The two national powers have met 10 times in that span and it's been either to decide a Trinity League, Southern Section or Southern California regional title.
The game also carries national ranking implications. They have each won national crowns — Mater Dei in 2017 and St. John Bosco in 2019. Each are regulars among top five teams in the country.
But coaches Bruce Rollinson (Mater Dei) and Jason Negro (St. John Bosco) will tell you that their teams could be playing for an In-N-Out burger or a Chick-fil-A strip and they would engage in an intense battle to the finish.
In their last 10 contests, each has won five times. The cumulative score in those games: St. John Bosco 295, Mater Dei 287.
Heading into Saturday's 7 p.m. game at Santa Ana Stadium, here are capsule looks at their 10 meetings, with photos from our network of photographers and links to our overall coverage.
Oct. 10, 2014 at St. John Bosco | Final score: St. John Bosco 28, Mater Dei 25Though future NFL quarterback
Josh Rosen threw for 201 yards and accounted for two touchdowns and top running back
Sean McGrew added 119 yards rushing and another score, it was a 69-yard fumble return by
Traveon Beck that proved decisive for the Braves. The Monarchs, who lost three fumbles and missed a 22-yard field goal, got big chunk plays from QB
Jack Lowary
(21-of-30, 343 yards) but no passes went for touchdowns. Mater Dei mustered only 36
rushing yards on 24 attempts. From there, Bosco (12-2) lost in the
section's Pac-5 Division finals to Centennial (Corona), 48-41. Mater Dei
(9-3) was eliminated one week earlier by the Huskies.

Matthew Katnik (55), St. John Bosco
File photo by Nicholas Koza
The three-touchdown margin was misleading as Bosco raced to a 42-0 lead late in the third quarter before freshman quarterback
JT Daniels threw three late TD passes to make it reasonable. McGrew, a future Washington Husky, rushed for 218 yards and two touchdowns,
Cross Poyer
added two more rushing scores. From there, Bosco breezed to seven more
wins to improve to 13-0 before losing 62-52 to Centennial (Corona) in
the Southern Section D1 finals. Mater Dei (10-3) was eliminated one week
earlier by Centennial.

Sean McGrew, St. John Bosco
File photo by Glenn Kross
Oct. 21, 2016 at Cerritos College | Mater Dei 26, Bosco 21Before 9,000 fans, the Monarchs broke a six-game losing streak to Bosco, keyed by a 75-yard punt return for touchdown by
Amon-Ra St. Brown, an interception by
Jalen Cole and a go-ahead TD run by
Shakobe Harper. Mater Dei scored 14 unanswered points in the fourth quarter to break the streak.
Demetrious Flowers rushed for two TDs and
Re-al Mitchell accounted
for 250 yards and another score for Bosco. Rollinson said the team's line play on both sides keyed the win.

Amon-Ra St. Brown, Mater Dei
File photo by Jeff Brocca
Dec. 3, 2016 at Cerritos College | St. John Bosco 42, Mater Dei 28More
than 13,000 jammed into Cerritos College to watch the Braves get
revenge in the Southern Section Division I final. Line play again
decided this one, but only this time Bosco's OL paved the
way for 405 rushing yards, including 100-yard games from
Terrence Beasley (22
carries, 145 yards, 1 TD), Mitchell (20, 131, 2) and Flowers (20, 120,
2). Harper rushed for two more scores and sophomore Daniels threw for
290 yards and two scores, but he also was intercepted by
Jaiden Woodbey,
Stephan Blaylock and
Tyrel Thomas. The Braves went on to beat De La Salle the following week 56-33 for their
second state Open bowl title in four
years.

Demetrious Flowers, St. John Bosco
File photo by Heston Quan
Oct. 13, 2017 | El Camino College | Mater Dei 31, St. John Bosco 21It
was the Daniels (18-of-24, 326 yards) to St. Brown show as the
two connected eight times for 206 yards and two touchdowns as the
Monarchs never trailed. Daniels, the top-rated junior QB in the country,
also showed off his much improved speed, rushing for 97 yards. St. John Bosco
introduced 6-foot-5, 240-pound sophomore
DJ Uiagalelei
as its first-time starting QB and he didn't disappoint, throwing for
243 yards and two long touchdowns. He was sacked seven times.

