My friend Jared Rubado, the talented and hard-working sports editor of the Bemidji Pioneer, writes an occasional feature titled “The best thing I saw last week.” Jared likes to pull back from the obvious things, like who won and who lost, and focus on the small but important moments that can make school activities so special. (You can read his latest such piece here: rb.gy/8cgax )
The best thing I saw Saturday, and one of the best things I have
ever seen in several decades of sports coverage from the youth level to the
pros, took place during the MSHSL adapted softball state tournament at
Chanhassen High School.
There are two divisions in adapted softball: CI (cognitively
impaired) and PI (physically impaired). In Saturday’s championship games, Burnsville/Farmington/Lakeville defeated
Dakota United 7-5 in 11 innings to win the CI title, and Dakota United topped Robbinsdale/Hopkins/Mound
Westonka 13-6 for the PI crown.
The best thing I saw took place immediately after the PI awards
ceremony. These ceremonies follow exactly the same pattern as all MSHSL state
championships; an all-tournament team is announced, the second-place team members
and coaches receive their medals and trophy, and championship medals are placed
around the necks of the winning team members, who then take possession of the
first-place trophy.
And then come photos. Lots of photos. Parents, friends and others
pull out their phones as the teams gather together for a formal photograph with
their new hardware.
The Dakota United Hawks players and coaches posed on the court
inside the beautiful Chanhassen gymnasium as the cameras began snapping. As they got into place, I
noticed someone moving into position to take a photo; he stood out because he
wore a red second-place ribbon around his neck.
It was Marcus Onsum, the longtime coach of the Robbinsdale/Hopkins/Mound Westonka Robins.
I absolutely cannot remember ever seeing this happen before … the head coach of
the losing team shooting photos of the winning team.
A few minutes later, Marcus was in the
school cafeteria spending time with his players and their families. The mood
was light and relaxed, with no downcast attitudes, no regrets and absolutely
nothing negative.
I asked him about the photos, and his
response said everything.
“I just want to kind of commemorate the spirit of the state
championship game,” he said. “That Dakota United team is a heck of a team. I've
coached a lot of really good teams myself and played against some really good
teams, and that team's every bit as good as any one of them.”
Marcus is president of
the Minnesota Adapted Coaches Association and Dakota United coach Brett Kosidowski
is vice-president, according to the group’s website.
“Brett and his coaching
staff, they're just such a personable group of guys,” Onsum said. “I love
competing against them, I love working with them and their kids are awesome. We’re
fierce competitors in the field, but their kids will stop every one of ours in
the hallway and say hi, and it's just like it really truly represents the
spirit of competition and adapted sports.”
Onsum played basketball
at Robbinsdale Armstrong before graduating in 1994. He has siblings with muscular
dystrophy who played for the Robins adapted teams in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Marcus said, “When I
graduated from high school, our program founder, Lloyd Olson, approached me and
said, ‘You know what? You get these kids, you get what we're doing. Come coach
with me.’ And so I coached with him for a year as an assistant and then they brought
in another head coach. We were co-head coaches for a while and then in 2000 I
took over.”
Saturday’s tournament
ended Onsum’s 29th year of coaching adapted athletes. Like everyone
involved in adapted sports – the MSHSL also sponsors adapted bowling, floor
hockey and soccer – he knows that what truly matters goes well beyond the
scoreboard.
“I keep coming back
because one, these kids are amazing,” he said. “And growing up with siblings
that benefited from adapted sports, I see firsthand the reason why we offer
them. I know the benefits of it and I can't walk away from that. I want to make
sure that every kid out there continues to get the same opportunity that my own
brother and sister and hundreds of other kids have had.”
Those words? They’re the best
thing.
--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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