New Jersey high school opts out of winter sports

Burlington City High School in New Jersey will not offer sports this winter.

Burlington City High School in southern New Jersey has made the decision to not offer sports this winter.

According to NJ Advance Media, Superintendent Dr. John Russell confirmed the decision made by the district’s board of education on Monday, citing health and safety concerns.

“Winter athletic stipends were on the October 19th Board of Education agenda for consideration. The motion to appoint those positions did not receive an affirmative vote from a majority of board members,” Russell said in a statement. “After declining to move forward with fall sports, it was important to consider winter sports well in advance of the NJSIAA transfer deadline.

“Nobody relishes having to disappoint our students, but health and safety must remain the District’s top priority. Unfortunately, this was yet another difficult decision in a year full of tough choices, uncertainty, and limited options. We cannot wait for the day when our Blue Devil athletes can safely return to competition and continue making us proud.”

In previous years, Burlington City has offered boys and girls basketball, wrestling, indoor track and cheerleading as winter sports. Burlington City’s boys basketball team has won consecutive Central Jersey Group I championships and won three sectional titles in the last four years.

“I’m disappointed,” boys basketball coach Phil Collins said. “I understand the COVID situation, but there are 22 teams in the county and 16 played football. Not us. I don’t know what the numbers are for winter sports, but it’s disappointing for the kids. There are schedules to make, things to be done. I don’t think waiting would have changed this group.”

New Jersey high school sports team quarantining after COVID-19 exposure

A New Jersey high school sports team is quarantining after its exposure to COVID-19.

At least 25 students from a high school sports team in New Jersey are quarantining after being exposed to a student who tested positive for COVID-19.

According to the Asbury Park Press, Lakewood High School’s soccer team has been quarantined. The district’s latest coronavirus update also stated that two classes, a preschool special education and a kindergarten class, were placed in remote learning for 14 days after three staff members tested positive for COVID-19.

However, the district did not say how many students had been sent home to quarantine. Parents informed the Press that the soccer team had quarantined and were not happy that they were not alerted of the recent cases despite having children in the school.

“My daughter called me to tell me I had to pick her up from the high school because she had been close to a student who tested positive,” Ofelia Resendiz said. “The district called me until this morning to let me know that my daughter had been identified as a close contact.”

Lakewood has been one of New Jersey’s coronavirus hot spots throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. Between Sept. 24-Sept. 30, 840 of Ocean County’s 1,214 positive coronavirus cases came from Lakewood.

High school sports Plays of the Week

See the latest highlights around high school sports action from Week 6.

We’re back for another edition of Plays of the Week from our partners at ScoreStream, and this might be one of the best highlight reels yet!

It was a Quarterback and Receivers clinic in Week 6, with dime-dropping passes and over-the-shoulder grabs. And the eye-opening moments went beyond the athletic displays on the gridiron, too, as we’ve got our first “Wait. What?!” moment from the pitch—an all-time header that’s worth a look (and then a few more).

Let’s get to it…

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Watch the fan-submitted highlights from previous weeks: Week 5Week 4

New York planning accelerated decision on fate of winter high school sports

A decision on the fate of winter high school sports in New York could be coming sooner than originally expected.

A decision on the fate of winter high school sports in New York could be coming sooner than originally expected.

According to syracuse.com, the New York Public High School Athletic Association has set Nov. 30 as the date when winter sports such as basketball, hockey and wrestling can begin practice. This decision comes after a timetable for New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s decision whether to allow high-risk high school sports this winter emerged.

Cuomo has said that he will make his decision on winter high school sports “before Dec. 31.” However, that does little for the outlook of winter high school sports in New York, as competition is usually underway well before the end of December. The uncertainty surrounding Cuomo’s timetable for a decision is why the NYSPHSAA elected to push high-risk fall sports cheerleading, football and volleyball to March.

State budget director Robert Mujica said Cuomo will “likely” address winter sports at some point in November on a conference call Wednesday.

“That obviously is beneficial to us because we were under the impression we wouldn’t get any new information until Dec. 31,” NYSPHSAA spokesperson Chris Watson said. “I think the timeline that was announced today is a good timeline for us to get some things figured out. What will happen next is we will wait and see what we can get from state officials. To know that athletics is on their radar is a good sign for us.”

