips laid on the turf, the Dolphins’ medical staff rushed out to see what was wrong. Watching a non-contact injury, everyone on the sideline likely feared it was something serious.
“I felt like someone f—ing shot me in my f—ing Achilles,” Phillips told a trainer. “I thought someone stepped on me. No f—ing way, bro! There’s no f—ing way.”
Phillips sat up while trainers continued to work on him, and that’s when all the emotion came pouring out of Phillips. All the hours training in the offseason, battling with teammates at camp, fighting side by side in the regular season with the hopes of winning a Super Bowl were snatched away on one play.

Jaelan Phillips of the Miami Dolphins celebrates after making a defensive stop against the New York Jets at MetLife Stadium on Nov. 24, 2023. (Mike Stobe/Getty Images)
“Hey, you’re OK. Hey, buddy, you’re OK,” head coach Mike McDaniel said as Phillips was crying.
Phillips was placed on a medical cart with the entire Dolphins team surrounding him and showing their support. The stadium applauded Phillips as he held a towel over his eyes, still emotional about how his 2023 season came to an abrupt end.
Phillips underwent surgery to repair his Achilles on Tuesday. “Hard Knocks” showed Phillips in the Dolphins’ training room the next day, rolling around on a supportive scooter to keep his right leg off the ground. He was in better spirits, as he looked ahead, knowing he has a fantastic support system around him with rehab in the coming months.
“When I saw a clip after the game of my whole entire team surrounding me on the field, I mean, that just means everything to me,” he said. “My mom was crying on Dan Marino’s shoulder. You know, they were there for me, not just me, but my family as well.

Linebacker Jaelan Phillips of the Miami Dolphins in action against the New York Jets on Nov. 24, 2023. (Rich Schultz/Getty Images)
“When this is all said and done, it’s going to make me a stronger person because of it. I’m just trying to keep that positive mindset and start to attack rehab. It’s going to be a long process, but I just know that, yeah, I’m a fighter. I’m going to keep fighting.”
Sports
Top high school football games in the Southland for regional bowls

Analyzing the top high school football state playoff games this week:
FRIDAY
Birmingham (11-2) at Del Norte (11-2), 7:30 p.m.
The City Section Open Division champion Patriots have a lot to prove in the state playoffs. A 41-0 nonleague loss to Sherman Oaks Notre Dame in August still has people wondering whether Birmingham can win games outside the City Section. Quarterback Kingston Tisdell has grown immensely, making 162 pass attempts without an interception. Former NFL linebacker Nick Barnett is in his first season as head coach at Del Norte (11-2), and he has 34 seniors to rely on, including quarterback Jack Schneider, who has 23 touchdown passes. The pick: Birmingham.
Granite Hills (12-0) at Mission Viejo (11-3), 7 p.m.
Granite Hills is the San Diego Section Open Division champion with a 21-game winning streak. Freshman quarterback Zachary Benitez has shown he’s a dual threat. Running back Max Turner has scored 16 touchdowns. The Diablos are no longer considered a young team in Week 15. They are showing how good they might be in 2024. Defensive lineman Jaden Williams has 15 sacks. The pick: Mission Viejo.
SATURDAY
St. Bonaventure (11-3) vs. St. Augustine (10-4) at Mesa College, 6 p.m.
The Seraphs won the Southern Section Division 3 championship and have balance on offense with quarterback Anthony Wolter and running back Koen Glover. St. Augustine is a young team with an aggressive defense led by Isaiah Hasten, who has seven interceptions. Jon Class had four sacks in the San Diego Division I final. The pick: St. Bonaventure.
Sports
Iowa’s Cade McNamara takes subtle shot at former team ahead of Big Ten title game

Iowa Hawkeyes quarterback Cade McNamara is in a unique position to help his team gain a little bit of an edge as the team gets set to take on No. 2 Michigan in the Big Ten Championship over the weekend.
McNamara played at Michigan for three seasons before he transferred to Iowa. He played five games for the Hawkeyes this season before suffering a devastating season-ending knee injury.
Cade McNamara, #12 of the Iowa Hawkeyes, warms up before the game against the Penn State Nittany Lions at Beaver Stadium on Sept. 23, 2023 in State College, Pennsylvania. (Scott Taetsch/Getty Images)
As Iowa started talking about the conference title game, McNamara surely ruffled some feathers with his words about the Wolverines.
“I think this week, specifically, I’m not just getting Deacon (Hill) ready, I’m getting the entire team, as much as I can, because I know so much about that other team that from a defensive standpoint, from an offensive standpoint, I’m just doing everything I possibly can from an entire team standpoint to just let these guys know everything that I possibly know,” he said on “Talkin’ Hawks with The VandeBergs.”
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Cade McNamara, #12 of the Iowa Hawkeyes, walks off the field on crutches after the match-up against the Michigan State Spartans at Kinnick Stadium on Sept. 30, 2023 in Iowa City, Iowa. (Matthew Holst/Getty Images)
Michigan fans took to X to express their frustration with McNamara’s comments, calling him bitter about losing his starting quarterback job to J.J. McCarthy.
However, there did not appear to be any ill-will because of that. McCarthy himself said the team had been anticipating seeing McNamara and Erick All.
WHAT COLLEGE FOOTBALL FANS LEARNED FROM WEEK 13: RIVALRY WEEK NEVER DISAPPOINTS
“It was obviously at the forefront of our minds at the beginning of the season to have that chance to play Cade and Erick again,” McCarthy said, via The Gazette.

Cade McNamara, #12 of the Michigan Wolverines, warms up before a college football game against the Connecticut Huskies at Michigan Stadium on Sept. 17, 2022 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. (Aaron J. Thornton/Getty Images)
Iowa finished first in the Big Ten West with a 7-2 record against conference opponents and 10-2 overall.
The Hawkeyes’ last win against Michigan came in November 2016. The Hawkeyes knocked off then No. 2 Michigan at Kinnick Stadium, 14-13. The Wolverines blew the Hawkeyes out 42-3 in the 2021 Big Ten Championship.
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