Saturday, January 28, 2023

John’s Journal: Shot Clocks Are Coming, Teams And Officials Are Preparing


 ROCHESTER -- Pete Hinrichs had never before been in charge of setting and resetting basketball shot clocks, but he was ready to go Saturday at Mayo Civic Center.

The rest of the Minnesota high school basketball world will be ready to go next season, when 35-second shot clocks become mandatory for all girls and boys varsity games. This season, many teams are playing with shot clocks when they have the opportunity.

Hinrichs was sitting at the scorer’s table at Mayo Civic Center Arena. He had been assigned to operate the shot clocks for four games during the Hiawatha Valley League/Three Rivers Conference Showdown, which matches girls and boys teams from one conference against an opponent from the other.

“I’ve never done this before,” said Pete, who lives in Zumbrota. He then referred to a video on the MSHSL website that offers guidance on operating shot clocks. “I’ve probably watched that video 10 times.”

Pete did a great job. There were two shot clock violations in the four games he worked, and once the officials stopped play to make sure the shot clocks had been reset properly. Other than those types of very minor issues, this season’s shot clock experience appears to be smooth.

When the girls team from Lake City met Plainview-Elgin-Millville in the HVL/TRC Showdown, it was the first shot clock game for Lake City.

“Today was our first day and we haven't even practiced with it. So we just thought, ‘Hey, let's give it a ride,’ ” said Tigers coach Drew Olinger.

“I've looked into it with our team and we don't have any possessions that go for 35 seconds in reality, unless it's at the end of the game and we're trying to stall or we're trying to take a lot of time off the clock, so I wasn't going to bring it up. That was kind of my philosophy, to let the game happen and I was going to tell them, ‘If the horn goes off you’ve got to keep playing (until the whistle).’ Those are things we’ve got to learn for next year, obviously. I think it'll change some types of styles for some types of teams, but the big impact is going to be in end-of-game situations.”

Indeed, the very rare instances of teams holding the ball for minutes at a time will be in the past next season, and shot clocks are most likely to come into play at the end of the half and end of the game. It’s just the latest change to a game that has been evolving for a long time.

Minnesota high school basketball has used the three-point line since 1986-87; the game went to two 18-minute halves rather than four eight-minute periods in the 2005-06 season; and four-foot restricted arcs were placed under each basket, to help clarify block/charge calls, in the 2018-19 season.

Shot clocks don’t just impact teams, of course, because officials also will make the adjustment.

Erik Okstad, an official from Pine Island, also officiates women’s college basketball so he has experience with shot clocks.

“I’ve had a handful of high school games (with shot clocks) so far this year and it works out very well, in my opinion,” he said. “It doesn't come into play very much but it comes into play in the last few minutes of the game. When a team wants to stall, they’ve got to make a decision and go to the hoop.”

On several occasions at the HVL/TRC Showdown, coaches counted down the final few seconds on the shot clock to make sure their players were aware. At the scorer’s table, a beep was heard every time a shot touched the rim and the shot clocks were reset on a hand-held device.

Ryan Keller, an official from Rochester who has worked basketball games for 20 years, has shot-clock experience from doing junior college games.

“It seems like teams just run their offense and they get used to it after a while, so I don't think it'll have too much of an effect on us as referees,” he said. “It seems like the coaches are trying to get their players to move the ball more, and their offense is going to have to dictate how the game goes flows.”

Goodhue boys basketball coach Matt Halverson, whose team has played several games with shot clocks this season, was the shot clock operator for one game at the HVL/TRC Showdown.

“It took a little bit of learning but I don’t think it will be a huge learning curve,” he said.

“We’re not going into it blind next year. Every situation I’ve seen with it has been positive. Just like the charge circle and 18-minute halves, you get used to it.”

--To see the shot clock video, click here: https://nfhslearn.com/library/videos/basketball-rules-the-35-second-shot-clock

--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, January 25, 2023

John’s Journal: Three Generations Of Gymnastics Coaches

 

A family photo is affixed to the front of a refrigerator inside the Roseville High School gymnastics center. The family, three generations strong, is also the coaching staff for the Raiders.

The head coach is Maddie Pearson. Her assistant coaches are her mother, Emi Yokose and her stepgrandfather, Mark Curley. They may be the only three-generation varsity coaching staff in the state.

“It’s been a very memorable season,” said Maddie, 24, who is in her fourth season on the coaching staff and second as head coach. “It’s rewarding in so many ways. It’s a season of family.”

