Frank Workman on Sports: High school sports - lessons learned and taught every day
Sunday, June 24, 2012
By Frank Workman
It’s been a full month since the last High School games were played and championships contested,and already I find myself itching to get back out to watch another year’s action.
I love High School sports, and I get out and see between 60 and 70 games a year. When you throw in some high school plays and jazz concerts, the number of events I attend grows by 5-10.
Compared to their professional or collegiate counterparts, sure, the level of athletic performance is nowhere near as high.
Yet the passion and commitment shown by the players at the high school level take a back seat to no one.
And while the HS ranks can have the occasional controversy (usually when the adults involved try to muck up the works), it for the most part maintains a degree of purity that is close to 99.44%.
Compare that to what we read every day about cheating scandals and money squabbles in both the college and pro ranks, and the HS brand of ball, regardless of the sport, comes up smelling like a rose.
At the HS level, it’s understood by coaches and players that representing one’s school is a privilege, not a right, and the privilege can be revoked should there be a dip in grades or other unacceptable behavior.
When players’ britches get a little too big for their own good, they are usually given the opportunity to watch the game from the sidelines until they fit better.
High school sports are an extension of the classroom, played out in public, where lessons are taught and learned every day.
Unlike the classroom, where the lessons are taught first, then the test taken; sports gives you the test first, with lessons to be learned from it afterwards.
And all the while, as these lessons are being taught and learned, we get to sit in the stands and watch the drama of athletic competition unfold before our eyes, watching our favorite sports being played by athletes, our neighbors, who throw their heart and soul into every minute of play.
The athletes are approachable after the games. Grade school kids, some with stars in their eyes, can meet the players, and lifelong friendships can be struck.
Try doing that with the members of your local college or pro team.
High school sports are where we get to watch great people begin to take shape – not to mention the next All-American, All-Pro, or even Hall of Famer.
Yes, I will enjoy the warmth of the summer sun, if not the heat of a pennant race for the next few months.
But until I get to see and hear a toe kick a football on a warm Friday night next September, things won’t be quite right with the world.
And there’s only ten more Friday nights to go!
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