Wednesday, October 27, 2021

John's Journal: Hockey Broadcaster Sloane Martin Aces The Big Test

Originally posted on March 6, 2019...

Sloane Martin made history on Wednesday, and that's something that has been happening in recent days. Last Saturday, Sunday and Monday, Marney Gellner became the first female to handle play-by-play duties for Minnesota Twins broadcasts, calling spring training games from Florida for Fox Sports North and WCCO Radio.

In downtown St. Paul on Wednesday, Martin made her mark as the first women to do television play-by-play at the MHSL boys state hockey tournament. She worked the first two Class 1A games with Mark Parrish, the analyst for all the 1A games.

It has been a little bit of a whirlwind for Martin (pictured). Last weekend she was in Indianapolis calling a women's basketball game between Indiana and Purdue on the Big Ten Network.

"As soon as the game was over, I drove to the airport and was pulling out my hockey stuff and looking at my notecards," she said after Wednesday's broadcast had ended.

Now a reporter with WCCO Radio, Martin is a Los Angeles native who played basketball at Division III St. John Fisher College in Rochester, N.Y. She has previously called girls state hockey tournament games as well as several Prep Bowl football games.

"I always say that I'm so happy to have had an introduction to Minnesota hockey with the girls because that exposed me to the kind of talent that's in this state, the kind of skill that we see," she said. "I felt like I was able to easily slide into things and it wasn't any kind of adjustment because of my three years doing the girls tournament.

"It's open notes but it's a test. But it's not just a test, it's a big one. It's like the bar exam or the LSAT (Law School Admission Test) or something. I really take a lot of pride in being as prepared as possible. Of course it's knowing players, but I think being a reporter myself I'm very big on narratives and storylines and background stories."

During the telecast Martin was informative, excited and stayed on top of the action. She takes pride in being the first woman to call boys state tournament games, and knows the impact this can have.

"It's been very exciting. And to me the most important thing about this is that representation is important. When you have women who are visible in these roles, it's just going to normalize someone occupying this position. And that's the goal with all of this.

"It's not that I would want any attention for myself, and I'm sure (Marney) would think the same way. It's letting more people see this, so it just becomes something that we accept and know is going to happen in the future."

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 




Sunday, October 24, 2021

John’s Journal: After 21 Years, Minnesota Is Covered With Turf

 Some of the smallest Minnesota schools with artificial turf fields, with grade 9 through 12 MSHSL enrollments:

--Mountain Iron-Buhl 136 

--Lakeview 148

--Russell-Tyler-Ruthton 177

--Janesville-Waldorf-Pemberton 206

--St. Charles 278

--Triton 306

--St. Croix Prep 375

--Esko 393

 

Anyone making the drive from Forest Lake Area High School to Lakeview High School in Cottonwood might want to pack a lunch. It’s a long trip, 170 miles and roughly three hours, from the northeast suburbs of the Twin Cities to the small town in southwest Minnesota.

The two schools don’t have a lot in common. Forest Lake, with an MSHSL enrollment of 1,849 students in grades nine through 12, is a large suburban school. Their teams play in the largest class in each activity, including Class 6A football. Lakeview has a 9-12 enrollment of 148 students and competes in Class A in football and other sports.

Despite their differences, as of this fall the schools have one thing in common: Both are celebrating the arrival of artificial turf as part of stadium renovations that have put both schools on the map.

“When you’ve got a facility like this, it just makes it easier for kids to rally around their community and for the community to rally around the kids,” said Lakeview football coach Scott Hanson, standing at midfield on the new turf after the Lakers played the final game of the regular season last week.

With a population of 1,220, Cottonwood has fewer residents than Forest Lake (pop. 22,347) has high school students. But the Lakers’ new stadium is a big-time addition to the school campus on the edge of town.

A press box was one of the final installs, being put in place during the final days of the regular season. A new track is waiting to be lined, which will happen before next spring. Lakeview boys who play soccer are part of a cooperative team with nearby Marshall High School (as well as Tracy-Milroy-Balaton), but football isn’t the only activity that can be played on the turf.

