Torrance's Bishop Montgomery High School forfeits 2025 football season for breaking CIF rules
Bishop Montgomery forfeited its 2025 football season after five player transfers were ruled ineligible due to booster-funded violations, prompting staff changes and corrective actions.
5 Articles
5 Articles
Bishop Montgomery High School fires coach, forfeits 2025 football season
Bishop Montgomery High School in Torrance forfeited its entire varsity football season and parted with its head football coach, raising questions from parents and community members. The decision to forfeit the season comes after the CIF deemed five transfer students ineligible and the school self-reported more violations. “Past few weeks, practices were going crazy,” said Robert Williams, who lives near...
California High School Stripped of Entire Football Season, Forced to Forfeit Games
Bishop Montgomery High School in Torrance, California, has made the stunning decision to forfeit its entire 2025 football season after revelations that a notorious local booster was involved in orchestrating a series of illegal player transfers. The school announced Tuesday that the move was part of an “internal investigation in coordination with the Archdiocese of Los Angeles Department of Catholic Schools.” According to SFGate, the scandal cen…
California's Bishop Montgomery forfeits remaining 2025 high school football games
A short, controversial 2025 high school football season is over for Bishop Montgomery High School from Torrance, California. The school, which has been under scrutiny since welcoming about 20 transfers during the offseason, has announced that it’s cancelling its season... The post California’s Bishop Montgomery forfeits remaining 2025 high school football games appeared first on High School Football America.
'Suspending The Season': California Bag Man Brett Steigh's Messy Million Dollar High School Football Scheme Pays Parents To Illegally Transfer Students
The NIL era hasn’t only caused a new layer of problems for college football and its players, but once California became the first state to allow high school athletes to profit from their name, image and likeness (NIL), the world changed and a new generation of teenage sports stars gained access to a finanical world once reserved for college and professional players. The new “pay-for-play” era hasn’t eliminated the predatorial culture that exist…
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