JT Daniels, Mater Dei quarterback
File photo by Louis Lopez
Dec. 2, 2017 at Cerritos College | Mater Dei 49, St. John Bosco 24Daniels
and the Monarchs were unbeatable on this night and every game
throughout their magical season, piling up nearly 500 yards in another
wire-to-wire win. Daniels threw for 300 yards and five touchdowns, three
to
Bru McCoy
and Harper continued his big-game prowess with 107 yards rushing and
two scores. It offset a 20-of-21 performance by Uiagalelei but Mater Dei
was in control from the start and put it away with three TDs in the
fourth quarter. They'd go on the next week to beat De La Salle 52-21 for the Open Division title Mater Dei outscored opponents 724-229 on the year and never trail once en route to a
MaxPreps National Championship.

Bru McCoy, Mater Dei
File photo by Anthony Guillean
Oct. 13, 2018 at Santa Ana Bowl | St. John Bosco 41, Mater Dei 18In
the eighth-ever meeting between the nation's top two ranked teams,
the Braves got a huge game from Uiagalelei, who passed for four of his
five touchdowns in the first half and finished with 278 yards passing.
With Daniels reclassifying after his junior season and moving on to USC,
this was the start of a fantastic QB rivalry between Uiagalelei and
Bryce Young,
who threw for 311 yards and a couple of scores. But three TD passes to
Jake Bailey, plus a 75-yard touchdown run to start the second half from
George Holani solidified the Braves' spot at No. 1 in the country.

DJ Uiagalelei (5), St. John Bosco
File photo by Louis Lopez
Nov. 23, 2018 at Cerritos College | Mater Dei 17, St. John Bosco 13After
13 straight wins to start the year, including a decisive win over the Monarchs, St. John Bosco was
stunned in the Southern Section Division 1 title game as Mater Dei held
the Braves' high octane offense to 202 yards and two touchdowns.
The secondary held Uiagalelei to seven completions, 105 yards and
intercepted him twice, including one by All-American
Elias Ricks.
Mater Dei held the ball 31 minutes, 34 seconds to 16:26 for Bosco and
got touchdowns by McCoy and Harper to advance to the state Open bowl
game, where it defeated De La Salle 35-21.

Every Mater Dei-Bosco games features big hits, but especially so in the second 2018 contest.
File photo by Jeff Brocca
Oct. 25, 2019 at Panish Family Stadium | Mater Dei 38, St. John Bosco 24In
another meeting of the nation's top two teams, Alabama commit Young
stole the show, accounting for 329 yards and five touchdowns leading No.
1 Mater Dei to the wire-to-wire win.
Kody Epps
was on the receiving end of 11 of Young's passes for 175 yards and three
touchdowns as the Monarchs held a two TD lead early and never gave it up
despite 320 yards passing from Uiagalelei.

Bryce Young, Mater Dei
File photo by Louis Lopez
Nov. 30, 2019 at Cerritos College | St. John Bosco 39, Mater Dei 34In
a complete reversal of 2018, the Braves turned the tables on the
Monarchs, winning one of the most exciting and memorable Southern
Section title games in memory. St. John Bosco fought back from a 28-5 deficit,
scoring 34 unanswered as Uiagalelei simply wouldn't let his team
lose. He threw for 446 yards and five touchdowns, outdueling by a
nudge his good friend Young, who threw 405 yards and five TDs. But
Young was intercepted three times and Uiagalelei none. The Clemson-bound Uiagalelei completed the 34-point swing with two touchdown passes to
Logan Loya (10 catches, 164 yards) to make it 39-28 with 8:52 left. Young responded with a 23-yard TD pass to
Kyron Ware-Hudson
three minutes later. Eventually, the game came down to a Hail Mary heave
by Young from midfield. Eight players had a shot at the pass in the end
zone, but Bosco's
Kris Hutson
came down with the interception to seal it. Two weeks later, Uiagalelei
cemented his prep legacy by accounting for 477 yards and five scores in
a 49-28 win over De La Salle for Bosco's third state bowl title and
first MaxPreps National Championship. The following month, Young and Uiagelelei
were selected 2019 national MaxPreps co-Players of the
Year.

DJ Uiagelelei accounted for 446 yards and five touchdowns in his Southern Section finale.
File photo by Louis Lopez