A home plate and batter’s boxes are painted on the turf in one corner of the field, allowing for softball and baseball to be played if the adjoining grass fields for those sports are unplayable (new lights were added to those fields as part of the stadium overhaul). Physical education classes, elementary-school recess and youth and community groups can also use the turf field.

The scoreboard that was part of the old grass field was moved behind the opposite end zone and a new, larger scoreboard was put in its old spot, meaning there is a scoreboard on each end of the stadium. There are no football play clocks, but they can be attached to the scoreboards. The new lights are bright, the public-address  system is first-rate and the sound of a train whistle celebrates touchdowns by the Lakers.

Lakeview is the second-smallest school in Minnesota with its own turf field. The smallest is Mountain Iron-Buhl, with an MSHSL enrollment of 136 … 12 fewer students than Lakeview.

Forest Lake’s new stadium was designed and built from scratch. The sidelines were flipped, with the Rangers football teams and fans (of football, soccer and lacrosse) no longer having to stare into the setting sun. The home bleachers seat 2,500 – twice the population of Lakeview -- and the visitor’s side has room for another 1,000.

With a new track, the Rangers will be able to host a track and field meet next spring for the first time since 1992.

 

Forest Lake’s previous grass field was known for two things: a large crown running from end zone to end zone and a propensity for rain turning the place into a mud bath.

“It's nice to be able to see from one side to the other,” said Rangers football coach Sam Ferraro, a 1990 Forest Lake graduate. “There was such a big crown on here, even when I played.”

Like the field in Lakeview, Forest Lake’s new facility has bright lights atop four towers. When the Rangers score, the lights flicker off and on in celebration. A digital scoreboard shows replays, and play clocks are located behind each end zone. Both stadiums include bleachers that are compliant with the American Disabilities Act.

There are several bonus additions to the stadium in Forest Lake: a building behind one end zone with rooms for each team as well as officials, a large press box that’s the envy of every other high school in Minnesota (as well as many colleges), a new large concession/restroom/storage building and plaza area, and a second turf practice field that can be used for softball, baseball, physical education classes, etc.

New turf fields christened this year in Forest Lake, Cottonwood and elsewhere provide the latest chapter in the history of high school turf in Minnesota. The first high school to have turf was Wayzata in 2000, with Hopkins and a few others in the metro area following closely.

In the 21 years since, turf has exploded. All 32 schools that play Class 6A football have turf fields, as do most of the 5A football schools and lots of schools in smaller classes. Some large schools have four or five turf fields.

“Look around the metro and it’s hard to find 10 schools that don’t play on turf,” said Hopkins activities director Dan Johnson, whose school was one of the first to add turf to its stadium and now has turf fields as part of an on-campus baseball/softball/soccer complex.

Hopkins hasn’t played a football game on grass in two years, and that was at Forest Lake’s old field.

“I think it's going to do a lot of good things for the program, and obviously it's a great facility,” Forest Lake’s Ferraro said of the Rangers’ new home. “It's fun to be out here. We’ve had decent numbers (of football players) but I think our numbers will start going up, we're trying to get more youth games out here. People want to be out here.”

Before construction began in Forest Lake, the football players were the last people to set foot on the old grass field. The night before heavy equipment would rip apart the grass, the Rangers played seven-on-seven and had fun together.

“So we were the last people on the field, and then we made sure, the first day we could come out, that we got out here so we were the first ones on the new field,” Ferraro said. “They take a lot of pride in this.”

That same type of pride is felt in Cottonwood, where the Lakeview Lakers played all their regular-season home games on turf and all their road games on grass.

“We've used this field so much more this year,” Hanson said. “We have recess out here, P.E. classes out here, the communities use it, our youth football has used it, everybody has used it.

“When the community comes together for the school and the youth, this is what happens.”

 

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 

Wednesday, October 20, 2021

John’s Journal: The Quinn Kids Play On In Winona

 


The season ended for the Winona High School girls soccer team with a 1-0 loss to Kasson-Mantorville on Oct. 14 in the Class 2A Section 1 semifinals. It was a very good season, too; the Winhawks finished with a record of 12-4-2.

