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Chapter 242 - Documentary III

Rick rested his elbows on the desk, interlaced his fingers, and gave a faint smile, like someone who knew exactly why he was there.

"I remember the first time I saw Andrew," he began. "As an offensive coordinator, I spend hours watching highlights, especially of players in California who aren't at Mater Dei. It's part of the job: identifying talent, seeing who might fit, who has something different."

He made a small dismissive gesture with his hand. "But at Mater Dei, it doesn't work like it does at other schools. Each year we can bring in, at best, eight to twelve outside players. No more. And that's on a roster of more than sixty kids."

Rick leaned forward slightly and continued. "The school takes a lot of pride in developing its players from freshman year on, making sure they know the system, the discipline, the expectations, from day one."

He paused briefly before adding:

"And generally, we don't bring in quarterbacks… We've had five-star and four-star quarterbacks who were at Mater Dei from their first year. We develop them here. That's something the program is very proud of. Creating quarterbacks is part of our identity."

As he spoke, images appeared to match his words: Leinart, Barkley, Wittek, and other talented quarterbacks from the '90s era.

The camera returned to Rick.

"That's why, when we bring in players from the outside, we're almost always talking about linemen, offensive or defensive," he explained. "Positions where genetics matter a lot, where it's harder to develop someone from scratch."

Rick smiled slightly, as if anticipating the turn.

"Until I found Andrew's highlights and realized I wasn't watching something normal."

He let his words sink in for a second, then continued. "I found him on MaxPreps. At the time, he was at Palisades. He was a sophomore and had already won his second section championship in Los Angeles."

The camera showed images of Palisades: a modest field with small bleachers, but living through the best period in its history.

"I started looking into the school. Five years earlier, they weren't even on the map. At best, they'd finish third or fourth in their league just to sneak into the playoffs. And then suddenly, in a little over a year, boom: five titles. And with the chance at a sixth, which ultimately did happen," he said, shaking his head in disbelief.

The image cut back to a younger Andrew, throwing the ball in a Palisades uniform.

"That's when I really started following him," he admitted. "Yes, with a certain obsession. I'm a quarterbacks coach, I couldn't look the other way."

He chuckled softly.

"I talked to Bruce. To the rest of the staff. I told them: we have to look at this kid, he might be what we're looking for."

The footage showed Palisades games in both Division V and Division IV, but the result was always the same, win after win.

"He finished his sophomore year with sixty touchdowns. And even though it was a lower division, nothing he did was inflated. These weren't screens. They weren't short passes to pad the stats. They were explosive runs, slipping past defenders. Intermediate and deep throws, with real reads."

He waved his hand, brushing aside any doubt.

"In two years: six titles and more than a hundred touchdowns. That's not a coincidence."

The image changed: headlines, rankings, on-screen commentary. The name Palisades appeared again and again, always alongside Andrew's. By that point, he was already listed as a high four-star, with analysts debating how far he could go in his final two years of high school and whether he'd make the jump to a more competitive division.

"Unfortunately for us," Rick added with a smile, "we weren't the only ones watching him."

"At that point, it was obvious to anyone with half a brain that we were looking at a rare talent," he said bluntly. "Everyone wanted to see him against elite competition. And offers he didn't lack those."

Rick shook his head, remembering it.

"For a moment, I thought someone else was going to steal him from us," he confessed, half joking.

He smiled a little wider.

"But he chose us. Thank God."

The words hung in the air for a few seconds, and then there was a cut.

Now it was a different office, with trophies neatly lined up, framed photographs of championship teams, signed jerseys, and yellowed newspaper clippings. Everything spoke of decades of football.

Bruce Rollinson appeared seated behind his desk, posture straight, with the calm expression of someone who no longer needs to assert himself.

At the bottom of the screen, a question appeared: How was Andrew's adaptation?

Bruce didn't even need to think about it. "Impressive," he replied.

Then he paused briefly, as if weighing his words, before adding, "That word might actually fall short."

He let the phrase breathe.

"The fastest adaptation I've seen in my entire career. And we're talking about a quarterback," he added. "The most cerebral and complex position in this sport."

"A quarterback has to orchestrate the offense, read defenses in seconds, and carry responsibility for every single play. Athletic ability alone isn't enough. You also need a brain. You have to understand the game and anticipate it."

The images showed whiteboards, practices, and quick corrections on the field.

"Normally, adapting to a new environment, to a different playbook, takes time," he said. "Months. Sometimes years, and in some cases, it never fully happens."

The camera returned to Bruce.

