People who think about these archdiocesan schools in terms of administration don't understand the realities of situation. The administration changes like underwear. The administration main role is raise enough funds to keep the doors open. Plus there is the weird dynamic between the school and downtown archdiocese. How much independence etc you get from downtown is widely debatable.
All of this, every single piece of this is a money game. The school, athletics, the play etc. It's how much money can the school raise, how much of a total discount can they provide to students through BLOCS, direct alumni support, financial aid, etc, etc.
You either find enough people to pay the full tuition expense or you have to come up with ways for them to attend cheaper. If O'Hara, Bonner, Carroll, insert school name here fields a football with a team full of full tuition payers, one thing is certain. They will not win a game. Knute Rockne wouldn't win a game. And because of the dynamic with the Archdiocese the school can't just say we won't charge 14 football kids and we will win games. If you are a private school you could theoretically not charge a kid and make it up in your own budget. Not in archdiocese. You have to cover it through fundraising and programs.
I personally believe all of this is not sustainable. O'Hara or anyone else for that matter can be fantastic at football tomorrow. You have a 400,000 a year budget and say we want to win and we are going to fund the program and buy players. Just think getting there is impossible.
Hogan is a very good football coach. The school, the program, the alumni did not give him enough financial support to be a big winner. He also isn't a pied piper sales guy or a snake oil salesman who would promise kids aid that never got delivered. So ultimately the players that were coming weren't going to be enough to win big.
There are forces in the alumni that think that can rectified with new leadership and that winning will garner more financial support. They also provide financial support. Ultimately in these scenarios where the entire school is dependent on financially well off alumni to run, those folks have more power than any "administrator". The administrator's job is to keep those guys happy and checks coming.
What happened to BJ Hogan is a shame. He's a good coach, a good person, and really ended up in a very difficult job. He wasn't provided what he hoped for when he took the job. Certain alums expect way better than the results and in their opinion another person is better equipped to attract kids to the program and they are willing to write checks and try to attract funds etc. So a change is made.
I wish Mike Ewing the very best. Pop Pop and Dad would be thrilled. I think any Catholic League Archdiocesan head coaching job is an absolute beast. You have to be a coach, a mentor, a fundraiser, a recruiter, a diplomat, a representative of the school at all times and you have to win games. If you lose, it's ultimately your fault. You can't say you didn't have the horses because the primary role of the job is to get the horses. It's a brutal task.
However he has had very good success with the type of kids O'Hara is going to have to attract to win. O'Hara has to get Chester, Penn Wood, Academy Park, Ridley, Chi, Upper Darby, Sun Valley, Interboro kids to win. BLOCS can help there. But Humpty Dumpty ain't getting put back together again. The traditional footprint parishes aren't the answer. Not enough good players and a dynamic that has changed. If a kid is very good in those areas, Mom and Dad today have more money than 1980. They can pay for some or all of private school.
The ideal guy for a Catholic League job is a Joe Moglia or Biff Poggi. A guy who knows football, doesn't need a job to support their family, and is so wealthy they can throw 500,000 of their own cash at it every year to win. Best of Luck finding one of those. But I wish the best for both B.J. Hogan and Mike Ewing. I hope both find great success and I'm rooting for both guys.