Second-biggest city in Massachusetts postpones fall high school sports season

Worcester, the second-biggest city in Massachusetts, has postponed fall high school sports until February.

One of the largest cities in Massachusetts has decided to postpone its fall high school sports season because of the community’s high COVID-19 transmission rate.

Worcester officials said on Thursday that fall high school sports including football, soccer and field hockey could now be played an abbreviated season known as “Fall II” scheduled to begin in February.

Worcester is one of 40 Massachusetts communities that have been deemed high-risk spots for contracting COVID-19 by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health. In order for a community to be considered a “high-risk” area, the city’s average daily case rate is higher than eight positive cases per 1,000 residents.

“We were going to wait to get a few more weeks of data before we made our decision about sports. However, due to the increasing level of coronavirus in Worcester, Worcester Public Schools will be canceling sports for the fall,” Superintendent Maureen Binienda said, per CBS Boston. “Also, all fall sports and all practices are canceled. Fall sports, following the MIAA guidelines and DESE guidelines will now move to Fall II.”

Worcester’s decision to postpone fall sports impacts six public schools and two parochial institutions.

High school football Plays of the week

The best of the best from Week 5 in high school sports action.

More great highlights are in store for high school sports fans this week, from big throws to bigger catches, sideline shots, and blazing speed— and one impressive catch and run in Ohio to begin the reel!

It’s must-see moments in high school sports that are made possible because of the great fans submitting the clips to our partners at ScoreStream— keep ’em coming!

Now, let’s check out the latest Plays of the Week.

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3-time Olympic gold medalist Rowdy Gaines talks 1980 Summer Olympics boycott, gives hope to current athletes

If you were to gather a group of former athletes who might be able to shed some sort of light on the current path-altering squeeze the coronavirus has put on young athletes, then-to use to swimming analogy-you’d want Rowdy Gaines in the center lane …

If you were to gather a group of former athletes who might be able to shed some sort of light on the current path-altering squeeze the coronavirus has put on young athletes, then—to use to swimming analogy—you’d want Rowdy Gaines in the center lane of that pool.

Gaines, a three-time Olympic gold medalist and U.S. Olympic and International Hall of Famer, understands better than most the moments that seem like an end-all blockade in a young athlete’s career. And not just understands, like in the manner of older generations equating the general ups and downs of life, while fidgeting to convey it in the present landscape.

To the current USA Swimming ambassador and NBC television analyst, he can point to one glaring moment in history that carries a lot of unwanted similarities. 

One of the top swimmers in the late-70s, Gaines had catapulted up the ranks. And the first few months of 1980 were progressing for the then-21-year-old talent—who would earn Swimmer of the Year for the effort, which included world records in both the 100m and 200m freestyle.

But suddenly, Gaines found his path halted in the fateful spring months of 1980 as talks of boycotting the Olympic games seemed more like a reality.

Like so many young athletes focused on achieving their goals and dreams, though, it was not Gaines’ reality.

“We all were in denial, at first,” he told me during a phone interview. Although it’s been 40 years, you can still hear the passion in Gaines’ voice when he talks about swimming, from the earliest days to his current efforts with USA Swimming to get pools re-opened while championing the importance of swimming lessons. 

But the tone shifted from defiant to a reserved contemplation, one that typically accompanies something lost—the one that got away—as he continued about the 1980 boycott: “And then, it was anger, and then an incredible depression and sadness. It was an overwhelming grief,” he paused…

While listening to that progression of feelings, some, if not all of it, evoked the now-expected phrasing “that’s just 2020 being 2020″—even though Gaines’ reflection was four decades old.

It makes sense, though. The athletic world has been an unwanted reality of the “‘unknown” in sports (and yes, life), where people have struggled since March to face hypotheticals that asked for concrete answers, all while being shadowed by a new term: COVID-19.

As the cancelations grew this past spring and summer—including the 2020 Olympics—it left athletes in the same uneasy dilemma of having their goals, hopes and dreams abruptly halted as Gaines experienced in 1980.