It’s indeed a gymnastics family. All three have extensive backgrounds in the sport, going back to 1980, Curley’s first year as a coach with the boys gymnastics team at Alexander Ramsey; that school closed when Roseville High School opened in 1987. He also coached at Coon Rapids and Columbia Heights and is now in his 40th year of coaching and 30th at Roseville. Five years ago he retired as the ninth-grade dean of students at Roseville, a position he held for 15 years. He stepped away from coaching four years ago before returning this season.

Yokose coached gymnastics for 15 years in the South Washington County school district and is an MSHSL official in the sport. She and Pearson both competed in the sport at Woodbury High School and have coached club gymnasts for years.

Roseville has a strong gymnastics history, with 14 appearances at the state tournament, including every year from 2006 through 2016. They won state titles in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2012, 2013, 2014 and 2015. In the team competition at state, the Raiders hold scoring records in three of the four events (vault, uneven bars and beam) and the 2008 team still holds the state tourney record with a score of 153.525.

As this season approached, Maddie was in need of assistant coaches. While dining at a Davanni’s restaurant with Emi and Mark in September, she broached the subject.

“She said, ‘Hey, Papa, I need some help,’ ” Curley recalled. “I asked, ‘What do you mean by help? A couple days here and there?’ She said, ‘No, I need you full time.’ It's a family calling and so here I am.”

Yokose said, “She knows that it's a very big passion of mine and she knew how much I missed it.”

By the time dinner wrapped up, Pearson had her coaching staff.

“They both have always been my inspiration,” Maddie said. “The coach I am today is because of them. It’s been fun for them to watch me grow as a coach. I see the same corrections they gave to me when I competed.”

The team is small, with nine athletes. There’s an upside in the coaching they receive at practice.

“We get to spend a lot of time with each individual athlete, which has really been a joy,” Curley said. “And these kids are great students, too.”

Jasmin Zenner, a senior who has been on the team since seventh grade, called Curley “a huge influence. I knew he was a good coach right from when I first met him. And then two years later I met Maddie. She stuck by us and fought for us, and last year she stepped up as head coach. She's doing an amazing job.”

Asked to describe the coaches, junior Naomi Kramer said, “They're awesome. Curley has so much experience and he brings so much helpfulness to gymnastics. And coach Emi is great, she's super supportive and cares so much about us and wants us to do our best. And Maddie is just one of the best head coaches, she has so much positivity and she loves us so much. It’s welcoming and fun.”

The team’s family aspect extends from the coaches to the athletes, and that’s intentional.

“Your home life and your family life need to be in order,” Curley said. “And then your school life needs to be in order. And if those two things are in order, then you can do gymnastics. … I would be a hypocrite if I didn't say yes to this because that's what I've been preaching all these years.”

Yokose smiled and said, “It's been amazing. I am enjoying every moment. And as a proud mom, it's extra time with my adult daughter and that’s nothing to take for granted, that's for sure. It's been absolutely wonderful. I get to kind of stand back and watch her lead this team. And she just amazes me.”

“It’s kind of this whole new chapter,” Maddie said. “The girls are just loving it. We’re acting like a family. The parents are getting closer, too. It’s been so rewarding.”

--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  

Saturday, January 21, 2023

John’s Journal: A Familiar Name Is Back On The Bench In Chisholm

 


Chisholm head boys basketball coach Nick Milani (left) and assistant Joel McDonald.

When Joel McDonald resigned last summer after 23 years as the head boys basketball coach at Hibbing High School, his plans didn’t include spending so much time inside the most famous gym in Minnesota, where he set scoring records and his father set coaching records.

But here he is, a first-year assistant coach for the Chisholm Bluestreaks, who play on Bob McDonald Court inside Roels Gymnasium.

Bob McDonald, who coached for 59 years and won more games than any boys basketball coach in state history, was 87 when he died in 2020. Joel finished his high school career in Chisholm as Minnesota’s all-time scoring leader in 1991. As the coach at Hibbing, the Bluejackets went to the state tournament in 2021 for the first time in more than 30 years.

Joel, 50, is the youngest of six siblings. His brothers Mike (Cambridge-Isanti) and Tom (Ely) are longtime high school coaches and Paul McDonald coached at Vermillion Community College for 29 years.

When Joel stepped down at Hibbing, there were two main reasons. His health was a concern, after a diagnosis of bladder cancer in 2020 and continuing checkups at Mayo Clinic in Rochester. He and his wife Carrie also wanted more time to watch their son Ayden, a 2022 Hibbing graduate, play basketball at Augustana University in Sioux Falls.