"With Andrew, it wasn't like that. By the summer, he had already earned the starting quarterback job. And one of the most surprising things was that the team followed him."

He leaned forward slightly and continued. "The seniors respected him immediately. For his discipline, his work ethic, and his personality. That's when I knew we weren't dealing with just a good player. We were dealing with someone different."

There was a cut to footage of Andrew giving instructions in the middle of a game to seniors, juniors, and everyone else alike. Another shot showed him walking onto the field before kickoff, helmet in hand. Behind him, the rest of the team, taller, heavier linemen, seniors with years in the program, all following him just a step behind.

Rinaldi's voice returned in voice-over, providing context:

"As the coach said, Andrew earned the starting job during summer practices at an unthinkable speed. In just a matter of weeks, he displaced Max Wittek, a four-star senior, an experienced quarterback with a verbal offer from USC."

The images showed highlights of Wittek and his MaxPreps profile.

"And that meant the first test came almost immediately. To see whether the coaches' decision to bench a senior starter had been the right one…"

A title appeared on screen:

Dana Hills Summer Tournament — Summer

A highly prestigious 7-on-7 tournament. Elite schools and watchful recruiters. An ideal stage to measure reality. Andrew was the starting quarterback from the very first snap, a decision that did not go unnoticed once it became known that the senior had been relegated to the bench.

The images began to cut together rapidly. Mater Dei playing 7-on-7, with an offense that found no resistance. The ball leaving Andrew's hand again and again, clean routes, quick reads, and an unstoppable tempo.

Andrew led the Monarchs with authority and a rare calm for his first tournament at an elite high school.

In seven games at the Dana Hills Summer Tournament, he threw 41 touchdowns, dominating every matchup. Cameras captured repeated celebrations, incredulous smiles on the sideline, and recruiters taking notes without taking their eyes off the field.

The final was against St. John Bosco. The footage showed an intense, physical game loaded with tension, a rivalry that had already been growing, but from that moment on was sealed as one destined to reach another level in the near future.

Even so, Mater Dei prevailed and lifted the trophy. It wasn't an official title, but the image was captured forever: Andrew raising his first trophy in Monarchs colors.

That tournament marked the symbolic beginning of his era at Mater Dei. After Dana Hills, the rise was immediate.

Screens showed ranking updates. Andrew, who had begun the summer as a high four-star, was reclassified as a five-star, named the number one dual-threat quarterback in the country, and vaulted into the national Top 10 of his class across all positions.

And after that, September began.

The first preseason game came against Narbonne, the Los Angeles Division I champion. The footage showed a serious, physical opponent. Andrew responded with four touchdowns in a 32–15 victory for Mater Dei.

In an isolated shot, an interception appeared. A minor detail, but a striking one, something that would become a rarity over the course of his season and would stand as the only one for several weeks.

A week later came the second preseason game. New footage. Another win. Five touchdowns, zero interceptions. The pace never slowed.

Then came the Trinity League opener.

The first league game was against Orange Lutheran, a program with deep tradition. The final score appeared on screen: 46–17. Andrew threw five touchdowns, all through the air, with no interceptions, piling up 370 passing yards. Cameras focused on the crowd on its feet and the Mater Dei sideline celebrating without restraint.

Week two of league play brought Santa Margarita. A 40–20 victory. Andrew dominated again: four touchdowns, three passing and one rushing. Once again, no interceptions. The images repeated a pattern that was becoming increasingly clear.

A week later, JSerra. Another comfortable win.

The tally appeared on screen:

Andrew Pritchett-Tucker

5 games

23 touchdowns

1 interception

1,675 passing yards

Average: 4.6 touchdowns per game

Rinaldi's voice came in over the footage. "Mater Dei wasn't just winning," he said. "It had once again begun to strike fear into its opponents."

The images reinforced the point: dejected opposing sidelines. Silent stadiums filled with rival fans wearing resigned expressions. Exhausted defenses. Even coaches glancing at the clock too early, almost wishing the beating would end.

"The team was evoking sensations similar to the golden years of the nineties," Rinaldi continued, "and in many ways, even more overwhelming."

Final scores scrolled across the screen. Margins of fifteen points or more. Games decided before the fourth quarter, even against high-level opponents.

"Because this time," he added, "the extraordinary had become routine."

More of Andrew's touchdowns filled the screen.

"These weren't isolated performances," Rinaldi explained. "They weren't three- or four-touchdown games that used to be enough to talk about a great night that would be hard to repeat the following Friday."

"They were four, five, even six touchdowns, repeated week after week without fail. There was no peak," Rinaldi continued. "There was a constant line, and it was very high."

