GAMES
RANKINGS
Resilient Northbrook breaks through win column to snap losing skid
As seconds ticked off Northbrook’s 27-14 win over Aldine last Saturday, Raiders coach Andres Gomez’s thoughts weren’t on getting his first win as a head coach in his 22nd try.
They were on the kids who wore the maroon and white over the past five years. The seniors currently on the field. And everyone in between.
“I saw a few of our seniors who had graduated last year who were at the game. I was thinking about them,” Gomez said. “I was thinking about our seniors now, who had never seen a varsity football win since they’ve been in school. It can’t be easy to put yourself through that. The fact that these kids keep going at it and keep fighting and keep competing, and finally got to see that scoreboard be in their favor … it was very rewarding for me.”
The win snapped the longest losing streak in Texas high school football at 42 games. The Raiders were winless from 2018 through 2021. Their previous win was Nov. 3, 2017, a 34-12 decision over rival Spring Woods.
“Honestly, I can’t even tell you how exciting this was for the team, coaching staff, and entire Raider Nation,” said senior receiver/running back Marquell Hannah, who was spectacular in the win with three carries for 120 yards and three touchdowns. “Just feels like a dream come true, you know, after waiting so many years. All the hate, all the doubt, and we finally managed to pull through. The coaches always said, ‘Come out, play hard and play for each other,’ and that’s what the mindset was throughout the entire game.”
Northbrook senior Marquell Hannah rushed for three carries and 120 yards and three touchdowns in last Saturday's win over Aldine.Courtesy of Northbrook Football
Hannah came to Northbrook as a sophomore. Toward the end of that year, kids were continuously leaving the program, advising on the way out that he should do the same.
“Telling me I should go somewhere better, and that Northbrook would never win a game,” Hannah said. “I never let that faze me at all. I always told them we were going to win, and that when we do, we’re going to shock everybody that said we couldn’t.”
Hannah said players now hold each other accountable for every mistake, no matter how small. That started with Prince Echaverry, a former defensive lineman and highly respected program leader who graduated in the spring.
“I do not believe this would be possible if he didn’t come in and set the standards for us all,” Hannah said. “The guy was incredible. I mean, just outstanding on and off the field. He gave it his all. I would have loved to share this moment with him but I’m glad we were able to pull this off for him.”
Gomez knew going into the Aldine game that it could be a favorable matchup.
“I told them that we need to prepare to win, because we don’t know how to do that,” Gomez said. “We’re still learning how to finish games and close things out.”
The Raiders led by 21 points at halftime. Second-half penalties and a couple of big Aldine plays late made things interesting, but it was an otherwise comfortable win.
Hannah was remarkable. Defensively, junior defensive lineman Brian Fernandez, senior middle linebacker Angel Reyes and junior linebacker Dade Delva were difference-makers.
“They may not be the fastest or biggest, but they really get after it,” Gomez said. “They’ve set the tone the last two weeks, and then we were able to get the running game going and establish the ground game.
On two consecutive offensive plays from scrimmage spanning the first and second quarters, Northbrook scored on runs of 30 and 50 yards, respectively.
\u201cTouchdown Raiders!!! @NHS_Raiders1 @MarquellHannah\u201d— Northbrook Athletic Booster Club (@Northbrook Athletic Booster Club) 1662252162
“You could see the shift,” Gomez said. “Whenever things like that happen to us, you can see the air let out of the sidelines, like, ‘here we go again.’ But to be on the other side of that, you could feel the energy.”
If Echaverry was the heart of the Northbrook culture, Gomez is its soul.
Gomez is in his third season leading the Raiders. Last year, the University Interscholastic League recognized the Mexico native as one of 15 winners for the 2021 UIL Sponsor Excellence Award, which identifies those who “enable students to develop and refine their extracurricular talents to the highest degree possible within the education system.”
Gomez has seen all that Texas high school football has to offer. He won a state championship playing receiver for coach Mike Johnston at Katy High School in 1997.
But perhaps his greatest impact is the four cornerstones he’s instilled into Northbrook football—Relentless, Intensity, Discipline, Effort, i.e., R.I.D.E.
“I can say Coach Gomez is, hands down, one of the best head coaches in the state of Texas,” Hannah said. “Guy’s a leader, a motivator, a mentor, a comedian … basically, anything you can ask for out of a coach. He’s always walking around with a smile. He seems to always have that type of positive energy that you want out of a coach.”
Gomez said he’s never received so many text messages or Twitter notifications in one night as he did after the win. He barely slept.
Considering the socioeconomic challenges Northbrook endures, the Week 2 win was not just any victory. The statewide response and adoring congratulations that poured from dozens of coaches, former players, athletic administrators and media afterward proved as much.
