Empire Editorial: One team makes more sense than two

One of the promises made by supporters of building a new high school were more opportunities for Juneau’s students to become engaged through sports and activities. In recent years, those promises have not held true.

Creating two teams for every sport and activity (except hockey and tennis) may have been sound in theory but has failed in reality. Those failures are difficult to ignore for those involved with Juneau prep athletics.

The Juneau School District was granted permission Friday to combine four Alaska Scholastic Activities Association sports and activities for the coming school year. We say it’s about time, because if teams aren’t merged the problem will only get worse.

What’s happening among high school sports is systemic of what’s happening elsewhere in the state and in our city as funding is lost. Budgets are tighter everywhere. The result for high school teams has been fewer opportunities for more students.

Teams now take fewer trips outside of Juneau due to a lack of funding, and when they do travel fewer players are brought along. Other teams struggle to have a team at all.

Some examples:

• Juneau-Douglas High School, once a perennial football powerhouse, could not field enough players for a JV team last season. That also limited opportunities for Thunder Mountain’s JV football team. “I only have 28 guys out, so we couldn’t run a good JV,” JDHS football coach Kevin Hamrick told the Empire last season. “The community is split between two schools and that is the way it is.”

• In basketball, the JDHS girls team could only afford to send seven players north to play in the Kenai River Classic to start the season. One starter was injured in the first half of the first game, leaving six to compete in the three-game tournament. Those six athletes played lots of minutes, but just as many varsity teammates were benched in Juneau.

• Also in girls basketball, if not for a team competing in the Capital City Classic adding a game to its schedule, TMHS would have had to wait three weeks into the season to play its first game. The Falcons were left out of the Capital City Classic this year. All the other basketball teams played in three or four games before the Falcons took to the court for the first time. When the Falcons did finally begin their schedule, every other team had registered half a dozen games or more.

• The JDHS and TMHS wrestling teams can’t find enough bodies to fill all the weight categories. When the two teams meet, some wrestlers have no opponent to face. The problem is the same when competing against smaller Southeast schools. There are now fewer than 20 wrestlers for both teams combined.

The JDHS boys basketball team brought home the state trophy this year, but they did so in spite of having two schools. What we’ve seen in far more other sports is a constant struggle to be average. If teams can’t compete – and win – student-athletes won’t want to participate. We’re seeing that now, and how more and more teams are needing underclassmen to bolster their roster in order to field a team at all.

The reality of our high school sports situation is that Juneau doesn’t have the money, athletes or experienced coaches to sustain two teams for every sport and activity at this time.

Having two schools go head to head, sharpening each other’s talents in combat on the field, the court, the diamond and the pitch, was a wonderful dream.

Now it’s time to wake up.

More in Opinion

Web
Have something to say?

Here’s how to add your voice to the conversation.

Win Gruening. (Courtesy photo)
Opinion: Ten years and counting with the Juneau Empire…

In 2014, two years after I retired from a 32-year banking career,… Continue reading

U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, addresses a crowd with President-elect Donald Trump present. (Photo from U.S. Sen. Dan Sullivan’s office)
Opinion: Sen. Sullivan’s Orwellian style of transparency

When I read that President-elect Donald Trump had filed a lawsuit against… Continue reading

Sunrise over Prince of Wales Island in the Craig Ranger District of the Tongass National Forest. (Forest Service photo by Brian Barr)
Southeast Alaska’s ecosystem is speaking. Here’s how to listen.

Have you ever stepped into an old-growth forest alive with ancient trees… Continue reading

As a protester waves a sign in the background, Daniel Penny, center, accused of criminally negligent homicide in the chokehold death of Jordan Neely, arrives at State Supreme Court in Manhattan on Monday, Dec. 9, 2024. A New York jury acquitted Daniel Penny in the death of Jordan Neely and as Republican politicians hailed the verdict, some New Yorkers found it deeply disturbing.(Jefferson Siegel/The New York Times)
Opinion: Stress testing the justice system

On Monday, a New York City jury found Daniel Penny not guilty… Continue reading

Members of the Juneau-Douglas High School: Yadaa.at Kalé hockey team help Mendenhall Valley residents affected by the record Aug. 6 flood fill more than 3,000 sandbags in October. (JHDS Hockey photo)
Opinion: What does it mean to be part of a community?

“The greatness of a community is most accurately measured by the compassionate… Continue reading

Pete Hegseth, President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for defense secretary, at the Capitol in Washington on Monday, Dec. 2, 2024. Accusations of past misconduct have threatened his nomination from the start and Trump is weighing his options, even as Pete Hegseth meets with senators to muster support. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times)
Opinion: Sullivan plays make believe with America’s future

Two weeks ago, Sen. Dan Sullivan said Pete Hegseth was a “strong”… Continue reading

Dan Allard (right), a flood fighting expert for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, explains how Hesco barriers function at a table where miniature replicas of the three-foot square and four-foot high barriers are displayed during an open house Nov. 14 at Thunder Mountain Middle School to discuss flood prevention options in Juneau. (Mark Sabbatini / Juneau Empire file photo)
Opinion: Our comfort with spectacle became a crisis

If I owned a home in the valley that was damaged by… Continue reading

(Juneau Empire file photo)
Letter: Voter fact left out of news

With all the post-election analysis, one fact has escaped much publicity. When… Continue reading

The site of the now-closed Tulsequah Chief mine. (Michael Penn / Juneau Empire file photo)
My Turn: Maybe the news is ‘No new news’ on Canada’s plans for Tulsequah Chief mine cleanup

In 2015, the British Columbia government committed to ending Tulsequah Chief’s pollution… Continue reading