"And everything reached a new scale in Week Four of the Trinity League: Bosco vs. Mater Dei."

The images stopped abruptly. The stadium noise vanished, replaced by a sharp transition. The football field faded away, and in its place appeared a sober, clearly televised studio. The image was deliberately frozen in black and white.

A man in his early thirties was sitting on a beanbag chair. Across from him sat Andrew.

"The interview ESPN released three days before the game completely changed the context of the matchup," Rinaldi's voice explained over the frozen frame. "Because of a few simple words."

The image returned to color and the interview continued.

"You know your game against Bosco will be broadcast regionally, right?" the interviewer asked.

Andrew nodded, with genuine excitement. "Yeah, I'm excited. It's going to be my first game broadcast live on television."

The interviewer smiled, as if holding something back. "Well… I've got a surprise. It's not just regional. ESPN decided to air it nationally. The whole country is going to watch!"

There was a second of silence. Andrew stayed still, processing the information. Then he smiled, a wide, almost childlike smile.

"Thats great!" he said, even more excited than before. "The whole country is going to watch the beatdown live!"

The camera caught the interviewer for a fraction of a second. He hadn't expected that. The confidence. No filter.

The image froze again. "At that moment," Rinaldi resumed, "the game stopped being just a league matchup and became a national rivalry."

The screen faded to black. And then the avalanche began.

The images returned, but no longer to the field. Sports headlines appearing one after another. Debate shows replaying the clip. Lower-third banners with chopped-up quotes. Andrew's name looping endlessly.

In parallel, screenshots of social media: anonymous, heated messages from Bosco fans, promises to "bring him back down to earth," equally intense responses from those who already followed him. The digital noise grew fast, too fast for a high school game.

"For ESPN," Rinaldi continued, "it wasn't a problem, if anything, it was an advantage."

The network had made a bold bet: a national broadcast for a Trinity League game. And the risk made sense. Andrew didn't just dominate on the field, he brought something new to high school football, a built-in audience. More than a two million subscribers following his every move on his channel. The interest was no longer just Californian. It was national.

"The expectations were high," Rinaldi said. "And the question was simple: could he deliver on the promise of a blowout?"

There was a cut. Now they were in a stadium with a capacity of more than nine thousand people. Bosco at home, the stands full, and a constant roar filling the air.

"The answer came quickly."

The footage sped up. Deep passes, routes won cleanly, defenders left behind. Touchdown. Another. And another. Andrew dominated the game. No adjustment was enough, nor were the efforts of Bosco's players to get revenge for those words said on television. There was no response that could stop the momentum.

"Seven touchdowns," Rinaldi concluded, as the final score and Andrew's stat line from the game appeared on screen.

The promise had been fulfilled, and for many, it wasn't just another Mater Dei win. It was one of the most devastating performances ever seen in a high school regular-season game.

Then came the next step on Mater Dei's already playoff-bound path: Servite.

Both teams arrived at 4–0. Servite wasn't just a contender, it was the defending league and section champion. The team with the best defense in the section, even better than Long Beach Poly, which had a stronger offense. The benchmark by which everyone else was measured.

Another national broadcast. A neutral, packed stadium.

The atmosphere was different, less media noise, more real tension.

"Servite came in with the number one defense in the section," Rinaldi narrated in voice-over. "The only one that, in theory, could stop Mater Dei."

"It couldn't."

The Monarchs' offense imposed itself once again. Servite answered back. Their quarterback had a strong night: two touchdowns, two field goals, and poise. In any other scenario, it would have been an MVP-worthy performance.

But on the other side was Andrew, who threw for five touchdowns.

"There was no possible equation," Rinaldi explained. "If you couldn't stop him with your defense… the only alternative was to outscore him with your offense."

"And that," he added, "simply seemed harder than the first option."

The final whistle came with a sense of inevitability.

The ceremony appeared on screen. Mater Dei lifting its first title of the season. Andrew surrounded by cameras as he was handed the game's MVP.

"Andrew played in three leagues in his career: he won all three. Seventh official title of his high school career."

And the season wasn't over yet.

The images kept rolling, stitched together by Rinaldi's steady narration.

First round of the playoffs: Crespi. Regional broadcast on Fox Sports. Andrew set the tempo again with seven touchdowns. The second interception of his entire season came on an isolated play, a cornerback jumping a route. It changed nothing. The result was comfortable, almost overwhelming.

Quarterfinals: Lakewood. Same story, win and regional broadcast. And another note that began circulating in network offices: both broadcasts shattered all previous ratings records for regional games.

