Showing posts with label Northern Illinois Big 12. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Northern Illinois Big 12. Show all posts

Saturday, August 31, 2013

Football: Beating The Elements

Football is a game that is made of many physical challenges.

Feats of strength executed by those on the gridiron will make a difference between a sack and a touchdown. Hands, hips and feet twist and twirl around in and effort to subdue the opposing team.

Like a car's parts underneath the hood, many pieces all work together to make sure all is running smoothly.

However, on an afternoon where the sun shined bright and temperatures reached the triple digits, the individual parts of the vehicle that is the football team could break down at any given moment.

This is where the cooling system comes into play.

In practice, each player knows the schematics of what's being run, as well as what's run against them. However, the chances of knowing what to expect on the gridiron makes the game situations tougher. All of the thought processes being bottled up within a helmet can produce a bit of wear in the mind.

Temperatures ran high during the first week of the high school football season. As the sunlight sped its way down to the Earth at 5:15 p.m. on this Friday afternoon at Sterling High School, the sophomore Braves were about to do battle with Metamora's underclassmen.

With a game-day air temperature of 98 degrees as a high, the gridirons at Fulton, Rock Falls and Sterling tied for the hottest home games in northern Illinois. Sterling felt hotter, however.


Crisp Countdown

Two years ago, the playing field at Sterling's Roscoe Eades Stadium was considered to be in bad shape due to heavy rains and extra use over the years. Through fund raising and donations, field turf was installed in time for the 2012 season. This prevented the use of needing to water down the field and cause more harm to the playing surface.

Spraying was needed once more at the newly-named Sterling Chevrolet Field. Realizing the intense conditions of the opening football game of the 2013 season, Sterling High School called upon the city's fire department to hose down the football field at 2 p.m.

Playing on field turf increases the temperature by about 10 degrees from the air temperature. Still, after the fire department did its job, the mercury read a stifling 115 degrees on the turf along the Sterling sideline at 4:15.

About a couple of hours before kickoff, Sterling senior lineman Blake Hall and his varsity friends stood at the mouth of the stadium's tunnel talking about the heat, among other things.

They had been through it before and wouldn't let it bother them later in the night.

“We've been practicing on it for a long time,” Hall said. “We should be alright.”

At the steel table on the Metamora sideline were six water cooler jugs – three on top and three underneath. Sterling had just a single cooler on its table. However, modern technology controlled the cooling process for the Sterling sideline: A three-foot-high plastic piping cube pushes out water from several holes along the top to create a multi-fountain device. This is Sterling's newest hydration technique, having come in favor of the dolly-like water bucket, which uses a motor to spit out water from several handle-like fountains. This machine has been in the Sterling arsenal for the past couple of years, after an older system had numerous battery problems.

All resources were put to use on this oven of an evening.

Sterling athletic director Greg King chatted with the group of varsity players in the tunnel; kids whom he had been in charge of in the football program until a couple of years ago. Having turned over the head coaching reigns to Jonathan Schlemmer, King's duty on this particular evening of preparing the stadium for the game becomes more abundant.

After recollecting about a hot evening in Edwardsville many years ago while serving as a Rock Island assistant coach, King called on a couple of varsity players to bring over a large fan from the school's Fieldhouse to the Sterling sideline.

Metamora's fan had already been placed on their sideline.

“One of the first things you got to do is you have to make sure your kids are smart throughout the day and get a lot of water throughout the day,” King said. “You want the kids to play, and they've worked so hard, but at the same time you want to make sure it's smart.”

King served on a committee with the IHSA to look at the heat-related changes in off-season and preseason practices. The IHSA made substantial changes to the first couple of weeks of practice this year to limit excessive heat exposure.

“Listening to the doctors from the Korey Stringer Institute, it's some pretty serious stuff,” King recalled. “You want the kids to have fun, but be safe at the same time.”

Several Metamora players went through pre-game warmups shirtless, minus the black-colored pads and the black-colored helmets.

“When we got here today, we went a little less with shoulder pads and helmets,” Metamora team doctor Timothy Kaufman said. “We emphasized a lot with water every time they come out, and lots of ice bags on their neck to keep them cool.”


Sweltering Sidelines

The increased awareness on this scorching evening also increases the concentration for Sterling athletic trainer Andi Sumerfelt.

“I have the ice baths in case of any heat illness,” Sumerfelt said. “The best way to recover is to cool their body temperature down with cold water immersion. So I make sure I have the tank ready for that. We have fans on both sides. I have Gatorade for both teams, as well as plenty of water.”

