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FRANCIS: Texas High School football in the Age of Covid
I grew up, like many others do in Texas, as an avid High School Football fan.
I've been at the field under those Friday Night Lights nearly every fall weekend for the better part of twenty years. There is something so special about High School Football, and how it permeates an entire community. Even now, when I go home for a game, I eat at the same burger joint. I ride the same shuttle bus to the stadium with the same people. I sit in the same seats, and so do many around me. The important thing, though, is I'm not the only one. In a fairly large city, over nearly two decades, almost nothing has changed.
In the fall, a community and it's team become one.
When the UIL announced its plans for the fall season many of us were delighted at the prospect of football, even if it meant a drastic change to the norm. The possibility of no fan attendance, a delayed, and possibly shortened, season and even spontaneous cancellations were all okay as long as it meant football had a chance. We've all sacrificed for football before. We've sat in the rain, sleet, snow, boiling hot, and freezing cold. We've traveled hundreds of miles, spending hours in the car to travel to games. We've dropped everything on our calendar.
We'd sacrificed before, we could do it again.
Or, at least, that's what I hoped. Just because I was willing to sacrifice for football didn't mean others would be, and in the age of COVID sacrifice is everything.
I have to admit, I was not very optimistic when I pulled into Stafford MSD Stadium on Saturday evening. I was expecting a fairly low turnout, and not much in the way of COVID precautions by those that did attend. In my mind, it certainly wouldn't help that this game had been hastily rescheduled after Stafford's Friday contest in Texas City was cancelled due to Hurricane Laura. I was preparing myself for the worst.
Huffman Falcon fans traveled well.
Instead, after the strangest eight months of my life, I was treated to a perfectly normal evening of high school football.
When I walked into the stadium I was greeted by the staff at the gate who all had smiles beaming from behind their masks. The Stafford and Huffman football teams were on the field warming up, while coaches and staff finished their pregame preparations. When I sat down, I found a surprising amount of people. It felt like nearly 75% of the Stafford bleachers were full. Once I began to look around though, I started to see all of the open space. Fans throughout the entire stadium were, in fact, social distancing. Not only was there ample space, it took quite a while for me to find someone without a mask on. I was astonished. Maybe this could actually work.
As the game began things started to become...normal. People were talking among themselves about life, home, work, school, and everything else that wasn't football. I saw people smiling and waving to others they knew as they entered and exited the bleachers. Cheer squads, on both sides, were leading the crowd to support the teams. The action on the field was as genuine as I've ever seen it. The referees were sharp, and called the game with conviction. The players and coaches were so visibly excited just to be playing one game. This game.
That action, by the way, didn't disappoint.
Both defenses stood strong early, with the Stafford defense forcing a turnover on downs, all from inside their own 10 yard line. When they took over from inside their own five, Huffman forced a safety for the game's first score, before they were again stopped on downs on offense. The first half saw all matter of balls batted at the line, big sacks, interceptions, fumbles, and well defended passes. The second half brought some offensive flair, but it was too little too late for Stafford as the Spartans fell 28-14 to the Falcons.
As I walked out of the stadium gates to head home, I took one last look inside. I actually forgot what was supposed to be different about this game. I had expected to find some new experience, some different feeling that wouldn't live up to what I had remembered. What I had found instead was that same passion, joy, and sense of community that Texas high school football always brings.
Stafford MSD Stadium filled with Spartans
Calling a Timeout: Stafford coach David Montano reacts to halt of UIL Boys Basketball State Tournament
HOUSTON – David Montano was standing in a gym in San Antonio watching his team go through a light workout when he got the news.
Montano got the new like everyone else – a release from the UIL stating the 2020 Boys Basketball State Tournament was suspended until further notice due to concerns about the coronavirus.
"Obviously a little disappointed but I understand the reason why," Montano said. "Everybody's going to be disappointed, but we have to understand that this is a valid reason. It is nothing to play with, the health of people is nothing to play with."
Stafford was getting ready to play in its first state semifinal since 2010. The Spartans were set to face Argyle in the Class 4A State Semifinal on Friday at 1:30 p.m. inside the Alamodome.
When Montano answered his phone on Thursday afternoon, he had just found out the news himself about 10 minutes before. Telling his team would be the next step.
"I think my message will be optimistic," Montano said about his message to the team. "We will play at some point and time. If not, ultimately the goal was met in a sense. To get here was the No. 1 goal. Once you get here, whatever happens happens. The goal was met to get to the State Tournament. All-in-all it was a good season. Whether we play or not, it was a great season for this team, the community and the school."
The move by the UIL comes after the last 24 hours has seen massive shutdowns of other sports in the United States.
The NBA suspended its season on Wednesday night after Utah Jazz player Rudy Gobert tested positive for the coronavirus. The NCAA originally announced on Wednesday that it would limit fans for its men's and women's tournaments.
That escalated on Thursday morning with the cancellation of major conference basketball tournaments, including the Big 10, Big XII and American Athletic Conference, followed by the NCAA announcing that it would cancel March Madness all together.
"It's like a forest fire, once it goes, it goes," Montano said. "Everybody follows suit. It would look careless on their part when all the professional leagues have shut things down. I could see it. They are in a tough situation; nobody wants to see it cancelled. But those are hard decisions that have to be made with a lot of things involved. I think they did the right thing."
The biggest question is in the UIL statement, the tournament was "suspended until further notice", leaving the door open for the tournament to possibly being played at a later date.
"For my kids, I would love to see them play in a venue like that," Montano said. "Most of the kids I have never experienced anything like this, being at this level. This is all new to them. It would be weird to play this three or four weeks from now. It would just be weird … How do you keep practices going? I guess UIL would have to make that call. But it just affects everybody in general."
The UIL hasn't released any information on if that would even be a possibility as the "fluid situation" continues to develop by the minute.
But could the 2019-2020 Texas high school boys basketball season come to an end with no state champions?
"It would be weird to end the season without State Champions," "But, what do you do? If they're shutting this down, I'm sure there is talk about shutting schools down for a timeframe and going basically online education, which Stafford is capable of doing. It's weird but it may happen.
"A lot of it is uncharted territory, we just need to make the best decisions for everybody involved."