There were lots of highlights, with one of them coming when four members of the same family were in the starting lineup for a home game against Faribault in early October.

Grace Quinn is a senior, Faith is a sophomore (who was named All-State this fall), Hope is in ninth grade and Reagan is a seventh-grader. The youngest kids are Ireland (fourth grade) and Lincoln (second grade). Their dad, Jason, is an assistant coach on the Winhawks soccer team, working with head coach Katie Pearce.

“I was super pumped, I was really excited,” Grace said about the one-time sisters-in-the-starting-lineup game when I sat down with the Quinns earlier this week.

The four sisters were announced in birth order, youngest to oldest. Reagan was the first of them announced to the crowd, and she wasn’t quite sure what to do.

“I was excited but when I ran onto the field I didn’t know where to stand,” Reagan said. “I went up to Hope and said, ‘What do we do?’ ”

That night was lots of fun, and the soccer season as a whole has been a blessing for the Quinn kids and Jason. Their mother/wife, Dr. Laurel Quinn, was 44 when she passed away on July 14.

Laurel, a St. Cloud Tech graduate who was an ophthalmologist, had fought acute myeloid leukemia for years. The disease was diagnosed when she was pregnant with Lincoln. She had several rounds of chemotherapy, underwent a stem-cell transplant and other therapies. There was a period of two years when she was in good health, but the disease returned.

“I think it was great to get back to normal after everything,” Grace said of the soccer season. “It was my sixth year in high school soccer, dad’s been coaching for five years. It is kind of normal, along with school starting. Mom loved soccer, she was always there to watch.”

Faith said, “I thought the season was a lot of fun. We’ve been a young team and this year really reflected how far we’ve grown and improved and how much we want for next year.”

Laurel was a high-level athlete in her own right, competing in swimming, gymnastics and track and field in high school. While attending the University of Minnesota – where she earned undergraduate and medical degrees – she used her gymnastics skills to become a member of the Gophers cheer team for football and basketball, as well was a cheer team member with the Timberwolves.

Jason and Laurel knew each other in high school at Tech. He attended St. Cloud State and played soccer for the Huskies.

The Quinn kids stay busy with school, band, soccer, basketball and other activities. They compete in triathlons in the summer.

Grace hasn’t made a college decision but is thinking about taking biology or a similar pre-med track and becoming a surgeon. The University of Minnesota is on her list, “just like mom,” she said. “I think that would be cool to follow in her footsteps.”

The Quinns have received support from their family and friends, along with teammates and patients who were treated by Laurel.

“A bunch of basketball teammates came to the wake, a bunch of teachers, too,” said Grace. “And a lot of people I didn’t recognize. They said, ‘Your mom operated on me.’ ”

“There were a lot of hugs,” said Faith. “We didn’t know all of those people but they still came.”

Captain’s practices took place in July and summer soccer camp was held later that month. The Quinns and some of their friends participated in or watched games at the USA Cup in Blaine that same month.

“At one game, it seemed like mom’s whole side of the family was there,” Reagan said.

“We decided we didn’t want to sit home and cry,” said Hope. “We wanted to get back into things.”

“Mom would have wanted us to play soccer,” Grace said.

 --A memorial fund has been established to provide educational support for the Quinn children at Edward Jones. Checks should be paid to the order of Edward Jones, for Quinns and sent to 3760 Service Drive, Winona, MN 55987.

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 

Sunday, October 17, 2021

John’s Journal: Four Years Later, They Remain Spartans For Life

Four years ago, I wrote about a unique high school football team. On a sunny October Saturday afternoon at Waterville-Elysian-Morristown, I watched the St. Clair/Mankato Loyola Spartans finish their first season as a combined, cooperative team.

The Spartans lost to the W-E-M Buccaneers in that section semifinal playoff game, but that’s not what I remember. The lasting memory is what the Spartans did following the game, after shaking hands with and congratulating the Buccaneers. They listened to their coach, St. Clair principal Dustin Bosshart, who told them, “The coaches who coached you will be there for you for the rest of your lives. You will remember the lifetime memories you created. You did it the right way.

“You are a great group and you will accomplish incredible things in your life. Spartan family for life, that’s what you guys are.”

