Trinity League has three football coach openings. Are more to come?
It’s musical chairs time in the powerful Trinity League, where the number of football head coaching openings has grown to three with the announcement Thursday that JSerra has parted ways with Scott McKnight. And there’s growing debate whether Santa Margarita also could have an opening.
“Crazy,” is how one Orange County coach described the current state of affairs.
Santa Ana Mater Dei and Servite previously announced they were looking for new head coaches. Bruce Rollinson announced he will retire at the conclusion of the Monarchs’ season and Servite announced it has parted ways with Troy Thomas.
These unprecedented changes could have a ripple effect depending on whether schools hire from within or from outside.
The jobs are not easy in the Trinity League, where administrators are under pressure to produce winning programs and stay competitive with the league’s two top teams, Mater Dei and St. John Bosco.
Joe McNab steps down as football coach at Sherman Oaks Notre Dame High. He will continue as track coach.
The willingness of schools to make changes after one bad season also makes the job not exactly ideal for someone coaching at a public school that likes stability.
Asked whether the Trinity League is now run like college programs, one assistant said, “Definitely.”
JSerra certainly has a group of assistants who could receive attention to take over for McKnight, who spent two years as head coach.
Orange Lutheran coach Rod Sherman, hired last year, could be No. 2 in seniority behind only Jason Negro of St. John Bosco this fall.
High school football: City and Southern Section playoff schedule
More to Read
Get our high school sports newsletter
Prep Rally is devoted to the SoCal high school sports experience, bringing you scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.