News for those who live, work and play in North Santiam Canyon

No fall sports – New activities calendar starts Dec. 28

The Oregon School Activities Association has updated its plans for the 2020-21 school year. The upshot? The official calendar starts Dec. 28, with practices and features much shorter seasons. And football and other “fall” sports are moving to the spring.

The decision of the OSAA’s executive board, announced Aug. 5, supersedes a previous outline, released July 22, that called for a delayed fall opening with football still in the autumn mix.

“I think we all knew the one-month delay for fall sports was wishful thinking,” Stayton High Athletic Director Darren Shryock told Our Town. “The OSAA decision to play all three seasons, condensed as they will be, is the best we can hope for. If we truly get to play all three seasons, that will be great. It is going to be a rough fall for kids as it is. For many of them, athletics are what keep them coming to school.” 

Darren Shyrock
Darren Shyrock

Here is how the calendar looks at this point:

Season 2 (I will get to Season 1 below) includes swimming, wrestling and basketball, with practices starting Dec. 28 and games Jan. 11. Possible state playoffs, currently labeled an “OSAA culminating week” could take place March 1-7. Swimming would be limited to eight meets, wrestling to nine events and basketball to 14 games. Likely all competition will come against league opponents.

Season 3 features the usual fall sports of football, cross country, volleyball and soccer. Practice would start Feb. 22, games March 8 (except football, which would open play March 15) and the OSAA culminating week would begin May 3 for football and April 26 for the other sports. Contest reductions also would be in play, with nine meets for cross country, 14 playing dates for volleyball, 10 soccer matches and seven football games.

Season 4 includes the usual spring sports of baseball, softball, track and field, golf and tennis. Practices can begin April 19, with first contests set for May 3. The OSAA culminating week would be June 21 through June 26, thus ending the activities year almost a month later than most activities under the “normal” OSAA calendar. Golfers would be limited to 14 9-hole rounds, tennis teams could schedule 12 playing dates, track and field squads can have nine meets and baseball and softball squads can play 18 games.

Other OSAA sanctioned activities such as cheerleading, dance and drill, speech, solo music, choir, band and orchestra, all have been approved to practice Aug. 31, with OSAA culminating weeks starting in March and running through mid-May.

The OSAA also has tacked on kind of a free-form Season 1, also starting Aug. 31, in which schools and teams could engage in practices and regional competition as long as all of the state orders related to the coronavirus are followed. Football and other “full-contact” activities are out of luck here.

“We are going to encourage our coaches to stay in contact with their athletes a couple of times a week to help kids stay healthy both physically and mentally,” Shryock said. “It is very likely that all non-league contests will be gone, and we may move to regional play only as we get closer. At any rate, sports of any kind this year will be taken as a win.”

Left unresolved are those OSAA culminating weeks, although OSAA officials told Our Town that they would NOT include district championship competition. One could see fairly painless assembling of fields for state golf, tennis, cross country, wrestling and track and field championships, but the challenges of holding large gatherings and whether to allow spectators remain out there.

A four-team or eight-team basketball, baseball or softball state tournament could be accomplished in a week, but first you would have to figure out who those four or eight teams are.

A state football championship is inconceivable in a one-week scenario although one OSAA official noted the possibility of football “bowl games.” 

Something tells me we haven’t heard the last word on this one. There will be tweaks. Stay tuned.

Follow me on Twitter.com @jameshday. 

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