As I wrote then, something special happened...

The players’ families and friends stood 20 or so yards away, waiting for the team’s private moment to end. And then another incredible thing happened: It didn’t end.

The players remained together, some hugging, some finding one or more of the coaches to say thank you and share an embrace. Coaches patted boys on the helmet, returned the thank you and told them they loved them. The boys then gathered together once more – not wanting the moment to end -- each of them kneeling, for a few private words. Helmets removed and heads bowed, they prayed.

And then, only then, did the boys begin reuniting with their families. A strapping teenager hugged his grandpa and wept on his shoulder. Moms, dads, friends offered congratulations and condolences on the end of a great season.

(You can read that story from Oct. 27, 2018 by clicking here and scrolling to the third headline, “Spartans For Life: Lessons Learned On The Football Field … https://old.mshsl.org/mshsl/johnsjournal.asp?index=514 )

The ninth-graders on that team are now seniors, and the football coop remains in place. Then as now, in the winter and spring many athletes are either St. Clair Cyclones (from a public school) or Loyola Crusaders (from a private school). But during the football season, every player is a Spartan.

If not for the cooperative agreement, each school would have a very tough time fielding a football team. This year, about 75 percent of the football players come from St. Clair (9-12 enrollment of 219) and the rest from Loyola (105). The Spartans will take a 5-2 record into the regular-season finale on Wednesday, hosting Gibbon-Fairfax-Winthrop in St. Clair. The team splits its practices and home games between the fields at the two schools. The city of St. Clair is southeast of Mankato, 13 miles from Loyola.

Back in 2018, no one knew exactly how the players would come together. They needed a little prodding at the first summer camp workout.

“I’m looking around, and there’s a Loyola group in one spot, St. Clair upperclassmen over here, St. Clair younger kids in another spot,” Bosshart said. “I told the kids, ‘If this is going to work, this can’t happen. We have to be one group.’ Afterwards, I looked at the kids in the parking lot. They were exchanging numbers, creating group chats, and we were one team.”

There are 12 seniors on the 2021 Spartans roster, and they remember well what it was like when the now-rock-solid bonds began to be forged.

“Some of my closest friends go to Loyola,” said St. Clair senior Hayden Kasprowicz. “Thinking back to four years ago, I would have never, ever thought about that. I knew of people but didn't know them on a personal level. I think we were all kind of nervous but also excited.”

Prior to the football cooperative agreement, the two schools were already combined in wrestling, golf and soccer. Athletes in those sports are very familiar with driving between the schools for practices and games, and they enjoy their friends. But it wasn’t always like that.

“I was kind of nervous. I didn't really know all these people and it was a big change, especially coming from a small school,” said Colby Amundson. “But now, looking back, I was so happy that it happened. I would not be the person I am today, either, with the people I’ve met, the connections, the memories I've made with this team.”

Tyler Ahl said, “It's been really cool to meet new people and it's been a good opportunity to be able to see all these new faces and compete with them.”

The Spartans have a record of 23-11 in the four years since the coop started.

“They are a very competitive group,” Bosshart said. “It’s almost like watching brothers compete.”

That’s a word – brothers – that the players use when describing their teammates, no matter which school they attend.

“We didn't really want to coop at the beginning. But then we were brought together, and I’ve made lifelong friends,” said Connor Andree. “We were big rivals, like we almost couldn't stand each other. It's crazy how you can judge someone, then once you get to know them, they're just great people and you're having fun with it.”

It’s true that the two schools are rivals in other sports. At volleyball matches and basketball games, student from each school cheer loudly for their teams but then mingle with their friends from the other school afterwards. Sam Carlson, the head coach of the Loyola boys basketball team, is an assistant coach on the football team.

“We're really good in basketball and they're really good,” said St. Clair senior Riley Fitzloff. “So it's a good matchup. And during those games, the gyms are just packed. We get fired up. Going into (the football coop), we weren’t really expecting things to go as well as they did. Now one of my best friends is from Loyola.  I liked how everything worked out in the end.”

There are even some special bonuses, including this: the football team plays two Homecoming games, one at each school.