“After living the life I’ve lived and our family has lived (in basketball) for the past 15 years, and with my health, you prioritize things differently,” Joel said. “My intent was to step away and watch Ayden with Augustana and spend time on the road with Carrie. And I knew I would be running back and forth to Mayo. That was the biggest reason.”

Things changed when Ayden came home in October. As he wrote on Twitter, “I have decided to leave Augustana and step away from basketball. I am coming home to focus on my mental health treatment for anxiety and depression. I want to thank everyone who has supported me over the past 6 weeks, especially my coaches and teammates and coaches at Augie. ‘What mental health needs is more sunlight, more candor, and more unashamed conversation.’ ”

Ayden is now a part-time student at Minnesota Duluth and a freshman boys basketball coach at Duluth East, where the head coach is his cousin Rhett McDonald.

With trips to Sioux Falls off the table, Joel McDonald thought about returning to coaching in some form. In Chisholm, 2013 Hibbing grad Nick Milani, 28, was named head boys basketball coach last year. Nick played under Joel in high school and the two remained in touch while Nick was attending the University of Minnesota and Minnesota Duluth.

Isn’t it funny how life works? Because this winter, Joel is an assistant varsity coach – and head junior varsity coach -- back in the gym where he was a high school superstar, working on the staff of one of his former players. And to complete the circle on the story of Bob McDonald, Joel McDonald and the history and tradition of the Chisholm Bluestreaks, the third member of the coaching staff is Larry Pervenanze, who spent 12 seasons as Bob’s assistant and took over as head coach when Bob retired in 2014.

Milani, who is also Chisholm’s head football coach, had thought about someday working as an assistant basketball coach under Joel McDonald. But when Joel stepped down in Hibbing and Nick took over as head basketball coach in Chisholm, the reverse happened.

“He said absolutely, whatever help he could offer he would do,” Milani said. “With Ayden coming home, Joel began asking questions. As a first-year head coach, I couldn’t be happier to have him as an assistant.”

Joel said, “He asked if I had any interest in helping. Originally, I thought I would help when I could, voluntarily. We got into October and he was working on me to come and do more and be an official assistant. In my mind (Nick’s) still a kid. But to be honest I have a lot of good things to say about him. He commands the room, he commands the huddle, he commands the room, and the kids really respect him.”

Milani, who applied for the head basketball coaching job at Hibbing before being named the Chisholm coach, said McDonald has added a great deal to the team.

“The biggest thing for me as a first-year head coach is situationally, if I need a timeout, I can look at Joel and say we need a quick play here or we need to make a change. From day one he said, ‘I’m here for you and with you,’ and he has been. I have so much respect for him. He’s coaching with me, I’m not above him.”

Even though Hibbing and Chisholm are only a few miles apart, Joel McDonald said returning to his hometown over the years hasn’t always been a total positive. His mother, Darlene, died of bladder cancer in 1997 and memories of those times crop up.

“I really didn’t know how I was going to take it,” Joel said. “Since I’ve been back, I’ve told a few people that every time I drive to the school or practice, starting with the morning I went for the interview, I drive down 5th Street past the house where I grew up. It’s almost a new memory every day. It’s also a little bit of closure, because for a long, long time I never liked going back home. There were memories of my mom getting sick and passing away.

“The house, a couple blocks from school, is full of memories. Knowing how my mom got sick at the end of her life, that was always kind of tough, and I look at this as part of that process. I remember playing football and everything else with my friends and future teammates. It’s been an incredible experience. Even walking into school every day triggers visuals of all those good times from growing up. It's been really special.”

Considering that Joel McDonald became Minnesota’s state scoring leader as a senior in 1991 (he ranked ninth all-time as the 2022-23 season began), it’s no surprise that the current Chisholm players don’t know much about his playing career. Some of them attended Joel’s summer basketball camps in Hibbing, and the older players attended Bob McDonald’s long tradition of Saturday morning basketball for young kids in the Chisholm gym. The lobby of the gym is a museum of Bluestreaks basketball, which helps current players know about their school’s basketball tradition.

“They’re very aware of the history of the place,” Joel said. “Maybe more than any other gym I’ve been in, it’s hard to ignore the history of Chisholm when you walk through those doors.”

Voters in Chisholm approved a bond referendum in November for school improvements, including a new gymnasium that is expected to be named after Bob McDonald; it is scheduled to open in the fall of 2025. The century-old Roels Gymnasium will remain in place as a backup gym.

