Madden Williams leads way for St. John Bosco’s all-star receivers

Third in a series of stories profiling top high school football players by position. Today, Madden Williams, St. John Bosco receiver.
If blockers are a quarterbackβs best friends, what are receivers?
βItβs our job to make the quarterback look good,β St. John Boscoβs Madden Williams said.
Few teams in Southern California start the 2025 season with a better collection of receivers than the Braves.
It begins with the 6-foot-2, 190-pound Williams, a Texas A&M commit who caught 13 touchdown passes as a junior. Then thereβs Oklahoma commit Daniel Odom, San Jose State commit Carson Clark, super sophomores Darren Tubbs and Landon Perkins and two highly regarded freshmen.
βNot only is it our best group but deepest,β coach Jason Negro said.
In 2019, St. John Bosco had Logan Loya, Kris Hutson and Beaux Collins at the receiver positions. They ended up at UCLA, Washington State and Clemson, respectively.
Now sophomore quarterback Koa Malauβulu will be the beneficiary of an electric receiver group that will force defenses to pick their poison. Double team one and youβll get burned by another.
βWhomever they try to double, the others will go off,β Williams said.
As a freshman last season, Malauβulu looked for Williams to deliver big plays. And thatβs what he did, reinforcing the quarterbackβs confidence in him.
βI would say what makes him great is that he has no weakness,β Malauβulu said. βHeβs a go-getter. Whenever we can go get extra work, heβs there. Heβll get any ball in his vicinity. Heβs fast, strong and physical β everything you want in a receiver.β
Williams trusts his hands and uses fundamental techniques to make plays. His length gives him an advantage over smaller defenders. And once the ball is near him, his hands find a way to catch it like a magnet attracted to metal.
βHands are the strongest pieces of my game,β he said. βYou make sure you look the ball in. A lot of people are too worried what theyβre going to do after a catch. One-hand catches are cool, but only do it when you have to do it.β
As for dealing with defensive backs who are aggressive and strong, Williams said, βThe strategy is making sure you donβt let them touch you. Thatβs what we work, on releases and not let the defensive backs redirect. We know the route weβre running. We have to make sure they do not take us off the route we have. Sometimes they guess right, but most of the time I donβt think they can β at least against me.β
The individual duel between receiver and defensive back is like a football version of cat-and-mouse.
βItβs always you and the defensive back,β Williams said. βYouβre on an island and itβs whoβs better at the end of the day.β
Defensive coordinator Chris King has called Williams βunguardable.β Williams responded with seven catches for 252 yards and three touchdowns against Sierra Canyon last season.
βHeβs got such great route running ability, knows leverage and understands coverages,β Negro said. βHeβs super savvy and his football IQ is off the charts.β
Williams also played on the basketball team even though he was a reserve. He said the practices were helpful developing the skills needed for football.
In the end, Williams follows a motto that he hopes will carry him forward in sports and in life.
βWhat happens in the dark will always be brought to light,β he said. βIβm going to be grinding in the dark and when itβs time to shine in the light, I will play the best.β
Friday: Servite tight end Luke Sorensen.
Receivers to watch
Demare Dezeurn, Palisades, 5-11, 175, Jr. One of the fastest in California should dominate in City Section
Troy Foster, Huntington Beach, 6-2, 205, Sr.: Colorado State commit caught 15 touchdowns
Quentin Hale, L.A. Cathedral, 6-3, 175, Jr.: Caught 14 TDs as a sophomore
Chris Henry Jr., Mater Dei, 6-6, 200, Sr.: Ohio State commit is finally healthy and ready to put on show
Trent Mosley, Santa Margarita, 5-11, 170, Sr.: USC commit is big-play weapon and tough to stop
Daniel Odom, St. John Bosco, 6-3, 190, Sr.: Oklahoma commit has size to be a top player
Vance Spafford, Mission Viejo, 5-11, 175, Sr.: Miami commit has tremendous speed and great hands
Madden Williams, St. John Bosco, 6-2, 190, Sr.: Physicality, strength, instincts make him big-time target
Kayden Dixon-Wyatt, Mater Dei, 6-3, 180, Sr.: Ohio State commit delivers one big catch after another
Luc Weaver, Sherman Oaks Dame, 6-3, 195, Sr.: USC commit has improved speed, work ethic, aggressiveness