"It wasn't just a sporting hot streak," Rinaldi explained. "It was a television phenomenon."

Combined with the national broadcasts, Mater Dei was experiencing unprecedented exposure. More attention than even in its golden years. The program was back at the center of the map, and it had done so in high definition.

Then came the semifinal: Mission Viejo. The national broadcast returned. The pressure increased. Not only was a spot in the final on the line after eight years of waiting, history was within reach.

"Andrew was on the verge of breaking the record for most touchdowns in a season in California," Rinaldi recalled. "A mark held by Jimmy Clausen, considered one of the greatest quarterbacks ever to come through high school football."

The images showed the closing moments of that semifinal. Four more touchdowns. The final score. The exact instant the record fell. Andrew delivering a few words in the postgame interview that sparked widespread reaction.

But most importantly, the Monarchs were back in a section final after eight long years.

The shots compared numbers. Historic seasons. Legendary names. The conclusion was clear: Andrew already had better statistics than the best seasons of Barkley, Leinart, or any other quarterback at his peak with the Monarchs, and he still had at least one game left to play.

The final took place on the biggest stage yet: a matchup against Long Beach Poly at Angel Stadium, filled to capacity with 35,000 spectators. By that point, national cameras were simply the norm.

"There was no margin for error," Rinaldi said. "And Andrew didn't miss."

Mater Dei won 45–29. Five touchdowns from Andrew. Total control of the game. The section title that had slipped away twice at the start of the decade finally returned to Santa Ana.

The images widened to show the entire stadium, a sea of people. Celebrations. Players embracing. Bruce emotional as he finally put an end to the streak of two lost finals, and then Andrew lifting the trophy.

"The broadcast shattered every record," Rinaldi explained. "It surpassed the most-watched high school game up to that point, a basketball game featuring none other than LeBron James with St. Vincent–St. Mary. Now, Mater Dei had left it behind."

Mater Dei finished with an 11-0 record, two titles already secured, and a season that was already historic. But there was still one objective left:

"The third title. The treble."

"There was still one title on the horizon for the Monarchs. The final one, if they won it, it would close the year with a golden finish."

The narration slowed. The music changed. A title appeared on screen:

State Championship

Mater Dei qualified for the state championship. Three more rounds. Quarterfinals onward. The champions of the other California sections waiting.

The images rewound in time. Clips from past finals. Stadiums bigger and more packed than ever. Rinaldi's voice came in to provide context:

"California's state championship is relatively recent," he explained. "It was created in 2006."

Footage from the first game played in 2006 appeared on screen, highlighting its most exciting moments.

"And up to that point," he continued, "Mater Dei never won it. In fact, it had never even qualified."

The reason was simple and cruel: to reach the state championship, you had to be a section champion, and Mater Dei hadn't reached a section final since 2002.

Since its creation, only four state championships had been played.

2006:

The inaugural final. De La Salle from the north against Corona Centennial from the south. Two elite programs. A tight game. De La Salle crowned the first state champion.

2007:

Once again De La Salle, this time against Long Beach Poly. One of the most anticipated matchups of the decade. A packed stadium. Regional broadcast. De La Salle won again, reinforcing its image as a dynastic program.

2008:

A rematch. The same pairing. De La Salle versus Long Beach Poly. But this time the outcome changed. Poly won, capping an undefeated and historic season with major national prestige and ending De La Salle's dominance.

2009:

The final once again featured De La Salle, now against Servite. A close game, decided by just a few points, with the northern powerhouse reclaiming the crown.

The images froze on a comparative graphic. Four finals. The same names repeating.

"Two things were clear," Rinaldi remarked. "First: the finalists were almost always the champions of the Southern Section and the North Coast Section. In the final, there would be a giant from the south and one from the north. Second: De La Salle had won three out of four."

Mater Dei had finally qualified. This wasn't just another championship, it was new territory and a story they had never written.

The screen transitioned to Mater Dei's first game in the state championship.

A quarterfinal matchup against Oceanside High School, the champion of the San Diego Section.

"Oceanside had no answers," Rinaldi said. "At no point did they take the lead. They never really managed to trouble the Monarchs."

The images backed him up. Relentless Mater Dei drives, Andrew touchdowns one after another. The final score appeared on screen:

Mater Dei 46 – Oceanside 20

Andrew closed the night with six total touchdowns, five passes and one rushing. He was named game MVP as his stat line filled the screen:

23/28 completions (82.1%)

362 passing yards

5 touchdown passes

1 interception

7 carries – 41 yards – 1 rushing TD

Total TDs: 6

"His only negative statistic was the interception," Rinaldi noted. "The third of the entire season."