The ties between Bob McDonald, who graduated from Chisholm in 1951, and the Bluestreaks of 2023 are everywhere. As the football coach, Milani began using a team catchphrase: Nobody has what we have. He was not aware that Bob McDonald had used the same statement when describing his family’s homeland, Croatia. Bob took great pride in his Croatian heritage and for many years he led family members on summer trips there.

Joel said, “My dad always had a phrase that came from Croatia, ‘Nobody has what we have.’ It was almost verbatim of what Nick wanted to say, without him knowing this from my dad.

“That’s what has stuck. It’s on Nick’s practice plan every day. Nick is a proud employee and citizen of Chisholm. He’s very respected and very popular. He’s not oblivious to what this place has been and he’s working really hard.”

--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, January 16, 2023

John’s Journal: Morris Area’s Manska Named Heart Of The Arts Winner


 Lakia Manska, a 2022 graduate of Morris Area High School, has been selected by the Minnesota State High School League as this year’s recipient of the Heart of the Arts award.

The Heart of the Arts award was created by the National Federation of State High School Associations to recognize individuals who exemplify the ideals of the positive heart of the arts and represent the core mission of education-based activities.

In high school, Lakia was a multi-sport athlete, dancer and a three-time qualifier for the MSHSL state speech tournament. Her greatest impact, however, came when she wrote an essay from the heart in response to an ugly incident during the boys state basketball tournament. After Minneapolis North defeated Morris Area/Chokio-Alberta in the state semifinals, a student from Chokio-Alberta sent a vile, racist social media message to one of the North players.

Lakia’s essay was important, as were all the positive messages she received afterwards.

Here is the original story, posted on April 17, 2022…

Speaking Out, Sparking Conversations

Morris Area Senior Lakia Manska Is A Fearless Voice For Good

Lakia Manska is a busy senior at Morris Area High School. She’s a three-sport athlete, a member of the National Honor Society, a two-time qualifier for the MSHSL state speech tournament, a dancer and more. She’s also fearless.

At this week’s Class A state speech tournament, Lakia (pronounced “lu-KY-uh”) will compete in Original Oratory. The state meet will be held at Eastview High School, with Class AA competition on Friday and Class A on Saturday.

Lakia is one of seven Morris Area students who qualified for state. The others are Aarav Devkota, Alexis Lhotka and Zachary Dietz in Discussion, Samuel Jordan in Extemporary Speaking and Hailey Lesmeister and Emily Hamm in Duo Interpretation. Lakia and Aarav are team captains.

Lakia’s skills as a writer, a thinker and a force for good reached a wide audience recently after she wrote an editorial that was published by the Stevens County Times in Morris. It spread very quickly online throughout Minnesota and beyond. You can read it here: https://www.stevenscountytimes.com/opinion/time-to-change/

Her essay was in response to an ugly incident during the boys state basketball tournament. After Minneapolis North defeated Morris Area/Chokio-Alberta in the state semifinals, a student from Chokio-Alberta sent a vile, racist social media message to one of the North players. (https://www.mshsl.org/about/news/johns-journal/johns-journal-i-worry-these-are-my-kids-these-are-my-kids )

“It just broke my heart,” she said. “It’s horrible.”

Lakia, who is Black, was adopted by Stacie and John Manska when she was three weeks old. She has two older brothers: Lukus, 22, is in the Army in South Carolina and Logan, 26, is a teacher and head boys basketball coach at Lake Crystal Wellcome Memorial.

The social media message was sent late on Friday night of the state tournament, and by Saturday morning it had been publicized. Lakia said gathering with her friends to cheer for the Morris Area/Chokio-Alberta Tigers in Saturday’s third-place game at Concordia University in St. Paul was difficult.

“The whole year we’ve been watching this boys basketball team and the energy has been so explosive and crazy,” she said. “But you could tell we were all thinking about, ‘How excited should we be today without it being insensitive?’ It was a whole different atmosphere there.”

As she has gotten older, Lakia learned that she felt better if she wrote about things that were emotional for her. So after returning home from the state tournament, that’s what she did.

“I needed to vent,” she said. “And I was so upset and confused and sad. I ended up writing this paper. I read it to my mom one night and thought that would be the end of it, or maybe I would send it to a couple teachers and see if they wanted to talk about it at school.”

At the same time, one of the editors at the newspaper was searching for a way to begin a discussion of what had taken place and asked if Lakia would like to write something. It was already written.

Lakia’s words are powerful.

