Earned confidence
Mike Sciacca
Jimmy Nolan battled through an injury-plagued senior year of high
school football to emerge a winner.
Ten years later, he took on his first head coaching job and turned
a once-dormant prep program into a winner.
Now, he’s bringing his game to Laguna Beach High.
When Nolan, 30, was hired in late March, he replaced the retired
Dave Holland and ushered in a new era in Breakers football.
“He went through two interviews to get this job,” said Ron
Schwartz, athletic director at Laguna Beach. “I am so excited about
landing Jimmy that I wanted to put on some pads and go out on the
practice field, myself.
“He’s the right guy, in the right place, at the right time. So
far, the kids have been very responsive to him.”
When Laguna began football conditioning a few weeks ago, Nolan
said that 15 athletes had come out.
Now, he said, there are more than 40 participants, some of whom
went through voluntary workouts during spring break.
“That’s really encouraging to me,” he said. “I’m noticing a
beautiful camaraderie among this group of kids. I’ve also noticed
that the intelligence level here is terrific. I walked in to find
some tall, good-looking players here at Laguna.”
Nolan began his prep coaching career in 2002, inheriting a
Cantwell-Sacred Heart of Mary program that had gone 3-27 between
1998-2001.
He also walked into a program that was low in numbers in terms of
players, yet managed to turn the Cardinals into immediate winners.
In his first year at the Montebello school, the Cardinals went
10-0. In his two years with the program, he guided teams to
back-to-back undefeated league championships and won the first CIF
playoff game in the history of the school.
He did it, too, with a team whose average player weight was
145-pounds.
“On my first day at Cantwell, we had only 11 kids show up to
play,” Nolan recalled. “They had been 3-27 the previous years, and
nobody cared. Three days before our first game in my first season, we
finally got enough kids to come out to play.
“And we began to win. Winning’s great, but the best thing about
that 10-0 year, is that we became a real team. We grew from about 15
players, to a total of 80 in the program. That’s a pretty big number,
considering the school has only 210 boys in enrollment.”
Nolan faces a similar challenge at Laguna, which is one of the
smaller enrollment schools in Orange County.
“One of the reasons I like coaching high school football is
because this is the most challenging time of a young person’s life,”
said Nolan, who once taught physical education at a juvenile hall
facility. “They can fall, or rise up. This is such a great chance to
be a positive influence on the kids.
“I see certain similarities between Cantwell and Laguna and what I
want to teach these players at Laguna is to work hard. I want to
build up their confidence level through that hard work. I call it,
‘earned confidence.’”
Speaking confidently, Nolan recalled facing uncertainty during his
senior year of football at Mater Dei High.
It was the 1991-92 school year, and he had missed nine games due
to an Achilles heal tear.
But he came back with a vengeance at seasons’ end, his confidence
soaring as he began to tear up the field at running back and safety.
He was named game MVP of the 1991 CIF-Southern Section Division I
championship final on a night when the Monarchs upset the nation’s
No. 1 team, Eisenhower, before more than 32,000 at the Big A.
He went on to play football at Golden West College and the
University of Utah and was named game MVP on a couple of occasions
for the Utes.
He played one season with the Utah Cats of the Arena Football
League, then came back to the high school scene to coach running
backs and free safeties at his alma mater, under head coach Bruce
Rollinson.
Among those he tutored at Mater Dei was Matt Grootegoed, who now
plays at USC.
He took two years off from coaching to play football in Italy, but
returned to the prep football ranks to coach defensive backs and
special teams for 1 1/2 years at Fountain Valley High.
From there, he accepted his first high school head coaching job
and with it, the challenge to resurrect the program at Cantwell.
“This past fall, we opened our season against Fountain Valley,”
Nolan said. “It was like David versus Goliath, but we were winning in
the fourth quarter. They picked up an errant lateral to score the
go-ahead touchdown and ended up winning, but we ended up inside their
10-yard line when the final gun went off.
“I had trained a lot of the kids at Fountain Valley for two years,
so I knew a lot about them. Their fans gave us a standing ovation
after the game. That was such a great day for Cantwell football.”
Nolan got the players at Cantwell to believe in his system and
now, he’s implementing the same game plan at Laguna Beach.
“I want to get these kids enthused and interested in my program,”
he said. “I will then get them to recruit new players into the fold.
We’re one family, one heartbeat.
“I also will instill in them that they are no better than anyone
else on campus. I learned how to work hard and put myself in position
to be a winner. Say ‘no’ to drugs, ‘no’ to alcohol, ‘no’ to sex. Good
things happen to good people and I truly believe that what you put
out, you get in return. The Xs and Os will come, but for me, playing
football is not about winning and losing. It’s about passion and
about teaching the kids how to deal with losing, with adversity, and
how to win with grace. It’s about character and intensity and through
that, winning will come. A kid who displays a lot of heart, both on
and off the field, well, he’s going to be a winner.”
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