High School Sports

Champagnat Catholic, known for powerhouse football program, closes after nearly 55 years

Champagnat Catholic players and coaches pose for a team photo with the trophy after their FHSAA Class 2A Football State Championship against Lakeland Victory Christian Thursday, Dec.. 5, 2019 in Tallahassee, Fla. Champagnat Catholic won 35-14.
Champagnat Catholic players and coaches pose for a team photo with the trophy after their FHSAA Class 2A Football State Championship against Lakeland Victory Christian Thursday, Dec.. 5, 2019 in Tallahassee, Fla. Champagnat Catholic won 35-14. Phil Sears/SPECIAL TO THE HERALD

Champagnat Catholic School started as the dream of a couple of Cuban exiles, borrowing chairs and desks from a nearby church, and building makeshift teachers’ desks out of broken doors and bricks.

It stayed a family-run business by the Alonsos for nearly 55 years, largely serving students from their heavily Cuban-American community in Hialeah, and along the way became an unlikely athletic powerhouse, winning state championships in football and boys’ basketball.

Earlier this month, Champagnat Catholic’s incredible, improbable story came to an end. After 54 years, the tiny Catholic school is closing its doors because of health issues with the school’s director of operations.

“It was very, very tough. It was a very, very difficult decision,” said Isabel Alonso, whose parents opened the school in 1968. “The school’s been my family’s heart and soul. I was born and raised there.”

Champagnat humble beginnings, family affair

Reinaldo and Maria Alonso were both Cuban immigrants, educators by trade and had a joint dream from the moment they first met: They wanted to open a school.

Reinaldo Alonso had been a teacher in Cuba and ran several Marist schools on the island. When he left his homeland, he also left the brotherhood, but he wanted to bring the same sensibilities he learned there to his new home in Miami-Dade County.

In 1968, he and his wife opened Champagnat, a year before they actually got married.

“It was such a priority that they put everything they had into that before they even thought of having a wedding,” Alonso said.

Dr. Reinaldo and Maria Alonso founded Champagnat Catholic School in 1968. The school shut its doors following the recently completed 2021-22 school year after operating for more than five decades.
Dr. Reinaldo and Maria Alonso founded Champagnat Catholic School in 1968. The school shut its doors following the recently completed 2021-22 school year after operating for more than five decades. Courtesy of Isabel Alonso

At the start, the school had about 100 students, Alonso estimated. The Alonsos borrow desks from a church, lugging them back and forth each weekend, and used bricks, cinder blocks and doors to build the larger teacher workstations they needed in the front of their five classrooms.

Pretty much her entire family, Alonso said, worked at the school at some point and if they didn’t they were regular fixtures on campus.

“It was the lunch spot for my cousins who worked in the area,” Alonso said. “It was just where we created that bond, more than the dining-room table.”

The school grew as large as about 1,200 students, Alonso said, and had about 180 last year.

How Champagnat became athletic power

At 17, Alonso went to college and realized her high school experience was missing one very important element: There were no sports.

At some point during her freshman year, Alonso asked her mother what she thought about adding some sports teams.

“She said, Well, if you figure out how to fund it yourself,” Alonso recalled her mother saying, “go ahead.”

Champagnat Catholic head coach Hector Clavijo is doused with a water bath by lineman Ronaldo Sigers, in back, as wide receiver Cur’mari Dopson (7) celebrates at the conclusion of their FHSAA Class 2A Football State Championship against Lakeland Victory Christian Thursday, Dec.. 5, 2019 in Tallahassee, Fla. Champagnat Catholic won 35-14.
Champagnat Catholic head coach Hector Clavijo is doused with a water bath by lineman Ronaldo Sigers, in back, as wide receiver Cur’mari Dopson (7) celebrates at the conclusion of their FHSAA Class 2A Football State Championship against Lakeland Victory Christian Thursday, Dec.. 5, 2019 in Tallahassee, Fla. Champagnat Catholic won 35-14. Phil Sears/SPECIAL TO THE HERALD Phil Sears/SPECIAL TO THE HERALD

At 18, Alonso was the youngest athletic director in the state. The Lions began playing sports in 1995, with just baseball and boys’ basketball teams.

Sometimes, Champagnat played basketball with only four players, unable to find enough willing athletes around the school. At other times, Alonso had to fill in as coach when no one else was available. For most of the Lions’ first basketball season, she was just calling up friends to pick up games here and there.

By Year 3, Champagnat was in the state championship game. In just its fifth season, the Lions won their first state title in any sport, winning the Class 2A championship in 2000.

Football, however, waited a decade.

“I always asked my mom to let us start a football program and she never agreed,” Alonso said. “She passed away in January of 2007 and May of 2007 we started a football program. I joke about it. ... She would always tell me, Over my dead body, and I was like, OK, I’ll wait.”

For the last decade, it is perhaps what Champagnat has been best known for, producing Buffalo Bills defensive lineman Gregory Rousseau and won four state titles from 2013-2020.

The Lions’ four titles are tied for the 20th most in Florida High School Athletic Association history, are tied for the 10th most among South Florida schools and tied for fifth in Dade County. Champagnat is the only Miami-Dade private school with multiple FHSAA championships.

Champagnat’s Gregory Rousseau (5) picks up a blocked punt as Champagnat plays Jacksonville University Christian for the state football title at Camping World Stadium in Orlando on Fri., Dec. 9, 2016
Champagnat’s Gregory Rousseau (5) picks up a blocked punt as Champagnat plays Jacksonville University Christian for the state football title at Camping World Stadium in Orlando on Fri., Dec. 9, 2016 AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiherald.com
David Wilson
Miami Herald
David Wilson, a Maryland native, is the Miami Herald’s utility man for sports coverage.
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