Showing posts with label Transfers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Transfers. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Four Illinois Sports See Participation Increases

Boys cross country was one of four high school sports in
Illinois to see an increase in the number of participants,
according to the National Federation of High School's
 participation survey.
Whatever the high school sport may be, Illinois has its usual collection of them. Typically, those sports attract the biggest crowds and have the largest number of participants.

The National Federation of High Schools on Monday released data for its 2012-13 high school athletics participation survey. High school athletic participation in Illinois decreased for the second year in a row, falling from 346,896 students in the 2011-12 school year to 339,944. The fall continued from a high of 350,114 students in 2010-11.

All but four sports registered decreases in participation last year. Increasing numbers were boys cross country, girls soccer, boys swimming and diving, and girls track and field.

Participation in boys cross country has increased each year for the past five years. In 2012, 11,319 Illinois high school boys ran cross country, while 10,129 ran in 2008. Two years ago, 10,762 kids ran cross country, marking an increase of 2.76 percent.

Boys swimming and diving saw the largest percentage of increase among high school students in Illinois. In 2012, 6,744 Illinois high school boys participated in swimming and diving programs, an increase from 6,484 from the prior year.

Track and field numbers for girls in Illinois also rose last year. In 2012, 19,283 Illinois high school girls participated in track and field programs, an increase from 19,283 from the prior year.

Girls soccer numbers increased slightly from a year ago, increasing to 16,144 from 16,107 in Illinois.

Participation numbers for girls soccer, boys swimming and diving, and girls track and field were increases last year after decreases from 2010.

Football continues to be the most popular high school sport in Illinois in terms of participation, with 46,889 kids suiting up last year. However, the overall number has decreased in each of the past five years, with 51,334 kids out for the sport in 2008. Volleyball ranks second in terms of participation in Illinois high schools with 22,492 participants, down from 22,329 a year ago.

Among sports in Illinois with over 5,000 participants, boys tennis numbers went down significantly from a year ago. Numbers in boys tennis fell from 7,712 kids in 2011 to 6,670 in 2012.

Illinois ranks fourth in the nation in the number of high school sport participants behind Texas (798,333), California (777,545) and New York (389,475). Ohio is fifth in the nation with 327,919 students, with Pennsylvania (315,492), Michigan (304,438), New Jersey (270,423), Florida (243,397) and Minnesota (230,421) rounding out the top 10.

Of the top 10, only New Jersey had an increase in participants. Thirty of the 51 state high school associations reported increases.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Cutter: “Next Year”

Not to worry, these girls on last year's Dakota volleyball
squad WILL be back for this year.
One of the most important roles of journalists is to get things right and get facts straight. This means so much more than making sure the rushing yard count is correct.

Somewhere down the line a mistake will slip through the cracks. Even when we don't know of their existences until later down the road.

I would like to bring light to one of the most common high school sports media mistakes that even the most seasoned professionals make. In fact, sports media types alone do not make the mistake. I have also heard coaches and athletes make this same mistake.

This is the belief that a junior, sophomore or a freshman on a particular varsity team “will be back next year.”

For example: “All of the girls on Dakota's volleyball team will be back next year” (as mentioned in 2012).

Do we know this for a fact? Did the girls commit to a multi-year agreement that they will play until the end of their senior year?

As not to pick on one particular team, does any athlete in the area sign a four-year contract before their freshman year stating that they are bound by a particular program until graduating high school? Has this ever happened?. As much as our coaches would like to see every freshman player stay for all four years, we all know that the success rate of that happening is not 100%.

This may seem like semantics for print journalists, but think of it this way: If the not-so-entirely-true phrase of “will be back next year” is put in print, and the newspaper ceases operation, someone looking back through microfilm many years down the road will still be confused. They have put that phrase on record.

With “will be back next year,” journalists have given an indication that these particular athletes are definitely returning for the following year. Readers do hold on to that as a truth. When they do so, they don't give out the fine-print information – you know, the stuff said real fast at the end of a car dealership commercial.

Over 100 years ago, high school yearbook accounts often mentioned the “disbanding” of high school sports teams after the last contest, or after the postseason banquet. We are seeing less and less of this disbanding in today's high school sports environment with strict weight room commitments and the like.

Technically, no high school student can be committed to a particular team for a cycle of one year. This is because, technically, high school students do not belong to a particular high school during the summer vacation (save year-round schooling).

We forget that there is a period of time when all high school students are considered “free agents” in a way. The only way these kids can come back to their school is after they fill out all of the registration paperwork and pay the fees. The only way an athlete can come back to their team is if they fill out all of the participation paperwork and pay the fees.

This is the clause that gives athletes and their families the right to transfer to another high school. No contracts are ever breached when someone transfers. No punishments are handed out and no fines are doled out.

No athlete is any kind of property of a particular team when the season is not taking place, nor is any student any kind of property of a particular school when the school year is not taking place. This also gives students the opportunity to switch sports in a particular season if they do choose.

Speaking of transfers, the number of those taking place in the area are on the rise – for whatever reason. This fact is also a terrific reason why we should never suggest that anyone “is returning” to their team “next year.”

How many among those followers of Winnebago's boys basketball team, in 2011, said that Marcus Posley “is returning next year?” (He went to Auburn, where he was eventually ruled ineligible by the IHSA).

How many among those followers of West Carroll's softball team, in 2009, said that the next two years were going to be really awesome, since Jordan Kasbohm was just a sophomore? (She went to Moline for her next two years, where she helped lead the Maroons to a Class 4A title in 2010 and a third-place finish in 2011).

How many among those followers of Dakota's boys basketball team, in 2012, said that the Indians were going to be the team to beat because Kendall Lawson “is returning next year?” (He went to Rockford Lutheran and helped lead the Crusaders to a 3A regional).

Rather than believe an athlete has pulled a lie on someone, there is a more correct way to address a team's future, without having to elaborate on transfers or writing up fine-print information.

Instead of saying “five of Keith Country Day's six starters will return next year,” we should say “Keith Country Day loses one starter to graduation this year.” The latter statement about the volleyball program is more of a fact. Did we know at the time they won the IHSA Class 1A championship that those non-seniors on the team would definitely be returning for 2013?

On an aside, to suggest that any team would be a “team to beat” because they “will be returning a lot of their starters,” is not an absolute fact. That's another column for another day.

Such varsity starting spots are not automatically reserved for anyone just because they have so many more years of eligibility left. In fact, no athlete practicing today should consider themselves a varsity starter “this year.” They are only that when the first contest arrives.