Legacy
High football coach not intimidated by demanding jobs on the field or
at home
Legacy
High School football coach John Isola and his daughters, from left, Jaden, Siena,
and Gemma.
Posted in the Las Vegas Sun
Sunday, June 12, 2016 | 2 a.m.
The Legacy High School football team cleared out of the weight
room after practice last week, but all was not quiet. Giggles filled the
building, with strands of blonde hair fluttering through the air as three
little girls dashed across the locker room. Eyes covered, Legacy coach John
Isola patiently counted while his daughters searched for hiding spots.
Isola’s 5-year-olds, Jaden, Siena and Gemma, tag along with dad to
summer practice every day. The triplets have attended the Longhorns’ games
since they were in strollers, and have learned to proudly hold up miniature
“hook ’em horns” hand signals on cue.
It was a little over five years ago that Isola and his wife, Lisa,
were struggling to have just one child. “We tried for four years to have kids,
and then we decided to try in vitro,” Isola said.
Lisa was 39 at the time. After taking fertility drugs, she had
only three viable eggs. Doctors advised the Isolas that they wouldn’t normally
implant more than one egg in the uterus, but in Lisa’s case, the chances were
so slim of one making it that they were considering using all three.
“Well, for as much money as I’m paying, we will do all three and
hope we get lucky,” Isola remembered saying. “We found out about eight weeks
later when they did the ultrasound to check for heartbeats that there were
three.”
The doctor joked to the Isolas, “Get the minivan ready.” But on
the brink of getting a head coaching job he had dreamed about, Isola wasn’t
amused. “I was 43 at the time, and you’re telling me we are going to have
triplets,” he said. “We were looking for one and now we have three, and that’s
a whole other world.”
Isola’s coaching background helped him survive the early years of
raising triplets. “The organization of 28 bottles and 32 diapers a day was on
point,” he said. “I had it set up so that one got fed first, and a half-hour
later this one got fed, and then another half-hour this one got fed, and then
three hours later they got hungry in intervals.” Isola ran his household like
he ran his practices. All the 28-year coaching veteran was missing was his
whistle. “It was a process. It was feed, burp, diaper, feed, burp, diaper,” he
said, laughing.
That obsessive personality and attention to detail helped Isola
earn the head coaching job at Legacy before the 2014 season. The Longhorns have
made the playoffs in both seasons under him.
“I’m building a program into how I want it to be, and each year it
has gotten closer to that,” Isola said. “It takes time, and that is part of my
passion. I want Legacy to be an elite high school football program, so I will
put in the time.”
It’s time most fathers don’t have, especially fathers of triplets,
but Isola said his wife understands his passion for football. “She is from
Alabama, so she knows about football,” he said. “The culture of high school
football and football in general is like a religion down there.”
Isola has worked with children for many years. In his own youth,
he was a peer counselor at school, and in high school, he would go to middle
schools and talk to kids during their lunch break as a peer-group facilitator.
Now, as a football coach and full-time physical education teacher, he’s around
high school students all fall and winter, with most of the summer off to spend
with his daughters.
Even during the summer, Jaden, Siena and Gemma are at practice
with their dad from 8 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. Monday through Thursday. Spending so
much time around the team, there’s no doubt these little girls know their
father’s job. “Daddy is the big boss,” Jaden said, “but mommy’s a big boss
too.”
Lisa, an art consultant at Kevin Barry Fine Art Associates, works
9 to 5 and has time to dress the girls in Legacy gear for Friday nights — and
Alabama Crimson Tide apparel for Saturday afternoons.
While they love football, the girls’ favorite sport to play is
soccer.
“I like soccer and kicking the ball in the net,” Gemma said. “And
it was fun with Dad as coach.”
Isola reluctantly became coach of their soccer team. “That first
game was rough. I was screaming instructions and yelling at Siena to stop
sitting on the field,” he said. “I finally just said to myself not to care
about winning or losing, and just let them chase the ball.”
While the triplets were unexpected, he considers them a blessing
and can’t see his life any differently.
“I believe that I was meant to have triplets, because it’s such a
special thing,” Isola said, “and God knew I could handle it because it’s how
I’m wired.”

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