He paused briefly before delivering the final detail.

"That made him, at that moment, the high school quarterback with the fewest interceptions in all of California, and, in fact, in the entire country, regardless of division."

There was a clean cut.

The image now showed a man standing with his arms crossed, wearing a white T-shirt. Behind him, an empty football field and a cloudless blue sky. His name appeared in the lower left corner of the screen:

Mike Reynolds — Head Coach, Oceanside High School

In the lower right, a question appeared: Do you think you had bad luck facing Mater Dei in the first round?

The coach let out a short, almost resigned laugh.

"Of course. Facing the team with the best offense in the country in the first round isn't what I'd call good luck."

He lowered his gaze slightly, thoughtful. "Although I have to admit that when the matchups were announced, I didn't think it was the worst possible scenario. I thought it would have been worse to face De La Salle in the first game."

He shook his head, as if that reasoning now seemed naïve.

"Did you think De La Salle would have been tougher?" Rinaldi asked.

"At the time, yes. But after this game, you change your mind. Today, I'll tell you I would have preferred to face De La Salle rather than Mater Dei. And specifically because of that kid," the coach replied without hesitation.

He folded his arms again and continued, explaining his point:

"Last year, we faced De La Salle in this same championship, in the semifinals. We lost. But they didn't score six touchdowns on us. We didn't lose by twenty-six points. We had more chances than we did against Mater Dei."

Images from that game appeared, semifinal footage featuring De La Salle and a section champion, broadcast regionally. It was clearly a much tighter game, with far fewer points.

The image returned to Mike. "When we found out we were playing Mater Dei, the defensive coordinator and I went to work exclusively on stopping Andrew. We studied him. We prepared a plan. We tried everything. And even so… he scored six touchdowns. He was simply unstoppable."

"At least the plan did something," Rinaldi interjected. "Your defense managed to intercept him, something that doesn't happen often. In more than ten games, he'd only thrown two. This was the third."

The coach nodded slowly. "Yes, the problem is that it came too late. By the time it happened, the game was already decided."

He fell silent for a second, as if recalling a specific image.

"And there was something that caught my attention," he added. "When the game ended, I saw Pritchett's face. He was upset, brow furrowed, muttering under his breath about that interception."

He shook his head, almost smiling. "He'd won the game, been named MVP, and yet he was more annoyed by that mistake."

"At that moment, I confirmed it would have been better to face De La Salle. Because going up against a player in that kind of form and with that mindset wasn't an option for anyone."

There was a cut. The next obstacle for Mater Dei had a name and real weight.

Fresno Central High School. The champions of the Central Section. A historic powerhouse from the Central Valley.

"It was a team built in the trenches," Rinaldi's voice appeared in voice-over, as the images showed imposing offensive and defensive lines. Big bodies. Dominant physicality. The game was played at a neutral stadium with a capacity of thirty thousand spectators, completely sold out.

"It was the most physical game Mater Dei faced all season," Rinaldi explained. "Linemen who looked like they were built in a lab."

The Monarchs' offensive line struggled as it hadn't before. The pocket collapsed quickly. Andrew had less time than usual to throw. He was sacked twice.

"And it was only twice," Rinaldi added, "thanks to his mobility and his instincts to escape."

In very few games had Andrew been sacked twice. For most quarterbacks, a minor stat. For someone who averaged fewer than one sack per game, it was a clear sign of the level of difficulty.

"At this stage," Rinaldi continued, "against truly physical powerhouses, it's normal for even an elite quarterback to take between one and three sacks."

This time, Andrew fell within that range.

Another factor also emerged.

"Fatigue," Rinaldi went on. "It was game number thirteen."

Mater Dei arrived after a brutal schedule. Top-25 national opponents from the start of league play. Consecutive weeks of maximum intensity, and it showed.

Even so, Mater Dei showed its class and prevailed in a difficult game.

The score was tighter than ever:

Mater Dei 39 – Fresno Central 30

"Nine points," Rinaldi emphasized. "The closest win of the year."

But even then, the difference was where it had been all season: on offense.

Andrew delivered once again when they needed him most. Four passing touchdowns. One rushing touchdown. A 75.8% completion rate. And this time, no interceptions.

"In a game like this," Rinaldi concluded, "a single mistake, like an interception, would have changed everything."

But it didn't happen. Mater Dei moved on and was just one step away from sitting on a new throne.

As many had predicted, the final was set: Mater Dei versus De La Salle. South versus North, once again.

