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After flying the job through the district, Miller High School opened up the search for its next head football coach to out-of-district candidates Tuesday to what athletic director John Romagnoli described as a lot of interest.
"We have calls and resumes coming in from all over," Romagnoli said. "It's been a pretty hectic response. In-state, out-of-state, high school, college. We have a lot of people interested in this job and for good reason. We have a new stadium and a lot of talent."
The position opened up in a bizarre manner November 10, as Jeff Strycula was removed less than 24 hours before the Rebels played Redlands East Valley in their season finale with the league title on the line as a reaction to a hazing incident involving several players. Miller was coached by Mike Farnam, who is Miller's head track coach, in the game, which it lost 21-7 to eliminate it from the playoffs.
As far as Strycula's replacement, Romagnoli said that the ad for the position would be posted until next Wednesday, with finalists and interviews being chosen and given shortly after the posting closes.
"There were a lot of loose ends that had to be tied before we opened the job," Romagnoli said. "I made it my duty right after we got back from winter break to get this process going and we'll work hard to get a new football coach in here."
A huge game for the Miller football program took a turn for the bizarre Wednesday night, as Rebel head coach Jeff Strycula was removed from his position via a phone call as a response to an apparent hazing incident involving three of his players.
Those players - quarterback Eric Shufford, defensive end Sean Chaidez and linebacker Jamal Wilson - were held out of the first quarter of Miller's 21-7 loss to Redlands East Valley Thursday night. Details of the incident have yet to be released, but the punishment that Strycula received for it was far more severe.
"I got a call at 10:35 Wednesday night from the principal (Heather Griggs) telling me I was fired," Strycula said. "I've been an absolute wreck. I went to the hospital last night because I was vomiting, dry-heaving, had high blood pressure, wasn't eating. This whole thing has just taken a toll on me and my family. I think it's weird that the players involved were held out a quarter while I was removed from my job."
Miller was in a win-or-go-home situation against REV, as a win would have given them a Citrus Belt League title while the loss eliminated them from playoff consideration. Assistant coach Mike Farnam, who has worked alongside Strycula both at Miller and at Fontana High School, was made the interim football coach Wednesday night and was given the uneviable task of trying to deal with the chaos.
"You wouldn't have known what the kids were going through based on the way they played, because they played their hearts out, but last night was stressful," Farnam said. "There were several different rumors going around and it seemed like everyone had heard something else. To deal with that before a game was terrible. It was one of the worst things I've ever had to go through because of my friendship with Jeff and my love for these kids."
It's a situation that might not be completely resolved either. Rumors have surfaced that Strycula wasn't fired and that his removal from the proceedings Wednesday - he was banned from being at the school in any capacity Thursday - was more a suspension than a firing. Neither Griggs nor Miller athletic director John Romagnoli were available for comment Friday. Strycula is treating it as a firing.
"I was told that I was being relieved from my duties as football coach Wednesday night and could not return to school until Monday," said Strycula, a physical education teacher at Miller. "I haven't heard anything since then, so I'm assuming that I'm not the Miller football coach.
"I really don't know if I can even come to work Monday. The stress has already hospitalized me once and I just don't know if I can deal with teachers and students asking me about what happened and why I'm not the coach. I feel the worst for the kids and their families - I had a good group of kids and had a great time coaching them this year."
The incident which set in motion this chain of events, which neither Strycula or Farnam would divulge details of due to Fontana Unified School District policy, is the second hazing incident that the Miller program has dealt with in just over a year, as several players were disciplined in 2009 for an incident that was labeled hazing.
While the past 48 hours have been hard on Strycula, there was a glimmer of positivity for his family. His oldest son Andrew, a senior tight end at Redlands East Valley, caught a 21-yard touchdown pass for the game's final score Thursday, something that Strycula believes that REV coach Kurt Bruich made a point to do.
"I feel that Kurt planned that," Strycula said. "We've been friends for a long time and I had talked to him on Thursday before the game and I'm very happy that Andrew was able to get that opportunity. He's a good kid who has really had a hard time with this whole situation and I'm glad he was able to have that moment, though I would have loved to have had a chance to shake his hand and tell him 'good game' on the field after the game."
Last year was about as good as it's ever gotten for the Miller football program since it started in 1991. With a veteran, hardnosed defense and an explosive, multifaceted spread offense, the Rebels cruised to an undefeated regular-season record, a Citrus Belt League title and a playoff win over Corona Roosevelt before losing to Vista Murrieta in the Inland Division quarterfinals.
But things have been a bit tumultous at Miller since the loss to Vista Murrieta. Jeff Steinberg, who led the Rebels from the middle of the CBL pack to the top, left for Corona Santiago right after spring practice in May, leaving Miller to scramble for a new coach late in the game. A hazing incident, highlighted here by J.P. Hoornstra in this morning's Sun, has the status of several varsity players unknown.

T.J. Berka has been covering sports for The Sun since 2006. As a graduate of the University of Michigan, T.J. know good sports when he sees them - at least he thinks he does.



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