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Warren defeats Downey in rivalry game at SoFi Stadium

Warren’s Jalen Ross, left, and Darius Maddox celebrate after a touchdown at SoFi Stadium on Friday night.
(Steve Galluzzo / For The Times)
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Madden Iamaleava threw four touchdowns — the last a 16-yard strike to Jordan Ross with 9:08 left in the fourth quarter — to lift Warren past crosstown rival Downey 28-21 before a sellout crowd of 18,815 on Friday night in the first high school football game played at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood.

Iamaleava, a junior, watched his older brother, Nico — now a backup quarterback at the University of Tennessee — lead the Bears (6-2, 3-0) to neighborhood bragging rights and this year it was his turn to play the role of hero in a battle between schools separated by a little more than a mile.

“Without Madden we don’t roll like we do,” Warren coach Kevin Pearson said. “The way his brother coached him the last two years was terrific. I give Nico more credit than me. I’m extremely proud of them both, they have a great relationship.”

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Ross caught three touchdown passes for Warren, which took control of the Gateway League race.

“It was pretty loud — but this game is loud every year, this time it was just on a bigger stage,” Warren safety Jordan Jones said. “This is the highlight of my senior year for sure.”

Momentum swung with every score and Pearson said he struggled to keep his team focused on the task at hand: “It’s not where you play, it’s how you play. That was the message I was trying to get across to the players.”

It was the 66th meeting in a rivalry that began in 1958. Warren leads the series 37-29 and has won six straight since 2018. Before that, the Vikings had won seven of eight.

“The LA Bowl did a great job putting this together and the atmosphere was amazing,” Downey coach Jack Williams said. “I feel like [Rams head coach] Sean McVay for a second. Our kids battled and left it all on the field, we just came up a little short.

“Last year we lost this game and won a ring so hopefully we can do the same thing,” added Williams, whose team lost 49-22 at Warren last fall but went on to win the CIF Southern Section Division 4 championship.

Downey drive 89 yards in eight plays on the game’s opening possession, scoring on a one-yard run by Victor Morales.

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Downey running back Victor Morales high-steps through the end zone after scoring a touchdown against rival Warren on Friday.
(Steve Galluzzo / For The Times)

Ross caught his first touchdown pass from eight yards out to tie it 7-7 with 8:03 left in the second quarter.

The Vikings (6-2, 2-1) regained the lead on a 25-yard interception return by Anthony Francis, but Ross caught a 14-yard touchdown pass to pull the Bears even again at 14-14 with 1:18 left in the first half.

Jace Brown’s five-yard touchdown catch put Warren ahead for the first time 21-14 with 4:37 left in the third quarter. Downey tied it on a quarterback keeper from Oscar Rios on fourth-and-goal play from the four-yard line late in the third quarter.

Warren fans came out at SoFi Stadium during 28-21 win over Downey before more than 19,000.
(Steve Galluzzo)

“This was the experience of a lifetime — something I’ll remember forever,” Rios said. “I’ve never played before 19,000 people before. I felt the crowd during warmups.

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As the winner of the LA Bowl’s Friday Night Lights, Warren will be invited back to SoFi Stadium to be recognized for its achievement at this year’s LA Bowl on Dec. 16 between the No. 1 team from the Mountain West Conference and the No. 5 team from the Pac-12, after the CFP selection.

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