Wearing “Morris Tigers” across my chest felt like a betrayal. Some of my closest friends were on the team, yet I felt a pang in my heart each time I clapped. My body was in the gym, but my mind wandered. I felt nauseous. 

John Kleinwolterink, who is a music teacher and head speech coach at Morris, has a son on the basketball team. After the social media message was made public, his first reaction was, “ ‘What are we going to do about this?’ Then we have kids like Lakia who say, ‘This is what needs to be done, this is what I’ve experienced, and we need to address it.’ ”

Lakia had emailed her essay to Kleinwolterink, and he broke down in tears while reading it.

“I didn’t know all the things she had been through because of who she is,” he said. “If I could have, right then I would have grabbed her and hugged her.

“We need to do better. Our community needs to hear these things. It starts the conversations that have to happen and the change that has to go with it.”

I have been called a monkey. People have used the n-word to devalue me as a human being. My successes have been taken away because how can a black girl truly be successful? I understood what those boys were going through. Those boys fought their way to the state championship, yet they were made to feel they did not deserve it. 

Lakia, who plans to study English education at Minnesota State University Moorhead, said the reaction to what she wrote has been nothing but positive.

“I was surprised at how many people reached out and asked questions,” she said. “People from the Morris area asked how they can fix things around here. It’s crazy seeing how many people I know and people I don’t know talking about it. It’s cool to know it started a conversation.”

Before writing, Lakis reached out on social media to Minneapolis North assistant coach Trent Witz. She sent him a private message that read in part, “I am from Morris and just wanted to apologize and say I am absolutely disgusted by the message your team received.”

Lakia has had many wonderful moments during her high school career. She was a member of the girls tennis team that was the first in school history to play at state last fall. Her first year on the team was in eighth grade, when the team consisted of just a few girls and they lost every competition. But the girls worked hard in the following years, capped by their trip to state.

“That was definitely the highlight of my high school career,” she said. “That is probably the closest I’ve ever been with anybody, and we still talk every single day.”

Lakia and her speech teammates are focusing on Saturday’s state tournament. She has been a member of the speech program since eighth grade; last year she placed fourth at state in Original Oratory. Just like with the tennis team, the friendships made in speech are special.

“I really like the group of friends that I’ve made there,” she said. “There are about 16 of us on the team, and we talked about it on the bus ride home from (section speech in) Albany. It’s such a fun environment. I can tell my confidence speaking and writing has gotten so much better over the last five years.”

Kleinwolterink said, “I don’t think anybody could write as clear of a storyline as she does and explain to others what she wants to say. She is a smart kid and she’s talented. She’s involved, she knows what she wants to do and she’s driven, that’s for sure.”

Her Original Oratory presentation this year is titled “Getting Comfortable with the Uncomfortable.”

“I’m talking about uncomfortable conversations and why we don’t like to have them but why we need to,” she said. “Mental health, race, politics, all these different things. I struggled coming up with a topic but I talked about it one day in one of my classes, the importance of having discussions even when they’re not comfortable.

“I was definitely not a confident kid, not for a long time,” she said. “Now I’m pretty fearless.”

--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  

Thursday, January 12, 2023

John’s Journal: Officials Shortage Means ‘We’re Hanging By A Thread’


It’s no secret that high school sports are facing a serious issue when it comes to officials. The hard truth is that there aren’t enough people certified to officiate, and that’s the case in Minnesota as well as around the nation.

A microcosm of the situation can be found in southeast Minnesota during the current basketball season. Schools, conferences and officials, most of them members of the Rochester Area Officials Association, are scrambling to pair officials with games in the hopes of ensuring that every team will be able to play every scheduled game. Nothing is guaranteed.

“We’re hanging by a thread,” said Jared Butson, a veteran multi-sport official who assigns officials for girls and boys varsity basketball games through the RAOA. “It’s pretty bad.”

Games are in the process of being juggled for the remainder of the 2022-23 season, while officials, schools and conferences cast a glance into future seasons.

One sign of change was seen Tuesday evening when the girls and boys basketball from Pine Island and Cannon Falls played a varsity doubleheader in Cannon Falls. Originally, the boys were scheduled to play in Pine Island while the girls met in Cannon Falls. The teams will play a similar doubleheader in Pine Island later in the season. The changes were made because there weren’t enough available officials to work varsity games at both sites.

Winter weather has always thrown wrenches into scheduling games, but when there aren’t enough officials it’s a volatile double-whammy.

