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The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.
©
2002 Display
Advertising The
contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Advocate
promotes wrestling program Casey Kendall
looks like a wrestler, but he's not.
He was a Golden Gloves boxer
in high school and college. Two of his children participate in scholastic
wresting programs today, however.
That's part of the reason
Kendall has become the town's leading advocate of greater support for
high school and middle school wrestling. He thinks the sport has helped
his own sons in a variety of ways and could do the same for many more
if they, too, were attracted to a strong program.
This belief caused Kendall
to write a letter to the editor of The Nugget last month and
to follow up with an appearance before the Sisters School Board to make
a personal pitch on January 13.
A native of Boise, Kendall
is a heavy construction superintendent who has lived in Sisters for six
years.
In voicing concern about the
wrestling program, Kendall is not talking to a stone wall. Some of his
thoughts are reaching sympathetic ears on influential heads. School Board
Chairman Jeff Smith, for example, wrestled during his four undergraduate
years at Oregon State University, placing fourth at his weight level in
the NCAA nationals in 1967.
"I'm a great supporter of
wrestling," said Smith. "I wish everybody shared my passion for wrestling,
but they don't."
Smith attends all of the after-school
Outlaws wrestling team practices that he is able to.
For his part, Sisters School
Superintendent Steve Swisher says that during his first year on the job
here wrestling was about to be axed. Several factors had caused student
interest to dwindle and the pressure to pare the district budget was heavy.
"But I'm an ex-head wrestling
coach (Aloha High School) and I wanted to try to keep it alive," Swisher
said.
He and his allies succeeded,
and those who follow the sport believe its chance of growing into a strong
program at Sisters High is better today than for some years past.
One basis for that expectation
is Tony Cosby. In his college years, Cosby wrestled for national powerhouse
Oklahoma State University. He joined the Sisters High School teaching
staff last year and served as an assistant wrestling coach. This year
he was made head coach and has accepted lead responsibility for building
the program.
Casey Kendall is right about
the existence of some obstacles, including a lack of money. Yet virtually
all the sports at Sisters High face similar obstacles (See sidebar below).
Many are classified as "unfunded."
One of Kendall's worries is
the lack of district support for transportation, making it difficult for
the wrestling team to travel to other schools for meets. But the superintendent
notes that "wrestling is not the only sport that has that issue."
None of the unfunded sports
receive district funds for transportation, although some use district
buses and reimburse the district out of private funds.
Everyone in touch with the
wrestling program acknowledges that the facilities available now are far
from ideal. The team practices in the weight room in a loft above the
gym.
But as Swisher notes, "That's
going to dramatically change when we move into our new (high school) building.
There's a multipurpose room there (that will be) an excellent wrestling
practice area during the course of the season. So that should really help
not only the high school program, but when the middle schoolers move into
the current high school, that upstairs mat area will probably be very
sufficient for the middle school program."
At the school board meeting
and in a subsequent interview, Kendall also complained about the role
of Bob Macauley, the vice principal and football coach at Sisters High.
Kendall said that in most other schools he knows about, the football and
wrestling programs cooperate closely, with many football players signing
up for the wrestling team and some coaches doing both sports.
Kendall believes Macauley
discourages kids from going into wrestling.
Macauley adamantly denies
that, while complaining about being publicly criticized by someone who
has not bothered to come and talk to him about the problem being alleged.
(Kendall says Macauley has
refused to return his phone calls).
"Actually, wrestling catches
some of the kids we don't catch anywhere else, and that is super important,"
Macauley said last week, echoing one of Kendall's own points. "But I don't
think the football coach is the bad guy here...I think my record speaks
for itself.
"It would be my desire to
see wrestling as a premier sport here. It's not in my interest to be negative
toward wrestling....We've kept wrestling alive when the numbers have indicated
maybe we shouldn't. We have gone out and hired a very good coach who is
on staff and who can shepherd the program."
On a more philosophical note,
when asked what he thinks the wrestling program needs most, Board Chairman
Smith answered slowly:
"We need continuity in our
coaching, we need to have several wrestlers find real success, and we
need to start to build a tradition. Where does money fit in? I don't think
money is very important, to tell you the truth." All of the Sisters High School sports have to scramble for funds. Superintendent Steve Swisher explained that the high school's sports are divided into two large groups -- funded and unfunded. Those in the first group receive money for coaches' salaries, officiating at games or matches and transportation costs for traveling to other schools in the conference or district. The unfunded sports receive money for coaches' salaries but none of the other items. None of the teams receive district money for uniforms, equipment or other accouterments. All of the sports, regardless of category, raise private funds for a variety of needs. The pay for coaches is allocated on a three-tier system and ranges from $2,200 to $3,000 per season. About a quarter of the coaches are teachers on the SHS staff. "We really don't fund very significantly," Swisher said. Yet Sisters' overall sports menu is large. In comparison with the rest of the schools in the Capital Conference, Swisher says, "I think we're at least equivalent, and in some cases more so." The athletics budget is more than a shoestring, but it is no high-top Nike. "...We spend about $225,000 on all sports combined," Swisher said. "We're just about at the bottom of the Capital Conference." The other districts' total spending ranges from "more than twice" Sisters' total to about $280,000. At Sisters High, the funded sports (B for boys, G for girls) include: Football (B), basketball (B,G), volleyball (G), track (B,G) baseball (B), softball (G) and soccer (B,G). The unfunded list is composed of cross country (B,G) swimming (B,G), wrestling (B), tennis (G), golf (B,G) and skiing (B,G). |
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