“The kids have fun. They understand that football isn’t life and life isn’t football,” said Bosshart.

“It's been a fun process just getting to know some new guys, make some new friendships, on and off the field,” said senior Devin Embacher. “I think we really push each other, and it's just been fun getting to know everyone.

“We didn't really want to coop at the beginning. But then we were brought together, and I’ve made lifelong friends.”

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

John’s Journal: Kim Royston Goes From Big Ten To Back Judge

The big break that led Kim Royston to a career in educational leadership, as well as becoming an MSHSL football official, was an actual big break.

If his name rings a bell, that’s because Royston was a supremely talented football player. He was a first-team all-state wide receiver and defensive back at Cretin-Derham Hall, where he graduated in 2005. He played football at the University of Wisconsin for two years before transferring to Minnesota, where he finished his career in 2011.

He earned honorable mention All-Big Ten honors, received the Carl Eller Award as the Gophers’ outstanding defensive player and also was named Minnesota's defensive back of the year.

What broke was one of his legs. He suffered the injury during spring practice in 2010 and missed that season. He was granted a medical waiver for a sixth year of eligibility and in 2011 he started at safety in all 12 games and led the team in tackles.

Before the injury he was focused on working toward a career playing professional football. But his time on the sideline, as well as on the practice field and in the film room, shed new light on his future. Already a team captain, he basically became a Gophers coach.

“I enjoyed that process of working with younger guys,” he said. “I had my undergrad degree already and I didn’t have any intentions to get a master’s right away because I had set my mind on the NFL. But I started working on a master’s in education and really developed a passion for leading and developing young people.”

He spent a year as a graduate assistant football coach at Temple University in Philadelphia and was an assistant coach at Armstrong High School before moving into an administrative career. He was activities director at Minneapolis Southwest High School, assistant activities director at Shakopee and is currently an assistant principal at Plymouth Middle School.

His name was in the news in April when he was the first building administrator to arrive at an incident where a student fired a gun. He was known as an unflappable athlete, and he’s the same as an administrator as well as a first-year football official.

At 34 years old, Royston is married with a 10-month-old son and quite busy. But he wanted to stay connected and give back to the sport he loves while helping ensure that today’s student-athletes are allowed the opportunity to play.

“It’s been on my radar for at least five years,” he said. “I knew how hard it is to find officials.”

Royston is the back judge on a crew that includes referee Jarrod Leder, umpire Toby Sackett, head linesman Chad Evenson and line judge Dean Kockelman. Having played defensive back, Royston is used to being positioned in the secondary. But officiating is clearly different.


(From left to right are Kim Royston, Jarrod Leder, Chad Evenson, Dean Kockelman and Toby Sackett.) 

“When we worked our first scrimmage, he’d act like a free safety,” Leder said. “He would line up even with the slot and get into his crouch like he was covering him. I said, ‘Don’t get into your crouch, you just want to stand and watch.’ You can see why he was such a great player, because you tell him something once and he does it the next time.”

Royston has worked a varsity game every week this season as well as a number of sub-varsity games. It used to be quite rare for rookie officials to be on the varsity level right away, but there are fewer officials than in recent years.

Leder, 44, had an open spot on his crew this season. When Gopher State Officials Association assigner George Winn told Leder there was a new official named Kim Royston, “I distinctly remembered watching him play at Cretin,” Leder said.

“I said to George, ‘If he wants to be in officiating, based on his background, he’ll go as far as he wants. I’ll give him the best foundation I can give him.’ With his background and the way he picks up information and translates it to the field, the sky’s the limit.”

Leder, who is also an official in the Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, has attended officiating clinics all over the country. He said people in Minnesota don’t always realize the quality of high school officials in the state.

“We have some of the best officials in the country,” he said. “I see officiating in other parts of the country and I meet people and think, ‘How are guys even on a field? You wouldn’t last in Minnesota.’ ”

That level of quality is important to Royston, who said the game has slowed down for him as the season has progressed.