“With weather, you know snow will eventually melt,” said Pine Island athletic director Lisa Myran-Schutte. “Now we’re in a nice week and we still had chaos.”

Other schools in southeast Minnesota are moving games and adding girls/boys doubleheaders this winter in an effort to avoid cancelling contests. Looking long-term, other possible remedies are being considered.

Butson has asked five conferences in that part of the state – the Hiawatha Valley League, Three Rivers, Gopher, Southeast and Big Nine – to hold discussions on a conference level and consider possible solutions for the 2023-24 season and beyond.

Among those possibilities are …

--Each conference selects two Tuesday nights and does not schedule any conference games on those dates. If all five conferences did so, that would loosen up 10 Tuesday nights.

--Two schools in the same conference schedule a girls/boys varsity doubleheader on a Friday night, rather than playing the girls game at one school and boys at the other.

--When weather forces games to be rescheduled, schools are advised to consider playing Wednesday evenings or late afternoons, even if that means varsity only or JV/varsity competition.

Wednesday has traditionally been a night when games are rarely scheduled, but more games and not enough available officials on Tuesdays and Fridays could mean more Wednesday games in the future … along with Mondays, Thursdays and Saturday.

The RAOA consists of about 85 officials who can work varsity games. That’s simply not enough.

“People have asked, ‘What do you need to make it work?,’ ” Butson said. “We need 20 more officials who are varsity officials.”

Butson has asked schools and conference several times this winter to move games away from nights when there aren’t enough officials to cover them all. His emails to schools in southeast Minnesota paint a clear picture …

--“I realize this is not the email you wanted from me today.”

 --"I need 4 JV/Varsity game combinations moved to a different date or a double varsity, something. Yes, I'm 13 varsity officials short for the date as of now.”   

--"Yes, I'm 17 varsity officials short for the date as of now. I'm hoping to have the Minneapolis Association cover one game and possibly the Mankato Association. We'll see.”

--"I've worked every angle for this date and I'm at the end of my rope in trying to have enough officials for the date.”

All the southeast Minnesota conferences have transitioned from two-person to three-person basketball officiating crews in recent years. With shot clocks becoming mandatory in high school girls and boys varsity basketball next season, the game will be faster for every team and the necessity of three-person crews will be even more apparent.

But with the shortage of officials, some games this season are being played with just two officials when a third person simply isn’t available.

“We try like heck to have three-person crews at all varsity games but we don’t have enough people,” Butson said.

Coaches are well aware of the situation with officials, because they are being asked to reschedule game days and times. The tradition of girls and boys varsity games between two schools having one gender at one site and the other gender at the other school may be waning. For the Pine Island-Cannon Falls doubleheader, the girls games started at 6 p.m. with the boys tipping off around 7:45.

 Our boys like to watch the girls play and they don't get a lot of chances during the season,” said Cannon Falls boys coach Josh Davisson. “So I enjoy this and if we had to play at 6 vs. 7 o’clock, that doesn't matter. I'd rather have the varsity game than lose a game.”

There are upsides for fans when girls and boys teams play at the same site on the same night. Davisson said the crowd at Cannon Falls was larger than usual, and “I looked in the stands and I saw people that I don't normally see. They got to come in and watch both boys and girls play on the same night.”

There are several reasons for the shortage of officials. A number of veterans stopped working games during the Covid pandemic and have not returned. The way officials are treated by fans is certainly one reason why some step away; abuse of officials on youth and sub-varsity levels drives away young people who are interested in the vocation but quit because of how they are treated by parents and coaches.

Many basketball officials work games five or six days per week. That can mean many hours driving to games and back home, leaving fewer hours of sleep before they report to their “real” jobs the next morning.

The crew on Tuesday at Cannon Falls was Mike Klavetter of Plainview, Lee Meyer of Kasson and Dean DeBoer of Byron. They worked both the girls and boys games. Like all officials in the region, they are adaptable to changing game schedules and sites.

The Pine Island-Cannon Falls doubleheader was one of three that were rescheduled that evening.

“We’ll have enough varsity people there,” Butson said Tuesday afternoon. “I can send three officials to do both games vs. having six officials at two sites.”

Games had to be moved away from two Tuesday nights in December, with similar changes forced so far in January. Several games were moved away from Jan. 3, and that’s when a major snowstorm arrived. The result was a total of 68 junior varsity and varsity games were lost for that night.

“If we have another Tuesday or Friday that we lose everything due to Mother Nature, some games just won’t get played,” Butson said. “So far we’re making it work.

