Granada Hills reaches state championship game — without completing a pass
The early-morning fog casts a sheen over John Elway Stadium, the Granada Hills High football players assembling into formation again, bundled in hoodies underneath forest-green jerseys.
This was the stamping grounds for one of the greatest athletes in City Section history, a young John Elway slinging the ball for the Highlanders in his pre-NFL days. Yet 45 years later, nary a pass cuts through this Monday morning haze, coach Bucky Brooks barking out directions as his players line up in their vaunted double-wing offense again. And again. And again.
They put hours upon hours into the running game, Utah commit and featured running back Dijon Stanley says. And indeed the Highlanders have, riding Stanley and his cousin Darrell Stanley to a 12-2 season and a spot in the CIF Division 4-A state championship football bowl game against Novato San Marin on Saturday.
These Highlanders aren’t just run-heavy, though. They’re run-only, unlike any state championship team in California history. Get this: Granada Hills, the home of Elway, hasn’t completed a pass all season. All seven of their pass attempts have fallen incomplete.
When asked whether that was strange to look back on, Dijon Stanley grinned and shook his head.
“We’ve been doing this all year,” said Stanley, who has rushed for 32 touchdowns this season. “It’s not really weird to us. We always say we would rather be great at one thing than be good at a lot of things.”
The irony? Brooks, the mad scientist and former NFL kick returner cooking up this scheme, was once a proponent of a spread offense at Sherman Oaks Notre Dame under then-coach Kevin Rooney.
“He was the guy, when coaching with us, was trying to get us to throw the ball more,” Rooney said of Brooks.
Yet after years of talented quarterbacks and receivers at Notre Dame, Brooks quickly learned in 2019 — his first year at Granada Hills — that the City Section was a completely different ballgame.
After attempting to start the season in a power-spread offense, trying formations out of the shotgun and mixing runs with bubble screens, Brooks realized he had to pivot as his Highlanders coaching career started 0-3. The double-wing, then, was merely a part of their goal-line playbook. Brooks made it the focal point of their offensive system.
In today’s City Section landscape, Brooks said, it’s not always easy to find a quality quarterback. Even harder to retain them. So his philosophy in building a program? Have a system in place that lets you play without the pass.
“In high school,” Brooks said, “you got to coach what shows up.”
Prep football: SoCal and NorCal Regional results and State Championship schedule.
What’s shown up this season: the Stanley cousins, who have run wild in the double-wing behind an offensive line that has played together for a couple of seasons. Darrell, a sophomore, has run for 1,294 yards. Dijon, now a senior but playing his first full high school football season after breaking his collarbone last year, has racked up 2,670 yards.
After that injury-interrupted junior season, when Granada Hills stumbled to a 4-6 record, many believed Dijon would leave, he said. Not an option. He had known Brooks from his youth football days, and the coach, Dijon said, gave him a chance after he transferred from Grace Brethren High.
“It does give me a little sense of pride to just come out and play with my brothers,” Dijon said. “No scouting, no recruiting. These are just kids from — half of them live around the corner from the school, me being one of them.”
On Saturday, the neighborhood kids beat Laguna Beach, a Southern Section program with 38 passing touchdowns on the year, in a 56-55 barnburner for the CIF Division 4-A regional title. San Marin, the Highlanders’ opponent for the state title Saturday, is a team that has recorded — in a remarkable coincidence — 38 passing touchdowns on the year.
Since 2019, Brooks’ first season, Granada Hills has passed for one score.
“I think the challenge that you have sometimes as a coach is, are you married to systems or are you married to what works well for what you have?” Brooks said.
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