In addition to focusing on injuries and soreness to the football players, coordinating a hydration routine was a big part of Sumerfelt's afternoon. Water was not only being provided for hydration in the bodies, but also being provided for the surface of the bodies. She set up a pair of stations along the sideline where players would be soaked with water. At each station, one of her assistants would soak a large yellow sponge into a water jug and ring it out over the top of a player's head.

“It has ammonia spirits in them and it helps open the pores so they can breathe better, as well as cool them down because it's ice and water together,” Sumerfelt said.

Her other assistants, a select group of kids from Sterling's junior tackle program, were in charge of the green Gatorade bottles that were placed in the orange racks. The kids had to be alert for timeouts, stoppages in the game, and for certain players coming on from the field.

This being the season's first game, Sumerfelt taught the kids on how and when to deliver the water to the sophomore players. Eventually, one of the water boys had to be helped to the cooling station at halftime.

Breaks became few, as Sumerfelt describes such a night as having one thing happen after another before finding a break at the half.

“When it's hot like this, I always make make sure – any time of the day, whether it's practice or a game – I have an ice bath ready and ...”

Things were cut off all of a sudden when Sumerfelt received a motion from the Metamora sideline about someone with an asthma attack. As she raced across the field, a stretcher from the CGH ambulance also flew by. After a few minutes, all help needed was completed.

“The coaches made sure that they drank plenty of water throughout the day, as well as sodium,” Sumerfelt said. “It is depleted in the sweat, so they made sure they got a little extra sodium today to help prevent any cramps.”

And if there's not enough sodium, help can be found in a pickle jar.

“Pickle juice is very high in sodium,” Sumerfelt added. “We have one guy that cramps all of the time and he brings his own pickle juice and drinks it. It really helps prevent them because of the sodium that's in it.”

The water boys served not only the sophomore players, but also to the game officials.

“Hey, get some for the officials, guys!” King asked a couple of the kids from an open area on the sideline during a a timeout.

Veteran area referee Don Cook's squad was working both the sophomore and varsity contests. This particular sophomore game featured officials' time outs during changes in possession and longer quarter breaks. The lengths of the quarters were shortened on this evening from ten minutes each to eight.

“Tonight there's all kinds of water,” King said. “We got some fans here. We're going to shorten the sophomore game by quarters from ten minutes to eight minutes with a lot of water breaks in between.”

Fighting the heat and each other, the Redbird sophomores scored the game's first touchdown against the Braves on its opening drive. The Redbirds would cruise to a 21-8 halftime lead under the calling of quarterback Jacob Mitchell.

Also a member of the varsity roster, Mitchell was only scheduled to play the opening half. With his sophomore game done, Mitchell made his way to the bench where he relaxed with his pads off, with an ice bag wrapped in a towel hanging over his neck.

“You just got to keep your head up and stay focused to block out the heat as best as possible,” Mitchell said. “It's not a big factor once you're playing. You don't really think about it too much. You just got to block it off and stay hydrated all week. That's what everyone did. Our coaches told us to stay hydrated and we did.”

Mitchell was examined in this process by Dr. Kaufman. The evening was a busy one for him in between keeping the Redbirds hydrated and coordinating the efforts by the team's two water boys in freshman uniforms.

Metamora's cooling setup involved plastic cups of water placed on wood trays with holes in them, with the water boys carrying them out waist-high whenever time was called.

“We really emphasized hydrating the whole week,” Kaufman said. “You can't hydrate just today, you got to hydrate three or four days prior. So we really talked about having good meals, good rest, and to hydrate this week. That's the key thing.”

Just don't take in too much water at the wrong time, as was the case for Mitchell.

“He drank a little too much water there in the end and felt like he was going to throw up for a few minutes,” Kaufman said.


More Than Enough Water

Metamora's sophomore team would put the Braves at 0-1 with a 28-14 win. The elements improved as the game came to a close with large clouds looming over the stadium.

“Thankfully the clouds came out and cooled it off pretty quick to help,” Kaufman said.

Halfway through the first quarter of a scoreless varsity game, the hot weather had finally transitioned into one with a large draft of cool air. As the quarter drew to a close, the drafts became more prevalent. That meant the arrival of the second weather-related concern for the evening: a thunderstorm.

Small droplets of rain spat every few seconds during the four-minute mark of the first quarter. After that, the drops got larger and eventually cascaded over the turf in round, shiny chunks reflected by the lighting system.