Mondays and Thursdays are routinely for non-conference or extra games, but that’s where lot of reschedules have landed. My fear is that now we have officials who are overworked.”

Davisson said of officials, “I know a lot of these guys and I've talked to them and some of them are working five, six or more nights a week and it's tough on them.”

There are reasons for optimism. Butson said 15 or 16 new basketball officials have joined the RAOA this season, which means for the first time in many years there are enough officials to cover sub-varsity games.

“There is a bright side coming,” he said. “It’s not as bright as I want it to be. Also, we won’t be adding any three-person crews next year because all our conferences are already using three-person crews.”

Butson, who has been a physical education teacher in St. Charles for 23 years, will add something new to his workload this year. He will teach a class in sports 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  

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

John’s Journal: Mountain Lake’s Klassen Named Spirit Of Sport Award Winner


Back in mid-October I drove to Blue Earth in southern Minnesota for a small cross-country meet at Riverside Town & Country Club. I was there to watch, photograph and interview one runner.

Luke Klassen, a senior team captain at Mountain Lake, is a remarkable young man. He’s devoted to his team, his school, his community, his family and his faith. During the fall cross-country season, Luke never missed a competition despite undergoing treatments for cancer.

Because of his commitment, his courage and his strong desire to compete, Luke has been selected by the Minnesota State High School League as the recipient of the Spirit of Sport Award. The award, which was created in 2008 by the National Federation of State High School Associations, recognizes individuals who exemplify the ideals of the positive spirit of sport that represent the core mission of education-based athletics.

Spending time with Luke was a real treat, as was talking to his parents, Esther and Chad. The result of that trip to Blue Earth was a John’s Journal story that was posted on October 13. Here is that story …

One Step At A Time, One Foot In Front Of The Other

Open Mountain Lake’s Luke Klassen Conquers Cancer, Never Stops Running

Luke Klassen jokes about his hair … or current lack of hair. The good news is that his hair will come back. The cancer? That can stay away.

Luke is a senior at Mountain Lake High School who has been part of the Wolverines cross-country team since seventh grade. When he was diagnosed with cancer during the summer, his life was turned upside down and he thought his final season as a high school cross-country runner – he had been named a team captain -- would not happen.

But what happened was and is amazing. One day after being diagnosed with mixed germ cell cancer on June 11, he had surgery to remove a tumor from his groin area. Tests showed that cancer cells had spread to his chest and lymph nodes. Between then and Sept. 15, he underwent chemotherapy treatments in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, sometimes becoming so sick from the drugs that he could hardly stand. And yet …

Luke never stopped running. He has competed in every cross-country meet on the schedule this season. He hasn’t always competed with his varsity teammates, sometimes running junior varsity or junior high races. But he never stopped running. One step at a time, one foot in front of the other.

That’s how important his teammates, his friends, his coaches and cross-country is to him.

After running in the varsity race at the recent Buc Invite in Bue Earth, Luke told me, "I don't know how I would have made it through without this team and this sport."

Only four months had passed from Luke’s surgery until this week’s meet in Blue Earth. Shiny scalp aside, Luke looked strong as he ran. And he looked exactly like a team captain before and after, leading his teammates in stretching exercises and cheering for teammates who competed in other races before and after he ran.

“Luke has been the most faithful, inspired, inspirational person through all this,” said Mountain Lake coach Kyle Blomgren.

After Luke learned of his diagnosis, he went to Blomgren to tell him the bad news. That turned out to be an important meeting.

“I just knew it would be really hard,” Luke said. “Because I knew it would break his heart hearing that news. I didn't even know if I'd be able to get out of a chair for who knows how long because of this.”

Luke told the coach the diagnosis, thinking that the illness would never allow him to be the kind of team leader he wanted to be.

Blomgren’s response was not what Luke expected to hear. The coach talked about other ways to be a leader.

“He said, ‘Well, how are you going to lead then? What are you going to do?’ And we talked about it. We said even if I have to be in a chair on the sidelines, we’re going to lead and be involved and be a part of the team. And that was super inspirational to me.

“Here I was, going into it knowing I was just going to break his heart. I said, ‘I'm so sorry.’ And when I walked out, he had encouraged me a lot, which was really great.”

Among Luke’s teammates is his younger brother Zach. Their parents, Chad and Esther, along with extended family, friends and folks the Klassens may never meet, have offered support every step of the way.