It was the fifth edition of the state championship, and once more the pattern repeated itself. In the final, there was always a champion from the south and one from the north. And from the north, it was always the same name.

De La Salle.

From the south this time, it wasn't Servite, Long Beach Poly, or Centennial. The representative was Mater Dei, appearing there for the first time.

"The giant that had awakened," Rinaldi narrated, "and that seemed on track to reclaim the golden era that had defined the 1990s."

"However, they were facing a giant that had ruled since the nineties, and unlike them, had never fallen asleep."

The images began to show players in green uniforms and football fields from another era.

"For many," Rinaldi continued, "De La Salle is the greatest high school football program of the last twenty years."

He wasn't exaggerating.

"It changed the scale of high school football."

Numbers, dates, and newspaper clippings filled the screen.

"In 1992, the longest undefeated streak ever recorded began. De La Salle won 151 consecutive games between 1992 and 2004. An absolute national record."

More images and celebrations followed.

"More than fifteen section titles. Finals that were practically automatic every year."

And since the creation of the state championship, the dominance had been just as clear.

"Four finals played. Three titles. Just one loss."

Now came the fifth final. Once again, they hadn't missed it.

There was a cut, and a man in his early fifties appeared, with a calm demeanor and short hair. The footage showed him walking the field, talking to players, correcting the smallest details in a near-perfect system.

"Bob Ladouceur. The architect of it all. Head coach since 1979. More than thirty years in charge," Rinaldi introduced him.

"If Fresno Central had been physical, this was something else," he added.

De La Salle's identity was clear: defense first, dominant trenches, and an offense built around a calculated plan, long possessions. Drives lasting six, seven, even eight minutes. Touchdowns that weren't about spectacle, but control.

"Their objective was always the same," he continued. "To cool down the fast-paced offenses from the south."

De La Salle's games were rarely explosive, tight, low-scoring affairs. Suffocating for a fast-paced offense.

The complete opposite of Mater Dei's style.

On the other side stood Andrew. High tempo. Quick reads. Four, five, six touchdowns a night. A constant spectacle for anyone watching.

"De La Salle didn't rely on stars," Rinaldi emphasized. "Their recruiting was different. Two four-star players per class at most. The rest were two- and three-star prospects."

They never built their identity around stars. They were a system. A machine. Tested over decades.

But this time, there was something different.

"De La Salle had never faced a style like this," Rinaldi continued. "Not at this level of efficiency. Not with this sustained aggression."

The images contrasted both worlds. On one side, endless drives, control football, and a defense closing every gap. On the other, Andrew throwing relentlessly, every one of his games an MVP-caliber performance that dismantled any pregame plan.

"For years," Rinaldi explained, "the favorite in these finals was usually De La Salle. System versus talent typically tilted toward the machine."

This time, it wasn't so clear.

"It was talent versus system," he said. "But the talent had never been this consistent and devastating."

The scale had changed as well.

ESPN shows opened with the preview. Special graphics. Dedicated segments. Historical comparisons. The expectation was national, unlike previous finals.

"Everything pointed to this game surpassing the high school football ratings record," Rinaldi noted.

The benchmark was clear: Mater Dei vs. Long Beach Poly. The most-watched high school game across all sports up to that point.

And of course, the treatment was different, much bigger.

"The CIF and ESPN decided to elevate the event," Rinaldi explained. "To treat it as what it already was: something historic."

The screen opened to an image impossible to ignore.

The chosen stage said it all. The Rose Bowl in Pasadena. A monument of American sports. The historic home of UCLA. But above all, a sporting landmark of the city.

"What seemed destined to be the high school game of the decade truly was."

The images cut to the exterior of the Rose Bowl early in the day. Wide shots of the stadium. The sun slowly setting. And all around, a sea of people streaming in from the parking lots. Families, groups of friends, students, jerseys everywhere.

Red and white.

Green and white.

Monarchs and Spartans mixing in a constant flow. But there was something that stood out even without being said: most people were wearing red.

"The expectation was different," Rinaldi explained. "And you could feel it even before entering the stadium."

The camera panned across flags, hats, jerseys with the number 19 and the name Andrew Pritchett-Tucker, over and over again.

"Andrew wasn't just Mater Dei's quarterback," Rinaldi continued. "He was an internet figure. Millions followed him through his YouTube channel. And that phenomenon had an effect never seen at this level."

A quick cut showed a young reporter, microphone in hand, easy smile. Bowl-cut hair and pure energy.

"Hey, man!" he said, approaching someone. "Mind if I ask where you're from?"

