Sondheimer: Bryce Young gets his moment to celebrate Heisman Trophy at Mater Dei

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Alabama quarterback Bryce Young poses for a photograph after winning the Heisman Trophy.
Alabama quarterback Bryce Young strikes a familiar pose after winning the Heisman Trophy last December. He will be honored at Mater Dei on Tuesday. (John Minchillo / Associated Press)

It will be an official homecoming for Heisman Trophy winner Bryce Young of Alabama on Tuesday when Santa Ana Mater Dei High welcomes him for a celebration that will include adding his name to the “Heisman Lane” campus sign that already includes alumni Matt Leinart and John Huarte.

“This is an opportunity to just focus on great things that come from athletics,” his father, Craig, said.

Bryce will have his jersey retired and get to celebrate with people who helped put him on a path to success in high school and college.

His father understands that Mater Dei has been under scrutiny following a lawsuit filed in November by the family of a former football player who alleged a culture of hazing. This past month, another revelation came out that a police report had been filed last August of an alleged sexual assault of a football player in the locker room.

“I’ve learned not to talk about things I don’t know anything about,” Craig Young said. “That’s not the Mater Dei we experienced but doesn’t minimize what others might have experienced.”

Bryce Young grew up in Pasadena, and played quarterback for L.A. Cathedral for two years before transferring to Mater Dei.

Alabama quarterback Bryce Young with his Heisman Trophy.
Alabama quarterback Bryce Young with his Heisman Trophy at an award ceremony in New York on Saturday. (Todd Van Emst / Associated Press)

His father said coach Bruce Rollinson allowed his son to develop into the quarterback he became and didn’t force him to conform to somebody who looked like past Mater Dei quarterbacks. He was the first Black quarterback in Mater Dei history and a rare outsider who had to deal with high expectations in succeeding quarterback JT Daniels, who was the Gatorade national player of the year.

For two exceptional seasons, Young met and exceeded expectations.

Mater Dei's Heisman Lane sign will need to be updated by adding the name of Bryce Young '21.
Mater Dei's Heisman Lane sign will need to be updated by adding the name of Bryce Young '21. (Eric Sondheimer / Los Angeles Times)

As a junior in 2018, he completed 70% of his passes for 3,846 yards and 39 touchdowns for a 15-1 team. As a senior, he completed an astounding 72% of his passes for 4,528 yards and 58 touchdowns for a 12-1 team. Then he went off to Alabama.

“What he accomplished is remarkable and should be celebrated,” Craig Young said. "Bruce Rollinson is an amazing coach and he allowed Bryce to be Bryce."

For maybe an hour or two Tuesday, everyone will get to focus on Bryce Young. It's a worthy, positive distraction.

Others are still waiting to learn the results of a safety assessment the school announced in December when it hired a law firm to investigate its sports program. Not a word has been released on what was discovered. The only public response from the school has been to accuse the former athletic director of lying in her deposition that was critical of the school's handling of locker room issues.

People inside and outside Mater Dei are waiting for the new president, Michael Brennan, to address issues of what appears to be a lack of institutional control if you believe the continuing revelations. Meanwhile, the football team continues to work out and prepare for the 2022 season under Rollinson, head coach since 1989 who was last seen being carried on the shoulders of his players after winning the CIF Open Division state championship in December.

At a spring seven-on-seven tournament this month, it was business as usual for the Monarchs. They've circled the wagons and are clearly in batten-down-the-hatches mode. That can only work for so long, though.

A lack of transparency is not an effective response to safety concerns no matter how many wins a team achieves or how many Heisman Trophy winners are produced.

This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.