T-shirts were sold. Fundraising events were held, with some proceeds being donated to Ronald McDonald House, which housed the Klassens for free while Luke was undergoing several five-day rounds of chemotherapy. An event called Luke 5:19 (after a Bible verse), held on Luke’s 18th birthday in August, saw people running or walking laps from noon until 5:19 p.m., with pledges coming in as nearly 400 miles were completed.

Luke’s mom is a breast cancer survivor, and Esther feared for what her son would be subjected to during treatments for what doctors considered Stage 3.1 cancer.

“I know what chemo is, so to willingly subject my child to what I had endured was hard,” she said. “I just thought, ‘Wow, how can we put a 17-year-old through that? So I asked the oncologist, ‘What if we do nothing?’ She paused for a long time and looked at us to make sure what we were asking and she said the tumors will grow, they'll build up in his lungs and he'll suffocate and he'll be gone before he graduates from college.”

Luke said, “It was super gruesome and dark, obviously. But that put a good perspective on everything. I might be feeling like crap but I told myself I can endure this; I can't endure drowning in my own lungs.”

The decision to continue running came with the blessing of Luke’s care team, which included some experienced runners.

“They said being able to stay active in some way, keeping yourself somewhat moving and keeping yourself in good spirits was so important,” Chad said. “It doesn't just help you make it through mentally but your body even reacts better.”

One of the most astonishing races that Luke ran came at a home meet in Mountain Lake. It was held on a Friday, which was always the second day of Luke’s five-day chemo sessions.

As the Klassens were making the two-hour drive to Sioux Falls on Thursday, Luke asked his parents about competing in the race the next day. 

“As a mom,” said Esther, “I just wanted to wrap him in bubble wrap.” She told her son they would ask his oncologist, “And if she approves,” she said to Luke, “I will drive you all the way back home.”

Luke completed that day’s chemo, got the OK to run, they returned home and the next morning he was running with his team in their home meet during his senior year. Afterwards it was back to Sioux Falls to continue with treatments.

There were plenty of rough patches, including two platelet transfusions and one blood transfusion. On the first day of cross-country practice, Luke nearly threw up. “I ran the warm-up and was shaky and unsteady and had to immediately run to the bathroom and hold myself with the toilet for a little bit,” he said.

On several occasions, the effects from chemo meant trips to the emergency room in Windom. But running, the simple act of running, was always there as a goal, a beacon. One step at a time, one foot in front of the other.

Luke’s goal in each competition was simple: Finish the race.

“I love this sport,” he said. “It’s something I’m passionate about, but I couldn't do much more than finish (early on). But once the chemo ended, I was able to start doing more immediately. The very next race, which wasn't even a week later, I already felt like I could actually race. I saw someone and I wanted to catch them. And I did. I didn't collapse.”

A year ago Luke was usually the No. 3 runner for his team. In cross-country, the places of the top five finishers for each team are combined to tabulate the final results. His goal this season is to return to the top five. He was the Wolverines’ No. 6 varsity finisher at the Buc Invite. The individual winner was Luke Miest of St. James. Zach Klassen was Mountain Lake’s No. 2 runner and Luke was 31st in a field of 44 runners.

Luke has a clean bill of health and undergoes tests every two months to make sure the cancer hasn’t returned. Those intervals will get larger as time goes on; eventually he will be tested once a year throughout his life.

The Klassens know they can never repay everyone for all the good deeds that have come their son’s way.

“We've seen that communities want to fight with someone and they love to get behind someone who is fighting,” Esther said. “Because life is hard.”

Luke’s attitude was a big factor in his battle. There were times in the hospital when he couldn’t stop vomiting, times when his blood pressure was worrisome, times when he had a dangerously high fever.

Esther recounted one of those times, saying, “There were like 10 of us in the room trying to help him. And then he just laid back and said (jokingly), ‘Well, that wasn't too bad.’

“He was really kind to all the nurses, which isn't always the case with every patient. Nursing is a tough job. He asked about their days. He thanked them for things.”

As strange as it may sound, Luke knows he was lucky. His cancer is highly treatable and he received tremendous care and support

“My cancer is really, really rare but it dies fast to the chemo,” he said. “Chemo kills it really well.”

Meanwhile, Luke continues to run. He also continues to lead. He’s looking forward to the track and field season, where he focuses on the 400- and 800-meter distances. He was an alternate on his school’s 4x800 relay team that placed eighth at the Class 1A state meet last spring. Wouldn’t a chance to run at state next year be a great way to cap his high school career?

“Running kept me going,” he said. “It gave me something to get up and do every day.”

One step at a time, one foot in front of the other.

--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 

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