Former Power De La Salle's long road back to title game
De La Salle’s road to another state championship game has been challenging, on and off the field.
See full prep coverage in San Jose Mercury
The Spartans opened the season with back-to-back losses to Orange Lutheran and Serra, managing 14 points in the defeats. They nearly lost to a North Coast Section opponent for the first time in 32 years when San Ramon Valley took the Concord powerhouse to overtime in October.
A week after the SRV game, coach Justin Alumbaugh broke the news to the team that longtime defensive line coach Steve Jacoby had stunningly died the previous evening.
Alumbaugh let the players decide whether to play that night against El Cerrito, which they elected to do.
De La Salle beat El Cerrito and everyone else in its path on the way to a 31st consecutive NCS championship and a 41-0 rout last week of Clovis North in a NorCal regional, securing its spot in the 1-AA state title game on Friday night against Mission Viejo at Saddleback College in Mission Viejo.
After months of trying to find the keys to its storied past, De La Salle appears to have unlocked the door at just the right time.
“It’s gratifying,” Alumbaugh said on the field after the victory last week. “This team has faced a lot of adversity. You start the season with two really hard losses against two great teams. We were not a good football team, and we fought our way back and started putting together a season that we could be proud of.
“Losing Steve Jacoby, this is a resilient group. This is a group that is playing with a lot of pride and a lot of toughness and it’s gratifying to coach them. Not a lot of teams have faced the adversity that this team has faced. I am proud of them. If you had told me in late August or early September that we’d be standing here, getting ready to go down to LA for a state championship, I am not sure I would have believed you.”
The trip to Saddleback College is an opportunity for De La Salle to complete unfinished business. In the same venue last season, the Spartans nearly captured the program’s eighth state championship but lost to Lincoln-San Diego 33-28.
“Everyone that was on the team last year, we felt the pain of heading down there to state and losing,” said Cunningham, now a senior. “We know this next game, we’re going to come down there and we’re going to make up for that.”
Asked what it means for his last De La Salle game to be for a state championship, Cunningham added, “It’s amazing. It’s exactly what we wanted, especially after last year. All the way back in January when we started, we knew this is where we wanted to be, this is what we were training for. We know we have the opportunity and we’re not going to waste it.”
The atmosphere could be electric, given that Mission Viejo High is 4.4 miles from Saddleback College.
The Diablos, coached by former St. John Bosco assistant Chad Johnson for the past six seasons, reached the state final behind quarterbacks Luke Fahey and Draiden Trudeau (they rotate), running back Hinesward Lilomaiava (named after the former Pittsburgh Steelers receiver) and receiver Vance Spafford.
The difference between Serra and SoCal champ Mater Dei and why the Bay Area team’s state title chances are slim
Bay Area high school football 2023: State championship weekend preview
Bay Area News Group high school football predictions: Week 16, 2023
High school football rankings Week 16, 2023: Bay Area News Group Top 25
Monday Morning Lights: How Los Gatos, Acalanes are getting ready for first state title games
Johnson said about the QB rotation, “It’s been done to us before. I’ve got two great kids that play very well. They’re both deserving. Neither one of them wanted to leave. You know how that goes. You make one the starter and play him and one the backup and the other guy transfers. We gave it a shot and it’s been going very well.”
Over the weekend, Alumbaugh and Johnson devoted hours studying film. The Mission Viejo coach, who claims to have also spent time watching the 2014 movie about De La Salle football, “When the Game Stands Tall,” couldn’t say enough good things about Spartans defensive standout Biller.
“They’re D-line is amazing,” Johnson said. “I love, love, love No. 51. He might be my favorite player of all-time. That kid plays his absolute tail off. He’s a little undersized so he’s probably not going to USC. But holy cow, I’d take 20 51s, that’s for sure.”