“First and foremost, I’m fortunate to be part of a great crew, and Jarrod is a great mentor and teacher,” Royston said. “The biggest thing helping me as a back judge is reading keys, knowing if it’s a run or pass, watching the DBs, making sure the ball doesn’t get behind you. It’s almost like playing safety. When I started, my natural instinct was to go towards the ball on a pass. But you want to make sure you’re stationary and focus on the play. I needed to emphasize that with myself.

“I’m loving it. I’m learning new things every week. It’s really therapeutic after a long hard day at the middle school to go out there in nice weather, working in the game you love.”

Royston is trying to recruit new officials to join the profession, just as he has.

“I’ve been doing my best to get the bug into the friends I played with,” he said. “I’ll continue doing that.”

Leder, who works as a product manager, said his daytime job entails plenty of people management, just like officiating.

“I’ll talk about stressful situations with a coach and being able to work through it. I think football has made me a better employee,” he said. “I just love doing it. You’re going to deal with people who are idiots, but you also deal with so many great people.

“This year has been really nice. About every game I get at least one person who goes out of the way to tell us thank you. People are treating us way better than in the past and I appreciate that. But really, all we want is for people to relax, get some perspective and don’t act like a jerk.”

--TO LEARN ABOUT BECOMING AN OFFICIAL, CLICK THIS LINK:

https://www.mshsl.org/officials-judges/officiating

 --MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

John’s Journal: Officially Speaking, Behrens Does It all

In the summer of 1995, Marshall Behrens had just graduated from St. Charles High School. He had played high school and summer baseball, as well as other sports, all through school but there was an obstacle that summer: an age cutoff meant he couldn’t play ball with his buddies in St. Charles.

But the young man wanted to spend the summer with his friends on the baseball field. He approached coach Scott McCready, who is the baseball coach and activities director at St. Charles, about becoming a de facto volunteer assistant coach. He said, “I want to be around the guys.”

McCready’s oldest child was born that summer, causing the coach to be absent from a playoff game. But the young assistant coach took over with no hesitation.

“They whomped the other team and 26 years later, he still reminds me of it,” McCready said. “On her birthday, we text each about that. He ran that team then just like he runs a football or basketball game now. He was the arbiter then, even as a coach. It makes perfect sense where he’s ended up.”

Where has Behrens ended up? He’s one of the most well-known and respected officials in Minnesota high school sports. He officiates football and volleyball in the fall, girls and boys basketball in the winter, and baseball and softball in the spring. Away from high school sports, he also works Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference football games and amateur baseball.

Yes, he is a busy guy. He wouldn’t want it any other way.

“Officiating has become such a passion for me,” he said. “I’ve often used the word addiction. It’s so much a part of my life. The people and the relationships, the good friends, just giving back and seeing the kids. I don’t know what I’d do without it.”




(In this photo from a recent football game in Rochester, left to right are Chris Zollner, Curt Hughes, Marshall Behrens, Jay Lonien and Josh Prondzinski.)

Marshall and his wife Ellie often officiate volleyball matches together. She is in her fourth season of calling that sport.

“I conned her into thinking we could go out one night a week for date night,” Marshall said. “She enjoys seeing the female athletes and she can relate to them much better than I can.”

Brad Johnson, who was the activities director at Rushford-Peterson for 20 years and now is the MSHSL region secretary for small schools in the Rochester area, called Behrens “probably the most recognizable official in southeast Minnesota among small, medium and larger schools. He’ll work anywhere. No game is too big for him and no game is too small for him. I’m so impressed with him. He treats every game the same, it doesn’t matter if it’s a pair of 1-6 teams in Week 8 for football, they’re going to get the same effort he would give in a state championship game.

“He loves the games. He works hard at it. He’s in there for the kids. He’s got great relationship with the coaches and administrators and they know they’re going to get the best with Marshall.”

An MSHSL official for more than two decades, Behrens also works as an assigner for the Rochester Area Officials Association, making sure officials are assigned to baseball and softball games as well as sub-varsity basketball games. Fellow RAOA members Jared Butson and Jeff Newton assign officials for other sports.

“That has become a labor of love, just with our numbers and trying to recruit,” Behrens said. “It just means so much to the kids to play those games. We just have to keep grinding.”

