The Jerusalem Post

Denver Jewish Day School makes history on the basketball court

- SPOTLIGHT • By AMI GELMAN This article was produced as part of JTA’s Teen Journalism Fellowship, a program that works with Jewish teens around the world to report on issues that affect their lives.

After a crushing loss last year in the state championsh­ip round of 16 to Caprock Academy, the Denver Jewish Day School boys’ basketball team began the 2022/23 season hungrier than ever and ready to prove itself. That drive paid off in March when the Tigers became Class 1A state champions, the first-ever crown for the pluralisti­c Jewish community K-12 day school.

But to get there, they had to pull off a 15-point comeback against the reigning state champions, battle through antisemiti­sm on and off the court and travel more than an hour and a half each way for their final three games.

Winning the state championsh­ip was not only a monumental moment for the school, but it was also only the third time ever that a Jewish day school had won its state basketball championsh­ip.

The Tigers dominated the regular season, ending with a 22-3 record and becoming the number two ranked team behind the Belleview Christian Bruins. Going into the playoffs, the Tigers were on the lookout for the Bruins, who had delivered them one of their few regular-season losses. However, during the playoffs, the Tigers outplayed the Bruins twice in both the district and state championsh­ips, delivering Belleview their only two losses of the season and securing the championsh­ip.

Last year’s playoff loss against Caprock Academy, located 250 miles west of Denver, only provided them with more motivation.

“We had a four-hour bus ride home of pure sadness and anger” on the way home, said starter Andrew Zimmerman, 18. “Everyone except the seniors were back in the gym the very next day to start getting ready for this season.”

With a starting five composed of four seniors and one junior, everyone on the team knew that, for many of them, this was their last chance to win the state championsh­ip.

To add to this pressure, several players on the team experience­d antisemiti­sm from fans and players during the tournament. Some were called slurs, while others found posts on social media complainin­g that

the game was moved because of the team’s Sabbath observance and saying that they should be forced to forfeit instead. However, the Tigers ignored what people were saying and focused on what they were best at: playing basketball.

The two other Jewish schools that have won their basketball state championsh­ips were Shalhevet, an Orthodox Jewish high school of about 260 students in Los Angeles that won the California women’s Division IV basketball state championsh­ip only a few days before the Tigers, and the Yavneh Academy of Dallas, a Modern Orthodox school, whose boys’ basketball team won the Texas Associatio­n of Private and Parochial Schools’ 3A title in 2020.

Winning the state championsh­ip as a Jewish day school is “just incredible for the whole Jewish community, and the fact that it’s so rare for it to happen makes it even more special,” said Coach Michael Foonberg. “There’s also a stereotype of [there being very few good] Jewish athletes. And you can overcome that with hard work and commitment and dedication. To stay the course and do it with this Jewish school and being Jewish myself, it was something that I just dreamed about, and to fulfill it is just incredible.”

Fans and team members worried that DJDS would not be able to compete in the Colorado High School Activities Associatio­n’s

state championsh­ip tournament due to the team’s Sabbath observance. However, according to Josh Lake, the athletic director of DJDS, “the changes to the tournament this year were in place for well over a decade. [CHSAA Associate Commission­er Bethany Brookens] and I meet yearly to make sure the accommodat­ions are kosher for the particular season based on when the tournament is scheduled.”

Recently, the state associatio­n has been much more accommodat­ing of DJDS’s Sabbath observance.

“CHSAA respected the fact that we were Jewish and that we keep Shabbos and are not allowed to play on Shabbos,” said Noam. The team was able to play games typically scheduled for late Friday or Saturday afternoon on Friday afternoon and Saturday night, so the team could avoid violating the Sabbath.

According to Brookens, the Sabbath accommodat­ions for DJDS have “been in place and communicat­ed before this year.”

While CHSAA respected the team’s Sabbath observance, fans and parents of opposing players were unhappy with the scheduling changes and expressed antisemiti­c sentiments against the team from the stands and on social media, according to starter Gavin Foonberg, son of Coach Foonberg, 18, and starter Elan Schinagel, 17.

“We always run into [antisemiti­sm]. It happened in the playoffs against McClave. “There were some people calling our fans ‘dirty Jews,’” said Schinagel, “You just have to be the bigger person when that type of stuff happens. It happens generally once or twice a season.”

DJDS prepares the players to deal with antisemiti­sm. According to school policy, if they encounter antisemiti­sm, they are taught to tell their coach or a school administra­tor immediatel­y.

“It’s not a great feeling knowing that we have to prepare for that, but it is a good feeling knowing that our kids know what to do,” said Assistant Coach Matan Halzel.

Despite the protocol, the athletic director of DJDS, Josh Lake, did not receive any reports of antisemiti­sm directly. “No one has shared with me any [reports of ] antisemiti­c behavior at the district, regional, or state tournament this year,” he said. One of the players only discussed the antisemiti­c experience­s he witnessed within the team and said he did not report it because he was used to such behavior.

Officials at McClave said that no one had contacted them about any alleged antisemiti­sm.

“No one from the Denver Jewish Day School contacted myself or any other administra­tor during or after the tournament, so this is the first I am hearing of any issues,” said Maggie Pacino, principal of McClave.

Tiger center Zimmerman said an adult fan supporting McClave walked past and called him a “dirty f–cking Jew.” A DJDS fan who saw it happen told him that the man had been saying similar things the entire game. Zimmerman did not respond to the comment and walked away.

Notwithsta­nding the antisemiti­sm, the state championsh­ip win is still a bright spot for the Jewish community and a huge win for Jewish athletes around the nation.

The win “is history and is something that you’ll never forget,” said Halzel. “It’s etched in stone. We have a trophy, we have a banner, we have a signed ball that’s already in the trophy case. These are memories that will never be taken away from us.” (JTA)

 ?? (Avi Halzel/Courtesy) ?? MEMBERS OF the Denver Jewish Day School celebrate their Colorado Class 1A state championsh­ip earlier this year.
(Avi Halzel/Courtesy) MEMBERS OF the Denver Jewish Day School celebrate their Colorado Class 1A state championsh­ip earlier this year.

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