“The Olympic hopefuls and the high school and even college kids—they have literally lost this year. I have so much empathy for all of them, and what they’re going through right now,” he told me, while also explaining that the circumstances surrounding each event—a pandemic (the health components) versus a political statement—are not an apples-to-apples comparison.

Still, not getting to play means not getting to play. Simple as that.

“That was my best year swimming, and it just disappeared,” he added. “So I feel their pain.”

Possibly the most significant part of Gaines’ story, however, is that he considers his missed opportunities nothing more than a “chapter” in his overall tale. And, as many people witnessed or have since read or heard about, the accomplishments after 1980 are what makes his journey so incredible.

But it almost didn’t happen—not without a little boost.

He went back for his senior year at Auburn University in 1981, not because of unfinished business or a motivational fire, but for a more straightforward reason: it was his senior year.

And following that, he quit. “Back then, there was no money in swimming,” he explained. So Gaines, at 22, left the pool and decided to face the unknown…

His decision to hang up the goggles would not be a permanent one, though.

“My dad came to me about six months later, and said ‘Are you going to be able to look at yourself in the mirror for the rest of your life and not say what if? Are you going to have regrets?'”

From that moment—and then Gaines’ decision not to give up or in so quickly—he would go on to win 16 total medals (12 gold) for U.S. Swimming, including those three gold at the 1984 Olympics, at age 25. 

At the time, he was the third-oldest athlete ever to win gold at the Olympics.

He would fight and overcome beyond that, too. In 1996, following a battle five years prior with Guillain–Barré syndrome that left him with temporary paralysis, he qualified for the Olympic trials. Again. At 35 years old!

(USA TODAY NETWORK)

Now, all of that might seem like a super-specific and extreme case to try to use as present-day motivation—in truth, 320 Olympic athletes who made it in 1980 didn’t make it in 1976 or 1984.

But while many today are left wondering how to best approach “this” specific part of the 2020 timeline, what Gaines expresses makes a lot of sense. And it was the same thing he said to himself after his father had laid out that “what if” scenario—which commonly most young athletes would simply roll their eyes at.

“You say, ‘OK. I accept this, and now I need to get motivated to move toward the next chapter of what my life is going to be in the athletic world.'”

A father of four, he also understands that an adult introducing this route might cause a few a head-tilting squints from athletes in their late teens or early-20s. “They’re all about ‘right now,'” he chuckled, “and they want to know, right now, ‘how this is going to be solved?'”

While the answers to that question are still elusive at best, the fall has brought with it a more promising outlook. High school sports are occurring. College sports have made an effort to resume. And the Olympics will happen in 2021—something that Gaines, who will be there as part of the broadcast team, is optimistically excited about, saying that the pro leagues such as the NFL, NBA, and MLB are the perfect study for what to do (and not to do).

Of course, that won’t make up for the time lost, nor will it guarantee every athlete’s story becomes the next Rowdy Gaines tale of perseverance.

But Gaines sees common ground with the athletes dealing with the roller-coaster experience that many can’t relate to.

“With this current situation, they’ll learn to look at the longterm of their life, which is something that I learned at 22,” he explained. “And in the long run, they’ll see it’s a small bump in the road, and it’s going to be OK.

“So don’t give up hope because it will never be too late. I am living proof of that.”

Sometimes, it just takes a little boost. 

High school Plays of the Week

The best of the best from Week 3 in high school sports action.

More great highlights are in store for high school sports fans this week, from big throws to bigger catches, sideline shots, and blazing speed— and one incredible volleyball point to begin the highlight reel!

It’s must-see moments in high school sports that are made possible because of the great fans submitting the clips to our partners at ScoreStream—keep ’em coming!

Now, let’s check out the latest Plays of the Week.

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Related: Take a look back at the top plays from Week 2.

High school wrestler wins Courage Award for inspiring story

High school wrestler Dathan Wickson Jr. is being honored with Ganett’s High School Sports Courage Award due to his inspiring story of perseverance and will be presented the award by his hero, olympic gold medalist Jordan Burroughs.

High school wrestler Dathan Wickson Jr. is being honored with Ganett’s High School Sports Courage Award due to his inspiring story of perseverance and will be presented the award by his hero, olympic gold medalist Jordan Burroughs.