A guy who looked about 18 to 20 years old turned around and looked at the camera. He was holding a red cup in one hand and a hot dog in the other. He looked surprised for a second by the camera, then smiled.

"From Medford, Texas!" he replied with an unmistakable Texan accent.

"That's a long way!" the reporter said, genuinely. "Are you a Mater Dei fan?"

The question was almost unnecessary. The guy was wearing a red jersey, number 19.

"I came more for Andrew, although since he's with Mater Dei I want them to win, so you could say yes," he said, taking a sip of his drink.

The reporter smiled slightly. "Are you a subscriber to his channel?"

"Yeah," he replied with a shrug. "I'm not some hardcore fan, but I watched him with my family on TV when he played against Bosco, and from then on we followed every game that was broadcast nationally."

He smiled, like he was telling something simple. "Plus, my younger brother goes to school here in California. We came to visit him and took the chance to see the game and watch him play live."

The images kept rolling. Quick interviews with teenagers who weren't from California but had come to cheer for Mater Dei. Entire families talking about long trips, hotels, and weeks planned around a high school game.

"Most of them didn't belong to Mater Dei. They weren't even from the area."

License plates from all over the state, and others, clearly, from outside California.

"They had come for Andrew."

The camera rose and revealed the inside of the Rose Bowl. A massive stadium, partially covered, but with a presence impossible to ignore.

"That phenomenon translated into numbers," Rinaldi continued. "58,100 spectators bought tickets and were in attendance for the final."

The figure appeared on screen, large and unmistakable.

It wasn't a sellout. The Rose Bowl has a capacity of ninety thousand.

But the context changed everything.

It was a high school game with attendance higher than many average college games. More people than at college matchups without historic rivalries or Top 25 teams.

Rinaldi put the number into perspective.

"To put it in context," he explained, "Pac-10 programs like Arizona used to draw between 47,000 and 50,000 fans for minor games. And for big games they'd reach around 58,000, no more, because their stadium doesn't hold more."

For a high school game to reach that number was insane.

"This attendance broke the documented record for a high school football game."

The images rewound once again. Historical footage. Black and white.

"The all-time record belonged to Texas," Rinaldi recalled. "1977. Port Neches-Groves versus Plano, at the Astrodome in Houston. 47.500 spectators."

Then more numbers appeared on screen.

"Second place: a Texas state final in the highest division. Southlake Carroll versus Euless Trinity. 46,339 spectators."

"Third place: another game in Texas. 44,000 people, at the old Texas Stadium."

"The game between Mater Dei and De La Salle surpassed all of those records, by more than ten thousand spectators compared to second place."

"And it delivered," Rinaldi said.

The images transitioned to the opening minutes of the game. The kickoff, and the Rose Bowl roaring.

It was a tight game from the start. Every possession mattered. When De La Salle's offense had the ball, it moved slowly and methodically, true to its identity. Long drives, clock-draining possessions, and impatient whistles raining down from almost the entire stadium.

When it was Mater Dei's turn, the sound changed. Applause, anticipation, and a murmur that turned into noise the moment Andrew stepped into the huddle.

It wasn't easy for the Monarchs. There was no absolute dominance. No early lead that broke the game open.

The machine that had been finely tuned for more than twenty years responded as it always had. De La Salle did everything it knew how to do.

But it couldn't find a way to stop something different.

"That was the problem," Rinaldi explained. "They weren't facing a common talented player. They were facing an extraordinary player, in every sense of the word."

The images showed key plays. Third downs converted. Quick reads. A rushing touchdown that broke the defensive scheme, and a precise pass at the exact right moment.

The final score appeared on screen:

Mater Dei 34 – De La Salle 26

The whistle blew. A one-touchdown difference.

The stands exploded. The Mater Dei sideline stormed the field. Coaches running. Players embracing. Many went straight to Andrew.

"De La Salle was one touchdown away from tying it and changing history," Rinaldi said. "But across from them was the best player in the country, and a veteran coaching staff that knew how to build around him."

The statistics filled the screen as the images kept rolling:

Andrew Pritchett-Tucker — State Final

19 of 26 completions (73.1%)

286 passing yards

3 passing touchdowns

0 interceptions

5 carries, 29 yards, 1 rushing touchdown

Total: 4 touchdowns

The final shots showed the Monarchs lifting the state trophy in front of more than fifty thousand people. For most of those kids, an unthinkable stage.

"Mater Dei returned to the throne," Rinaldi concluded. "And it did so in the best way possible."

Perfect season: 14–0.

Complete treble. USA Today named them the team of the year, earning their third national title in that regard.

