DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

City Section boys’ basketball has nowhere to go but up after hitting rock bottom

January 4, 2026
in News
City Section boys’ basketball has nowhere to go but up after hitting rock bottom

It might be time to write a folk song about the demise of City Section basketball using the music of Peter, Paul and Mary and the new title, “Where Have All the Players Gone?”

The talent level clearly has hit rock bottom only a year after Alijah Arenas was a McDonald’s All-American at Chatsworth High and Tajh Ariza led Westchester to the City Section Open Division title. Because their parents went to City Section schools, Arenas and Ariza stuck it out. Then Arenas graduated early to join USC and Ariza left for St. John Bosco, then prep school.

Westchester is where Ed Azzam won 15 City titles in 42 seasons until his retirement in 2021. Crenshaw is where Willie West won 16 City titles and eight state titles. Taft is where Derrick Taylor won four City titles and coached future NBA players Jordan Farmar, Larry Drew II and AJ Johnson. Fairfax is where Harvey Kitani coached for 35 years, won four City titles and two state titles and earned most of his nearly 1,000 victories. He was followed by Steve Baik and Reggie Morris Jr., each of whom won City championships before leaving.

None of the City schools once considered among the best in Southern California are even close to resembling their glory days, and they aren’t alone. The City Section has lost most of its talent, and it was truly Hall of Fame talent: Marques Johnson and John Williams at Crenshaw; Gail Goodrich at Sun Valley Poly; Willie Naulls at San Pedro; Dwayne Polee at Manual Arts; Gilbert Arenas at Grant; Trevor Ariza at Westchester; Chris Mills at Fairfax. There were decades of success.

There’s no one person to blame. You can’t even place the downfall solely on the Los Angeles Unified School District, whose high schools compete in the City Section.

But LAUSD has done nothing to reverse the trend and didn’t help matters by opening so many new schools in such rapid fashion that longtime legacy schools lost their luster amid declining student enrollment. Things became even more disruptive by the rise of charter schools and private schools taking away top athletes. Adding to that, the loss of veteran coaches frustrated by bureaucracy issues and rules that force programs to secure permits and pay to use their own gyms in the offseason helped further the exodus.

Westchester is 2-8 this season and an example of where City Section basketball stands. Two top players from last season — Gary Ferguson and Jordan Ballard — are now at St. Bernard. Westchester doesn’t even have a roster posted on MaxPreps. King/Drew won its first City Open Division title in 2024 under coach Lloyd Webster. This season Webster sent his senior son, Josahn, to Rolling Hills Prep to play for Kitani. King/Drew is 4-10.

Charter schools Birmingham, Palisades and Granada Hills have separated themselves in virtually all City Section sports including basketball. They have no enrollment boundaries as long as there’s a seat for a student. Palisades lost so many students after the wildfire last year that transfers have been big additions for its teams this school year. Online courses are being offered to help students enroll and compete in sports at charter schools.

The old powers from the inner city — Crenshaw, Dorsey, Jefferson, Locke and Fremont — experienced big changes in demographics. Many coaches are walk-ons and not teachers. The legacy schools have to compete with charter schools View Park Prep, Triumph, Animo Watts, Animo Robinson, WISH Academy and USC-MAE. When young players are discovered and developed, rarely will they stay when one of the private schools or AAU coaches searching for talent spots them in the offseason.

So what’s left? Not much.

Palisades, Washington Prep and Cleveland look like the three top teams this season. All three added transfers to help buck the downward trend. And yet their records are 3-10, 8-8 and 7-6, respectively, against mostly Southern Section teams.

Maybe this can be a fluke one-year plunge to the bottom and the climb back up can begin, aided by coaches who recognize their job is to teach lessons in basketball, life and college preparation. Parents need a reason to send their kids to a City Section school. It’s up to LAUSD and principals to help change the trajectory by finding coaches with integrity, passion and willingness to embrace the underdog role.

There are plenty in the system doing their best. It’s time to start hearing and answering their pleas for help.

The post City Section boys’ basketball has nowhere to go but up after hitting rock bottom appeared first on Los Angeles Times.

Live updates: Day four of Davos kicks off with more deals, dialogue, and post-Trump speech reckonings
News

Live updates: Day four of Davos kicks off with more deals, dialogue, and post-Trump speech reckonings

by Business Insider
January 22, 2026

US President Donald Trump gave a big speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Wednesday. Fabrice COFFRINI / ...

Read more
Media

‘Hostage Standoff’ at CBS Over ‘60 Minutes’ Segment Exposed

January 22, 2026
News

A new Guinness World Record shows how Ukraine’s anti-Shahed interceptor drones have room to fly even faster

January 22, 2026
News

AI Leaders Discuss How to Foster Responsible Innovation at TIME100 Roundtable in Davos

January 22, 2026
News

Word of the Day: strident

January 22, 2026
Cellphone health risks are focus of new government study: ‘Very concerned’

Cellphone health risks are focus of new government study: ‘Very concerned’

January 22, 2026
I moved abroad at 40 to escape loneliness. I didn’t expect how hard it would be to go home.

I moved abroad at 40 to escape loneliness. I didn’t expect how hard it would be to go home.

January 22, 2026
Alijah Arenas’ debut spoiled by USC’s loss to Northwestern

Alijah Arenas’ debut spoiled by USC’s loss to Northwestern

January 22, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025