Sonoma Christian Home Banner
Erica Galindo
Celebrating Food, Faith and Family
Last edited on: February 18, 2015.

Could a football coach who teaches his players that character trumps winning actually win games? Consistently?

It’s happened – and quite dramatically – inspiring the film When the Game Stands Tall, opening August 22.

Coach Bob Ladouceur led a struggling, obscure, Catholic California high school team to record-shattering national prominence by helping his players mature toward adulthood.

Ladouceur’s (pronounced “LAD-a-sir”) De La Salle Spartans won 151 straight games, a record for football at any level. (To compare, Oklahoma University won 47 straight; the NFL’s New England Patriots 21 straight.) Rating services crowned them National High School Football Champions at least eight times.

Jim Caviezel as Coach Bob Ladouceur; Photo Courtesy of Rusty Wright.

Winning: doable; teaching life: hard

This inspiring film (Sony/TriStar) features Jim Caviezel (The Passion of the Christ, CBS-TV’s Person of Interest), Alexander Ludwig (The Hunger Games), Laura Dern (The Fault in Our StarsJurassic Park), and Michael Chiklis (TV’s VegasThe Shield).

“Winning a lot of football games is doable,” explains Ladouceur (Caviezel) in the film. “Teaching kids there’s more to life? That’s hard.”

The film focuses on how players and coaches cope with The Streak’s end, plus a former teammate’s murder and the coach’s heart attack. “It’s not how hard you fall,” reads the tagline, “it’s how you get back up.”

Watch the trailer now:

In this gritty story, a coach struggles to help his players make sense out of loss and tragedy while grappling with his own confusion and doubt. We see many contrasts: dreams shattered and fulfilled, family joys and conflict, selfish pettiness and stirring nobility.

An All-Madden tale

Legendary NFL coach and commentator John Madden called the Ladouceur/De La Salle saga “one of the greatest football stories ever told. There’s a lot more to it than X’s and O’s. [It has] life lessons for everyone about commitment, dedication, responsibility, friendship, brotherhood. And what you learn from those lessons is much bigger and more important than The Streak. It’s about community religious beliefs everything that’s important in life.”

Coach “Lad” (now retired) focused on accountability, preparation, bonding and hard work. Players set personal goals – for conditioning, practice, game performance, etc. – then held each other accountable, so each could thrive.

On the line: Offensive line play often made the difference; Photo Courtesy of Rusty Wright.

The Bellevue, Washington, team that finally snapped The Streak emulated their opponent’s methods. “Credit De La Salle for the things that changed in our program,” explained that coach.

Spartans’ secrets

Ladouceur, also a religion teacher, fondly quotes inspirational figures like Bobby Kennedy, Jesuit philosopher Teilhard de Chardin, and Jesus. He noted:

“The most important component of Spartan tradition is our commitment to create a brotherhood among ourselves. This task is bigger, tougher, and more elusive than any opponent we ever face. Individual egos must die in order for a team to live.”

“We win because our players love each other. They are not afraid to say it or embrace each other as a sign of that affection.”

Hard work at practice: a De La Salle trademark; Photo Courtesy of Rusty Wright.

He likes Jesus’ Parable of the Talents in which an employer gives each of three servants a sum of money to manage – “each according to his own ability” – then observes the results.

“God not only gave us some sort of ability,” notes Ladouceur, “but also placed us in an environment to develop those talents. And for what purpose?” Service is Ladouceur’s answer.

Of course, definitions of exemplary character differ, and Ladouceur willingly admits he’s imperfect. “I have a lot of regrets,” he confesses.

Michael Chiklis as Assistant Coach Terry Eidson coaching a player; Photo Courtesy of Rusty Wright.

A winning film

I don’t generally follow high school football, preferring the university and professional games. When I first heard about this movie, I wondered what its appeal could be. Now I understand.

There’s plenty of gridiron action for fans, but also poignant lessons about preparing for life, growing up, community, handling defeat, and more. The ending is somewhat perplexing (“seems contrived,” says my wife). But overall, it’s a great story for athletes and coaches, teams and fans, students and educators, families and friends.

Rated PG “for thematic material, a scene of violence, and brief smoking.”

 

Opening August 22, find out more about the film at WhenTheGameStandsTall.com

Looking for more movies to check out? Please read The Giver: Controversial Movie, next Big Thing

 

Rusty Wright is an author and lecturer who has spoken on six continents. He holds Bachelor of Science (psychology) and Master of Theology degrees from Duke and Oxford universities, respectively. His website is:RustyWright.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

At this time, we ask you refrain from purchasing on the Sonoma Christian Home store. We are in the process of performing updates and in the meantime we would ask you hold off on new orders. We will make an announcement once our store is back in action! Dismiss