“Everybody I’ve talked to, especially those I’m closest to that have seen the journey, understands the perseverance it took to get to this point,” Gomez said. “Coaches who have done this know it’s not easy. It’s a lot of fun to see so many rally behind our kids, and a lot of people understand how valuable it is for them to walk off the field victorious.”
It is validation for what’s been coached, and what’s been played for.
“We came in day one and set our eyes on our main goal, which was proving everyone wrong, and that’s exactly what we did,” Hannah said. “As a team, we’ve been doubted, not only by people outside of the school, but people inside, and we take that as motivation. We’ve been told there are over 1,000 students in the school, and less than 100 are playing football. Those individuals are a special group of men. They step out believing they can make a difference.”
And they have.
ROLE MODEL: Northbrook's Gomez A Beacon Of 'Excellence'
GROWING UP, ANDRES GOMEZ LEARNED HOW TO BE COMFORTABLE WITH THE UNCOMFORTABLE.
Born in Mexico, Gomez and his family moved to Katy when he was nine years old. The first home was a one bedroom apartment for the immigrant family of five.
“I was literally uprooted from what I knew and what I was comfortable with to a new place, a new culture, a new language, new everything, without knowing it was coming,” said Gomez, now the head football coach/campus athletic coordinator at Northbrook High School. “When we first came here, us kids were told we were going on a vacation.
“My dad was over here already working for a few months because the situation was tough in Mexico, and we were told we were going to go visit him. A week later, we were getting an apartment and staying here.”
Gomez was in the fourth grade when he started school in his new country. He vividly remembers carrying a lunch bag, following everyone around, not saying a word. Eventually, they ended up in the cafeteria, but when he got to a table, Gomez realized he had left his lunch in a classroom.
He broke down crying.
Gomez had no idea how to get back to the classroom and did not speak English nearly well enough to where he could talk to anyone around him.
“It was me and my two older brothers, figuring things out together,” Gomez said of his childhood. “Now, two of the three of us have our Master’s degrees, all of us went to Texas A&M, and all of us are coaches.”
Gomez is adept at keeping a level head about things and working promptly through adverse situations. It’s that M.O. that has carried him through 18 years of coaching, including the last two years at Northbrook.
That resilience led the University Interscholastic League to recognize him as one of 15 winners for the 2021 UIL Sponsor Excellence Award.
Now in its 31st year, the award identifies “outstanding sponsors who enable students to develop and refine their extracurricular talents to the highest degree possible within the education system.” Each winner receives $1,000 and a symbolic memento from the UIL.
“I had varied experiences growing up that I feel gives me the ability to relate to different kinds of kids,” Gomez said. “I appreciate the value of being part of a team and working as hard as I can to better myself, because that’s how I grew up. I can look at every kid and see the value they bring to our program. The impact we can have on everybody that comes through our doors is how I measure success.”
Gomez’s coaching stops include Northbrook, Klein Cain, College Park, Klein Oak, and Aldine. He has helped lead six teams to the playoffs.
It was during his middle school years at West Memorial Junior High in Katy that Gomez knew he wanted to be a coach. Gomez admired Paul McStravick, his history teacher and football coach, for his demeanor, confidence, and an aura of trust and accountability.
“I told myself then that I wanted to be like him,” Gomez said. “That’s the path I wanted to choose.”
Gomez attended Katy High School and played receiver on the 1997 State Championship Tigers team. Being around legendary coaches like Mike Johnston, Don Clayton, Chris Massey, and Gary Joseph only justified his future ambitions.
“Those guys showed me what it was like to lead a program, how to do things right and to maximize effort and potential with every rep and practice,” Gomez said. “From there, that path in life just fit me.”
Gomez found his way to Northbrook for his first head coaching job. It has been an ideal pairing.
Northbrook is a school in which there is a lot of movement in population because of difficult home circumstances for students.
“They have different life experiences than others,” Gomez said. “I’ve had kids that couldn’t come to practice because they had to babysit their siblings or had to work. We had a kid who was a good athlete, great size, who left school because his family needed him to work. Kids can’t make athletics a priority all the time. They have other things going on. But we’re always going to put our best out there.”
Gomez cites incremental progress as being essential at a school like Northbrook. Every accomplishment is significant, no matter how big or small.
For instance, though the Raiders went winless in 10 games last season, there were four games in which they were within a touchdown in the fourth quarter. They lost a doubleovertime game to Spring Woods.
None of that had happened in the 2020 season.
While Northbrook is finding its way athletically, academically the Raiders compete with anyone, boasting a plethora of all-state and all-district honorees.
“This place is incredible,” Gomez said. “We have some of the most well-behaved kids I’ve ever been around. These are kids trying to do the best they can to better themselves. They don’t have the comforts some other kids have to just focus on athletics.
“But they will do anything for you, and they will maximize their potential every single time to be competitive.”