“Grinding” is an appropriate term to describe the current state of officiating, specifically the numbers of officials. It has been a growing issue in recent years and the problem has been exacerbated by the Covid-19 pandemic, with some officials not returning to their sports and not enough others joining the officiating ranks.

“I rack my brain about that,” Behrens said. “I cannot pin down the moving target. Compensation is always brought up. We have a big focus on getting young people involved in officiating. … We need people who are stable in the community and get them going.”

As someone who frequently officiates junior varsity and other sub-varsity games, he has learned that many of the people who used to help call those contests – many of whom went on to become registered MSHSL officials -- cannot be found now.

“There always used to be locals doing ninth-grade and JV games,” he said. “On Mondays I usually do a lower-level football game, usually working with three local guys who I tried to train up. Now schools can’t find those local people to do those ninth-grade and JV games. I worked with a 25-year-old (recently) who was all in. There’s just not enough of them who say, ‘It would be cool to go out and officiate.’ ”

Around the state, many football games are being played on Thursdays and Saturdays because there aren't enough officials available for everyone to play on Friday nights. The outlook may be grim for the winter, as well; with the number of games played in sports like basketball and hockey, it's not hard to believe that games could be cancelled due to a lack of officials.

Some football games this fall have been played with four-person officiating crews instead of the normal five (NCAA and NFL game use seven officials). It’s a problem that’s not going away. Some people give officiating a try but walk away because of abuse by spectators, family concerns or other reasons. But the glaring fact is this: More officials and judges are needed in all MSHSL sports as well as activities such as speech, debate, band, choir, etc.




(In this photo, a four-person football officiating crew worked a game last week at Pine River-Backus. From left to right are Jeff Preuss, John Kostynick, Tim Seaton and Greg Esala.)

Behrens has worked in human resources at Mayo Clinic in Rochester for 21 years. His experience as a sports official was important in being hired at Mayo.

“There are a lot of similarities between officiating and human resources work,” he said. “They actually recruited me for this position because they knew I officiated. They said, ‘You know how to handle people, how to handle difficult situations. We can teach you the nuts and bolts.’ ”

His first officiating experience came when he was a student at Wisconsin-Stevens Point. He called intramural sports, enjoying the role as well as the pay, and also officiated youth basketball games.  

Behrens has lost track of how many state tournaments and state championship games he has officiated in baseball, softball, basketball and football. He is unable to work the state volleyball tournament because of his college football schedule.

“It’s obviously way more than a hobby for me,” he said. “There aren’t many hobbies where you’re making extra money. Obviously, that’s far from the reason any of us do it. But it’s an important piece for people thinking about this; it can actually pay for some fun things in your life.”

Behrens isn’t afraid to take on new challenges, as evidenced by something that happened in his hometown of St. Charles a few years back.

McCready and Butson (who teaches in St. Charles) had tried their hand at officiating powderpuff volleyball and football games during Homecoming week. It did not go well, as McCready explained …

“Our principal said, ‘Next year let’s get Marshall and Tristan Severson (of Plainview) in here. So we had like 12 years of Prep Bowl experience working powderpuff volleyball and football. We didn’t even pay them, we fed them burgers off the grill. It all goes back to the friendships.”

--TO LEARN ABOUT BECOMING AN OFFICIAL, CLICK THIS LINK:

https://www.mshsl.org/officials-judges/officiating

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 

Monday, October 11, 2021

John’s Journal: Remembering Bob Brink, The Pride Of Rocori



Bob Brink, a legendary figure in Minnesota boys basketball, died peacefully Saturday at Cherrywood Assisted Living in Richmond, surrounded by the love and comfort of his family. He was 84 years old. (In the photo above, Bob is inducted into the MSHSL Hall of Fame in 2015.)

As is written in Bob’s obituary, “His battle with Alzheimer’s in the recent years showed his strength, courage, and continued fight in facing life challenges which has left an unforgettable impression on all of us.

