My brother and I both graduated from John Curtis, we went there when it was a 2A school which is low profile football by your definition (4th grade for me, K for my brother). We were not put into Curtis for sports (although we both played football, baseball, basketball, and track) . . . parents made it our choice if we wanted to play or not. My parents choose John Curtis because they were unhappy with the New Orleans Catholic School system and public school education was not an option. In the 8th grade we were allowed to decide if we wanted to go somewhere else, we both decided to stay at John Curtis.
Most of the guys at John Curtis who play football go there as long as we did, and I feel that is where we held a real advantage once we get into high school. It's really no different than playground feeder systems used by the public schools and the Catholic league, but I still feel it was to our advantage. We were playing on the 4th grade team against other schools and playgrounds, when we got to HS it was the same kids playing in the same simple veer/option system, by that time you master it. I didn't see all this recruiting you guys talk about. In fact there is a $10,000 reward for any evidence of recruiting, reported by TP to be paid by John Curtis Sr. Anyway, usually the big knock against Curtis is that the kids are not that talented and can only really play in JT's system.
I know private schools have an advantage, considering the district public school boundary lines, but people were not bused in from an unreasonable distance at Curtis, that is no more than someone in New Orleans or Jefferson Parish who attend the Catholic league schools. I can only think of a handful of kids who started at Curtis in the 8th grade and went on to play football in high school, that were transfers. My point is that most of the kids who play any sport at Curtis, are more than likely already enrolled at Curtis in elementary school. However, I do remember some kids who would transfer to Curtis in high school, and then would quit and leave because it they may not start in football until their Sr year. Choosing a high school based on sports is not a wise choice. Education and sports are like anything else, you get out of it what you put into it. I don’t know what the solution should be, maybe a public/private split . . . it just seems no one wants that, and we do not really have enough schools to do it.
Parents will continue to send their kids to Curtis, regardless of the classification, because you can get a good education and they still teach discipline and other values not found in other school systems. Personally, I don't mind John Curtis moving down to 2A, and many of the people I went to high school with feel the same way. I was at JC when we were "asked" to move up in the late 80's (when we started playing out of state schools, it was also around the time we were constantly in the national rankings), Curtis did not demand a move up and we didn't actively pursue moving up. My point here is that John Curtis did not move up to further advertise the school or get a foot hold on talented young kids. The big boys wanted to take a crack at Curtis, in the 80’s people believed if John Curtis moved up they would start losing and that would spread the wealth of football power around a bit to other higher classification schools. So they moved us to 3A, and then later to 4A.
New Orleans is a big city, kids and parents have plenty of choices for their education. John Curtis was winning titles in the 70's every year just like they do now, classification means nothing. Some of our best football players came out of the 1980's, when the school was 2A. You'd be surprised at the raw talent level at John Curtis, it's not as great as you think. These are just kids, the system has more to do with the team's overall success than the talent level of the players. Moving Curtis down will not start the decline of good coaching and college interest, if anything it might be easier to win a state title (if that is even true, winning a title takes hard work . . . nothing is handed to you, even at a place like Curtis). I do remember the constant reporters snooping at the school in the late 80’s and early 90’s, if John Curtis ran a dirty program you would certain hear about it. Let’s face it, everyone in the LHSAA is waiting for Curtis to make a mistake or slip up. How many schools have reporters combing through the roster and checking backgrounds every single season, not to mention the constant grade evaluations?
Maybe John Curtis is a football factory to you, maybe not, I never saw it that way, then or now. We are dedicated and put in a lot of hard work to achieve our goals, just like everyone else. Moving us up or down will not have any effects on the success of the football program, or other sports. The college recruiters know where to go to find well coached players, classification doesn't have much to do with that. If this move does somehow make John Curtis an average high school football program, then fine, we had a great run. I’m sure we will continue to compete and strive to be the best. I was part of a few losing Curtis teams, and every time we walked off the field losers I assumed it was because the other team wanted it more, put in more time, or worked harder. I never considered it was due to some kind of cheating or bending of the rules.
My brother and I both got scholarships out of high school, I choose to accept an academic scholarship from LSU and ended up graduating in Architecture, now I work as an Art Director here in Los Angeles. My brother got an athletic scholarship, graduated in education and now works as a teacher out of state. We both have stayed close our high school and keep involved. I consider myself very lucky, I got the chance to attend both John Curtis and LSU, between the two I was very well prepared for life outside of sports and school. Even out here people in Los Angeles know of both schools. Sadly for both, they are better known for sports than anything else.
I know this post will open me up to all kinds of negative comments, but if you were using tigerforums and saw your high school being bashed on facts that you know are not true then you would want to respond as well. When I got to LSU I meet a lot of guys who I played against from all over the state, we all ended up friends. All high schools are different, each having different levels of success in different pursuits. Football is important at Curtis, but it is not the main focus of the school. There are strict education standards that have to be reached by the football players, if they are not achieved then you will not play. The football team is so popular because of the success not any classification, JT doesn't cut anyone . . . if you are willing to put in the work, you will have a jersey and chance to play.
I can't speak for Evangel, I've never seen the school and really don't know anything about them.
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