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Popular Coach, a Commander on the Field, Returns to St. Paul : Football: Marijon Ancich is back, school pride is soaring, and it’s only spring practice.

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

Marijon Ancich returned last week to St. Paul High. He was back on the football field, site of his greatest triumphs, where he has always felt at home.

The veteran coach built the 1,100-student school into one of the most respected prep football powers in the country in the 1960s, ‘70s and early ‘80s. When he left at the end of the 1981 season, boosters held a wake.

For the record:

12:00 a.m. June 17, 1993 For the Record
Los Angeles Times Thursday June 17, 1993 Home Edition Southeast Part J Page 6 Column 3 Zones Desk 1 inches; 27 words Type of Material: Correction
Football record: St. Paul High School’s football record in 1990 was 8-4-2. A story in the June 3 edition of The Times listed an incorrect record, based on information supplied by school officials.

This spring, Ancich, 54, who had been coaching at Tustin High, was coaxed back to St. Paul by alumni who yearned for a return to the days of Swordsmen glory.

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“A gift from heaven,” Ancich had said when offered the job.

Ancich averaged nine victories a season. Since he left, the team has had six winning years, six losing years and a 58-59-3 record. The number of boys playing the sport has steadily declined. Four coaches have come and gone in the last 12 years. Each found it difficult to live up to the expectations of boosters, who constantly reminded them of the good old days under Ancich.

“He was the one that started all the tradition there,” said Ron Henke, who resigned as coach last winter and returned to his native Cincinnati after posting a two-year record of 8-14. “Everyone wanted to live up to what he did. I know I had a lot of respect for what Ancich started.”

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Founded in 1954 in the oil fields of Santa Fe Springs, St. Paul High remains a throwback to yesteryear. Players still address coaches as “sir” and wear coats and ties on game days. Several generations of families have attended the tight-knit Catholic school at which football has always played a major role.

“Football gives us a positive image in the community as a winner,” Athletic Director Leo Gutierrez said.

Ancich, a Yugoslavia native who graduated from San Pedro High, came to St. Paul in 1961 and compiled a record of 188-37-6. In an era when relatively few teams qualified for the playoffs, he drove the Swordsmen to five Division I title games, winning three. From 1967 to 1977, St. Paul did not lose a home game.

“Marijon Ancich was the tradition at St. Paul High School,” said Don Ward, former booster club vice president.

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The Swordsmen played to standing-room crowds of 10,000 at Cranham Stadium, known as “The Pit” because St. Paul won 95% of the games played there.

In 1981, St. Paul went 14-0, set 30 school records and defeated Colton, 30-9, in the Big Five Conference title game before nearly 30,000 fans in Anaheim Stadium.

In addition to victories, Ancich’s popularity stemmed from a strong belief in family values and a blend of pride, patience and discipline.

“When he was here, there was an aura,” said Ed Begany, an assistant coach on the current team and a player on Ancich’s last St. Paul team. “There was a lot of discipline and a lot of belief in what you could do.”

Cordiality also was part of the Ancich legacy.

“No matter who you were, no matter what he was doing, Marijon would have time to talk to you,” Ward said.

Bob Henry, a booster writing in a program for the team’s football banquet after Ancich’s last season, predicted that future coaches would have “a tough act to follow.”

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“Years from now, when historians look back on prep sports, the Ancich era at St. Paul will rank at the top because he was and is more than a coach,” Henry wrote. “He has enriched and positively influenced our lives--especially those of our children--like few men have or will.”

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Saying it was time for a new challenge, Ancich left St. Paul to become offensive coordinator at Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff. But the coach, accustomed to being in charge, found it difficult to work for someone else.

He left Flagstaff after less than a year. In 1983, he was a volunteer assistant at Cerritos College. In 1984, he was named coach at Tustin High, near his Orange County home. In nine seasons, Tustin was 55-27-2 and played in two CIF Southern Section title games. It also won its first league title in more than 30 years.

St. Paul, meanwhile, had become a revolving door for coaches who faced the specter of Ancich wherever they turned. Football was downgraded at the school by the CIF Southern Section from Division I to Division III in 1989, and the Swordsmen (8-4-1) lost in the 1990 division title game to Anaheim Esperanza.

The program was returned to the top level, Division I, in 1992, as the team became part of the revamped Del Rey League. St. Paul made the playoffs, but finished 5-6.

Running back Morris Luevano, a junior who gained more than 1,300 yards in all-purpose running in 1992, said the program was headed nowhere.

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“We would fight with each other. We weren’t together as a team,” he said.

Discontented boosters had long lobbied for the return of Ancich. When Henke resigned, they once again confronted Father Robert J. Gallagher, the school principal.

“The idea was always resurrected about getting Coach Ancich back,” Gallagher said. “Initially, I didn’t feel it was the right move to make, because he had not been gone that long.”

But now, the timing is right. Ancich, who had always felt like an outsider among clannish Orange County coaches, was ready for another challenge. He was considering a coaching job in Texas.

When Gallagher called and offered the job, a shocked Ancich immediately accepted.

Ancich took a hefty pay cut to return, the principal said, but neither man would discuss the contract.

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Ancich has returned as a hero. The football players gave their new coach a five-minute standing ovation at their first meeting. A welcome-back party organized by boosters drew nearly 300 former students and players.

“They couldn’t have hired another coach and gotten the enthusiasm and pride that has returned to this school in such a short period of time,” said Ward, who predicted that the 1993 season opener at Cranham Stadium will sell out.

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Although none of the current players were around in St. Paul’s heyday, almost all of them had heard of Ancich.

“It was unreal when I heard he was coming back. I was feeling chills,” said free safety Rich Avina. “Now we’re going to reach for the ring. I just feel this team is destined to win now.”

On the dry outfield grass of the baseball field, where St. Paul holds spring football practice, Ancich has been familiarizing himself with his new challenge. For now, that means mostly learning the names of the players. About 55 players turned out for the team, 15 more than last year.

At practice last week he strolled the field, stopping from time to time to encourage sweaty young men in blue shorts and white T-shirts printed with “St. Paul Pride.”

The field was abuzz with excitement and anticipation. Marijon Ancich was home again.

Milestones of Marijon Ancich at St. Paul High School

St. Paul Record: 188-37-6

Career Record: 243-64-8

1961: First game, first win, St. Paul 50 at Bakersfield Garces 19

1961: First league title

1968: Southern Section co-champion, St. Paul 20, El Rancho 20

1972: Southern Section champion, St. Paul 29, Anaheim Western 24

1973: 100th victory, St. Paul 3, Anaheim Servite 0

1975: Third Southern Section title game, Loyola 14, St. Paul 13

1977: Fourth Southern Section title game, Los Altos 22, St. Paul 15

1978: 150th victory, St. Paul 20, Loyola 12

1981: Southern Section champion, St. Paul 30, Colton 9

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St. Paul Since Ancich

Year Coach Record 1982 Jim Walker 6-4-0 1983 Jim Walker 5-4-1 1984 Jim Walker 5-5-0 1985 Rick Ready 7-4-0 1986 Rick Ready 5-6-0 1987 Miguel Olmedo 3-7-0 1988 Miguel Olmedo 6-5-0 1989 Miguel Olmedo 6-5-0 1990 Miguel Olmedo 7-5-2 1991 Ron Henke 3-8-0 1992 Ron Henke 5-6-0 Total 58-59-3

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