SPORTS SPOTLIGHT BY JOHN MONTGOMERY
Charlie Bliss is probably the most successful offensive coordinator in the history of high school football in Illinois. Bliss helped Maine South and Loyola win eight state football championships. Bliss is now on the coaching staff with Mike Bukovsky at Montini who has won back-to-back state football championships.
“I tell everyone that I am a lucky guy,” Bliss admits.
“Our offensive co-ordinator Charlie Bliss took our offense to another level," Bukovsky admitted.
A 1975 graduate of Schurz High School, he grew up dreaming of becoming an NFL quarterback, the next Terry Bradshaw or Joe Montana. His hero was Joe Namath who also won the big game. The former Bulldog quarterback was named to participate in the first ever Chicago Public League/Catholic League all-star game at Hanson Stadium.
Bliss played football locally in Chicago at Northeastern Illinois University. He failed in tryouts with the Chicago Bears, Chicago Blitz and Miami Dolphins.
“I had a cup of coffee with the Bears and the coffee got cold,” he joked.
Finally, in 1992, at 35 years of age, he led the Racine Raiders semi-pro team to a 15-0 record by throwing 59 touchdown passes. It was his final season of competitive football and time to look for another job.
He found it at Maine South High School in Park Ridge starting as freshman coach in 1990. As offensive coordinator, he helped produce six state championship teams by developing a series of outstanding quarterbacks, including John Schacke, Sean Price, Charlie Goro, Tyler Benz, Matt Alviti and Nick Leongas in a wide-open spread passing offense that is still popular today. Bliss stayed with the Hawks until 2022 before landing with Loyola.
In 2023 and 2024, Bliss was offensive assistant coach at Loyola Academy in Wilmette. Bliss would work with quarterback Ryan Fitzgerald who led the Ramblers to back-to-back state championships. Fitzgerald, son of former Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald, threw 45 touchdown passes in two years while rushing for 15 touchdowns. He currently is a backup quarterback at Iowa.
His current post is at Montini in Lombard. Not surprisingly, he started the season seeking another state championship. Mission accomplished as top seeded Montini(14-0) won its eighth state title 48-33 over nine-time champion Rochester (12-2)
“I would rather look forward than behind,” Bliss said, summing up a career that was capped in 2023 with his induction into the Illinois High School Football Coaches Association’s Hall of Fame. “My most important title in my life isn’t coach but it is father and husband. The greatest uniform I ever wore in my life was as a firefighter.”
He served as a Chicago fireman for many years while being an assistant football coach at two of the most successful programs in Illinois high school history. Add Montini to the list. Montini won 300 games and six state championships under former coach Chris Andriano and added another state title under Bukovsky in 2024.
It all began at Maine South in 1990. Bliss heard there was an opening for a freshman football coach at the school. He got the job. Later, he moved up to the varsity staff as offensive coordinator under head coach Phil Hopkins. One of the first quarterbacks he worked with was Schacke.
“Phil Hopkins is one of the greatest high school football coaches in history,” Bliss said. “His philosophy was always to find a way to win and he taught me that philosophy, which helped me as a coach.”
It didn’t come easy. Maine South suffered through a 1-8 freshman football season with Schacke. Schacke didn’t start as a junior but led the Hawks to their first state title in 1995. They rallied to upset Mount Carmel 31-28 for the 5A championship as Schacke passed for 250 yards and three touchdowns. The hero of the game was Brian Schmitz, who kicked a 37-yard game-winning field goal with eight seconds to play.
“He (Schmitz) probably is the best athlete ever at Maine South,” Bliss said, with all due respect to three-sport star and NFL Hall of Famer Dave Butz. “He was the fastest freshman at North Carolina. He was the starting point guard in basketball and best wide receiver on our team. He was the punter on our team. He was an amazing athlete.”
The victory over perennial state power Mount Carmel put Maine South on the map.
Now Bliss is coaching at Montini, where he is working with another gifted quarterback, junior Israel Abrams, who has passed for 4,040 yards and 40 touchdowns. Abrams helped Broncos to their 23rd straight victory by completing 20 of 30 passes for 418 yards and five touchdown tosses in 4A championship against Rochester.
The secret to his success?
“I know what a quarterback is going through on the field,” he said. “I am always talking with my quarterback. It’s not just about corrections. If he throws a touchdown pass, I will ask him when he gets off the field what he saw on that play. I am not going to dwell on the negatives.”
Looking ahead to 2026, Bliss is eager to have an opportunity to coach his son, also named Charlie, currently an eighth grader in Naples, Florida, who will join his father at Montini next August. He’ll be wearing No. 11, his father’s old number.