Services will be held Friday at Peace Lutheran Church in Cold Spring. The full obituary is available by clicking here: https://www.wennerfuneralhome.com/obituaries/Bob-Brink/#!/Obituary

I wrote about Bob after the final game of his coaching career. It was a loss in the quarterfinals of the 2012 Class 3A state tournament and the coach was emotional. Here is that story…

After 51 Years, Rocori’s Bob Brink Is A Coach To The End

Before the first game of the boys state basketball tournament tipped off at Williams Arena on Wednesday morning, a veteran hoops observer surveyed the court and made a declarative statement: “Rocori always plays hard.”

For 42 years, that phrase has been uttered about teams coached by Bob Brink at the school in Cold Spring. Bob is 74 years old and ready to travel with his wife Judy to visit his brothers, who live in South Dakota and Wyoming, and see the countryside. He announced earlier in the season that this would be his last, and the end came Wednesday with a 52-49 loss to top-seeded Minneapolis Washburn in the Class 3A state quarterfinals.

Here’s another declarative statement: There has been a boys state basketball tournament in Minnesota for 100 years, and Bob Brink has been coaching boys basketball for 51 years, spending nine seasons in his native South Dakota before coming to Rocori.


“Great season, great kids,” Bob said after the end had finally arrived. “Reflecting back, if anybody had told me I was going to coach 51 years and be at Rocori for 40-some years…” His voice trailed off. He was still thinking about the game that the Spartans almost won … what might have been done differently … if only the kids had made a couple more layups … if some crucial turnovers had not occurred late in the game … he was still in coaching mode.

“Down the stretch we had the lead and that’s usually our game,” he said. “We just didn’t execute in the last two or three minutes, and that’s unusual for my teams. We normally do it. It’s a little different playing in the state tournament against one of the top teams in 3A. They beat a lot of 4A teams.”

Brink had taken 12 previous teams to state, including a 26-0 season in 1988 that included a Class 2A championship.

As a player, Brink led his high school team in Plankinton, S.D., to the 1956 state tournament. His first teaching and coaching job was at the State Training School in Plankinton, a place for kids who had come from troubled home lives or had been in hot water with the law.

“When I first started coaching I taught in a school with kids that really needed some help in their lifestyle,” he said. “You tried to pick out their priorities for them, what they needed to do outside of just sports. I think that’s one of the main things that I tried to leave with (players over the years), the things that are taught on the court, believing in people and keeping your nose clean.

“We take a knee sometimes and we believe in that; between their family and their religion and stressing some of those things a little bit without overdoing it. And academics next and extracurricular activities. That’s probably the most compliments (I’ve received) from my ex-players, and I’m proud of that.”


Brink ranks second in all-time career boys basketball coaching victories in Minnesota behind Chisholm’s still-active Bob McDonald. The No. 3 coach on the list, Zig Kauls of Mounds View, also retired this season. Brink is a member of the Minnesota basketball coaches association hall of fame, the MSHSL hall of fame and the Rocori athletic hall of fame.

A person learns some things over 51 years, and Brink knows that you win some and you lose some.

“It was a good game, great atmosphere and someone had to lose,” he said. “And we happened to be on the wrong end of it.”

Before meeting with the media, Brink spent time in the locker room with the last team he will ever coach. As he exited, he said softly, “That was hard.”

During the postgame interview – in fact, in what turned out to be the final question of the postgame interview – I asked Bob if he thought his players had felt pressure in knowing that if they lost it would be the end of their coach’s career.

“I think they did,” he said. And then, something happened that has rarely happened during the coach’s long and successful career. He became emotional. Tears welled up in his eyes as he thought about his players. His team. His boys.

“They wanted to win it for…” He was unable to say the word “me” because it’s never been about him. “But usually the most pressure is to get here …” His tears were stronger now and the small cluster of reporters all said the same thing.

“Thanks coach.”

--MSHSL media specialist John Millea has been the leading voice of Minnesota high school activities for decades. Follow him on Twitter @MSHSLjohn and listen to "Preps Today with John Millea” wherever you get podcasts. Contact John at jmillea@mshsl.org 


John’s Journal: Shot Clocks Are Here, With Mostly Minimal Impact So Far

  After watching a mix of early-season girls and boys basketball games, seven or eight contests in all, I can file this report about the big...