The section title they had longed for was finally in their hands. And for the first time in their history, they dominated the state stage, defeating the giant of the north.

The music softened slightly. The rhythm became almost solemn.

"These were the full 2010–2011 season statistics of Andrew Pritchett-Tucker," Rinaldi announced.

The image froze. Andrew in a medium shot, arm raised, the ball ready to be released. A single moment that summed everything up. Beside him, the numbers appeared one by one:

Games played: 14

Total touchdowns: 72 (57 passing TDs / 15 rushing TDs)

Interceptions: 3

Average completion percentage: 77.6%

Passing yards: 4,860

Rushing yards: 685

Total yards: 5,445

"What he had done in his freshman year at Palisades, in Division V, he was now repeating at the highest level of high school football," Rinaldi remarked.

"But with fewer interceptions, an even higher completion percentage, and over two additional games, since at Palisades he only played 12 games, as there were two in which he did not play."

The image changed. Sports newspaper covers. Overlapping headlines. Long-form articles. Comparative charts. The same conclusion repeated in different words.

"For many," Rinaldi continued, "the greatest individual and collective season ever recorded by a high school player. Neither Clausen, nor Barkley, nor anyone else came close to that level of dominance, both as a team and individually."

"And as expected," he added, "after winning three titles and posting those numbers, the individual awards didn't take long to arrive."

The names appeared one by one on screen:

-OC Register — Player of the Year

-MaxPreps California Player of the Year

-MaxPreps National Player of the Year

-Los Angeles Times — California Player of the Year

-Gatorade National Player of the Year (Football)

-Gatorade National Athlete of the Year

The music held for just one more second.

"Watching the documentary again, Dad?"

The voice didn't come from the television.

It broke the immersion as if someone had opened a window in the middle of a dark room.

Cam, completely absorbed on the couch, turned his head. His eyes were glossy, his mouth slightly open. In front of him, leaning against the doorframe with the room brightly lit behind him, stood Andrew, a smoothie in his hand and the exact expression of someone who already knew the answer.

Cam didn't hesitate. He paused the documentary with the remote and, in an excited tone, raised his voice a little. "Of course!" he said. "It's incredible: The Standard. ESPN really outdid themselves this time."

Andrew made a slight face. The Standard was the name of the special/documentary ESPN had made about him, one his father had already watched countless times, even though it ran close to fifty minutes.

The name meant the bar. Andrew was the standard. He had won in three different contexts. With statistics that couldn't be explained by system, schedule, or chance. With records that didn't depend on a single game, but on sustained consistency. Achieving both team titles and individual awards alike.

That was why it was The Standard.

Because from that moment on, any perfect season would have to be compared to his, or so they said…

To Andrew, it felt too solemn for something that, in his mind, had simply been playing football every Friday. But he understood it. That was the language of sports documentaries: grand, epic. Like when Clausen was called The Golden Boy, or LeBron James The Chosen One.

That didn't mean he disliked it. On the contrary, he liked it. Of course he did. He enjoyed seeing his story told that way, watching something that had started as high school games turn into a national narrative. It was his journey, his football, and a chapter of his life he had never imagined living, certainly not on that scale, and certainly not so early.

The documentary was full of different perspectives: comments from friends, teammates, coaches, analysts, reporters. Training footage, clips from his own YouTube videos, even Howard showing up interviewing people outside stadiums.

Watching it once was perfect.

Twice already started to feel excessive. He didn't want to drown in his own ego as a player, he knew that was the fastest path to stagnation. Getting complacent, believing he was above the process, thinking he was already the best, that could be the end of him.

Andrew understood that ego was necessary. Not as noise or spectacle, but as an inner fire. That quiet conviction that you could be better than the guy across from you, and that in a big moment you had to step up and save your team if it needed you.

"It's been months since it came out," Andrew said calmly, taking a sip of his smoothie.

Cam raised his eyebrows, as if that meant absolutely nothing. "I know!" he replied. "And it was a massive success!"

He smiled, proud, almost conspiratorial. "I guarantee you ESPN is already thinking about making another one when you finish your senior season."

Andrew shook his head, unable to keep from smiling. Then he looked at the screen and couldn't help but comment, "Almost a year since the final against De La Salle…" he murmured.

The final had been played on December 11, 2010. Now it was Tuesday, November 1, 2011. Just one month and ten days away from the one-year anniversary of that night at the Rose Bowl. A final that had shattered records for ratings, attendance, and media exposure like no other high school game before it.

"Yeah, how time flies, right?" Cam said, with a mix of nostalgia and excitement.

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Link: https://[email protected]/Nathe07

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