After busting my head against Permian, their "feeder schools" Bonham, Nimitz and Hood in 9th grade, JV then two years varsity for the "72 & '73 season, I have the utmost respect for the school, and the program. Permian was not just good in Football, they had an outstanding band, and were highly competitive in every sport, male & female.
Permian was the first successful program after the 50's powerhouse schools fueled by the oilfield. Odessa High, Amarillo High, Abilene High and Wichita Falls dominated the 4A division, but schools like Wink, Crane and Grand-Falls were hell on wells in the smaller school division. Permian's program was dominant because they installed their systems in 7th grade. Their fans were the most loyal that I have ever seen, back in the '70's till mid '90's.
Ector High School was closed in 1970, I believe. Most black students went to OHS, but Permian seemed to land the likes of Daryl Hunt in '72-74 (All-American at OU, then All-Pro with the Oilers). Later they had Ronnie Gentry, Lloyd Hill and Roy Williams. But Permian didn't win because of their talent, they won because of their discipline, toughness and will. I remember one of their running backs in the late '80's named Shawn Crow that over his two year career as a running back only fumbled one time, and I believe he recovered it. Their execution was flawless.
The mega-schools began chipping away at Permian's dominance in the late '80's. Plano was the first, and now we see powerhouse programs in Dallas, Houston and San Antonio-Austin. I don't think you will see 'ole Mojo make it back anytime soon, nor Midland Lee. I think it's a combination of things, enrollment and ethnic make up, but mainly the desire is not there with the kids or the communities. I left the Midland-Odessa area in 1980, but spend a lot of time there in the oilfields. Wish it would change.. their was nothing like 15,000 people crammed into Ratliff or the old Memorial Stadium to watch the Panthers and us ******* Rebels go at it!