Touchdowns by Sterling's Draque Peneflor-Heier and Metatmora's Zach Rohrback made for a 7-7 game that lasted until the 8:32 mark of the second quarter.

Lightning had been spotted from the stadium at 8:10 p.m. to enact a 30-minute postponement.

The postponement lasted longer than 30 minutes.

And it's ongoing.

On an evening when water was badly needed for the football players, the water ended up winning. No major heat-related incidents were reported from Sterling's sideline, and other than the asthma attack on the Metamora sideline, no other heat-related incidents were reported there.

The water ended up winning in the varsity game also, to the point where the game couldn't be resumed at any point during the night and had to be pushed back to 7 p.m. the next evening. Too much lightning scattered the sky to cause scheduling crunches for Metamora, whose caravan drove about 75 miles to get to Sterling.

Crunches were also made to the stadium schedule for Saturday. Roscoe Eades Stadium's other tenant, the Newman Comets, were scheduled to have a 7 p.m. varsity kickoff against Rockridge. Since the stadium's main tenant had no choice but to reserve its priority, this put Sterling's two high school athletic directors on the phone with each other.

King, Newman athletic director and football coach Mike Papoccia, and the administration from Rockridge worked out a deal where Newman's varsity kickoff would take place at 3 p.m.

So ended a rough evening for both varsity programs, whose game now has this gaping interruption. So ended a rough evening for Sterling's sophomores, given a season-opening loss to think about before suiting up once more to take on Mendota next Saturday. So ended a rough evening for Metamora's sophomores also, whose bus broke down in the heat not too far from Sterling.

The heat was a factor in having King giving out a freshman-level rarity: an air-conditioned charter bus to be used for the drive to Metamora this morning for a 10 a.m. kickoff, where the sun will shine directly over Malone Field.

“I told my son, who's a freshman, to take a water bottle with him for all his classes,” King said.


Sunday, August 18, 2013

State Softball: Quitting Is Not An Option

In three of its last four games, the Sterling Softball team was
trailing going into its last at-bat, and proceeded to put
runners in scoring position each time.
A late-game lesson just in time for the new high school sports season ...

Big plays might make sports games seem insurmountable at certain points. However, the finishes are almost always at a predetermined period of time down the road. Leading up to that ending, a trailing team's challenge of coming back when time is short begins to take shape.

The Sterling High School varsity softball team understood that situation when time was short during the final inning of its sectional final game against Marengo on June 1.

Down 5-1 with two outs in the seventh inning, the Golden Warriors' last breath brought new life into the team. They were able to score five runs without getting that fatal out to win the sectional championship and later advance to the IHSA Class 3A State Finals at EastSide Centre in East Peoria on June 6-7.

Sterling brought to East Peoria the knowledge of what it is like to have backs against the wall and to get themselves out of it.

Head coach Rick Henderson attributes this to attitude – a popular motto within the program.

Sterling's first game at State was against Marquette High School of Alton, Ill. The Golden Warriors were unable to win the game, falling 3-2 to try for either third or fourth place in Class 3A. Much of the troubles came against Marquette pitcher Alexis Silkwood, one of Illinois's top pitchers.

“We've had attitude shirts that we've bought for the past five years. We try to preach attitude, attitude, attitude,” Henderson said after the game. “They took that right into the batter's box today against one of the best pitchers you're going to see in a while. Every single player stepped in there with an attitude, with a belief, with something on their mind that they could do to help this team. I saw no quit. All season, let alone today.”

Marquette posted a 3-0 lead in the third inning and the Golden Warriors were only able to tally up on before the bottom of the seventh inning. That's when Sterling junior Karlie Mellott banged out a leadoff homerun off Silkwood past the right field fence. That momentum shift brought back the feeling of fighting with time running out, although coming up short in the end.

“We never quit,” Mellott said. “We never quit. All the way down the stretch getting here, with the tough game in the sectional, we never give up. We're all in the dugout yelling, cheering everybody else on, picking everybody else up. You can't teach that. As a team, that's so great to see.”

“We never let up. Every time we're in the dugout, we're always constantly cheering and making sure that we have each others backs,” said fellow junior Darien Bardoner. “You can see on the field when one of us strikes out, the next one does something to pull each other up. We've always had each other, and that's how we've been since we were little. It paid off for a sectional championship, but we were so close this time.”

Now having to face off against Tinley Park High School in the consolation game, this would be the team's last showing of the season. Despite posting a 4-2 lead after five innings, Tinley Park came back to go up 5-4 before the bottom of the seventh, and the backs against the walls again.

Mellott, leading off once more, doubled to left field and later came to third on a sacrifice. With the tying run 90 feet away, a grounder to the shortstop ended the second comeback run in a 24-hour span.

Despite being an all too familiar feeling, Sterling's dugout appeared cheerful and determined once more during that seventh inning.

“Although we didn't come out winning any games, it's still a great experience to be here,” said Sterling senior Stephanie Kester, who pitched both games for her team. “It takes a good team to be here, and we did that.”

It is safe to say that the fourth-place finish was made possible by the team's attitude.

“People are going to ask them questions not about how you lost, but about how in the world you keep fighting like you do,” concluded Henderson, who recently stepped down as head coach to spend more time with family.

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

2013-14 Area Enrollments and Classifications


The Prophetstown Girls Basketball team will move
from 1A to 2A next season.
 The Illinois High School Association on Tuesday released its list of enrollment figures to be used for the 2013-14 school year.

Enrollment figures used were tallied in 2012-13 Fall Housing Report, which tallied school enrollment as of September 30.

With the release of the enrollment data, the IHSA has also announced several classification changes that affect some area teams. Included in such changes were the announcements of multiplier waivers either granted to or eliminated from certain private school teams.

In all, 43 area teams were affected in IHSA playoff classification either through enrollment changes or through waiver status.


Fall Sports

In volleyball, Forreston, Indian Creek, Newman and Rockford Christian Life fall from 2A to 1A. North Boone falls from 3A to 2A, while Ottawa moves up from 3A to 4A.

In both boys and girls cross country, Sandwich falls from 2A to 1A, Alleman moves up from 1A to 2A, DeKalb falls from 3A to 2A, and Rockford East and United Township move up from 2A to 3A.

In boys golf, Byron, Kewanee and Oregon fall from 2A to 1A, while Belvidere North and Boylan fall from 3A to 2A.

In boys soccer, East also moves up from 2A to 3A.


Winter Sports

In both boys and girls basketball, Somonauk falls from 2A to 1A, Prophetstown moves up from 1A to 2A, Stillman Valley falls from 3A to 2A, and Ottawa moves up from 3A to 4A. In only boys basketball, St. Bede moves down from 2A to 1A via the multiplier waiver.

In wrestling, the Polo/Milledgeville/Eastland cooperative falls from 2A to 1A, while East moves up from 2A to 3A.


Spring Sports

In baseball, Belvidere North and Boylan fall from 4A to 3A.

In softball, Belvidere North falls from 4A to 3A, while Boylan moves up from 3A to 4A.

In both boys and girls track, North Boone falls from 2A to 1A and Ottawa moves up from 2A to 3A.

In girls soccer, Marengo moves down from 2A to 1A and Boylan moves down from 3A to 2A.


Enrollment Trends

The combined Northern Illinois Sports Beat area enrollment fell from 57,447 to 56,270.

Of decreases of eight percent or more, Newman's enrollment fell from 262 to 228, Boylan's enrollment fell from 1,151 to 1,055, and Guilford's enrollment fell from 1,950 to 1,769. Of increases of eight percent or more, East's enrollment rose from 1,509 to 1,741.

According to NISB data, enrollment continues to fall at Amboy, Bureau Valley, Byron, Forreston, Hinckley-Big Rock, Orangeville, Princeton and Sandwich - schools with noteable decreases in enrollment in the past six years.

Amboy's enrollment has fallen from 354 in 2007 to 257 in 2012. Bureau Valley has fallen in the same time period from 434 to 335, Byron from 611 to 506, Forreston from 348 to 242, H-BR from 272 to 209, Orangeville from 168 to 119, Princeton from 701 in 2008 to 551, and Sandwich from 832 to 724.

The area's two eastern-most athletic divisions, the Northern Illinois Big 12 East and the Big Northern East, has seen an overall drop in enrollment from last year. The area among both divisions had been growing steadily over the past decade. The NI Big 12 East fell from 7,712 students to 7,670. The BNC East fell from 4,951 to 4,846.

Chief among the BNC East's enrollment decline was Marengo's fall from 821 to 777 this past year. Marengo, located on the southwest corner of McHenry County, has seen its enrollment fall from a high of 908 students in 2007.

Yorkville, the area's fastest-growing school, rose from 1,565 to 1,622, and has grown from a tally of 1,295 in 2007.

(You can view the area's six-year master enrollment chart by visiting this link to NISB's General H.S. Discussion Forum, and downloading the enrollment chart from there.)