Albany Times Union

Say R.I.P. to H.S. football?

- NORMAN chad Norman Chad is a syndicated columnist.

High school football participat­ion is down 6.6 percent over the past decade. According to the White House, this is due to NFL players kneeling during the national anthem, a shift from coal to solar-power energy and disastrous Obama-era trade deals.

Uh, whither high school football?

For although football is woven into the fabric of American life, we could be in the midst of an incredible sea change.

Note I: I have just mixed metaphors here, another indication of the growing failure of the U.S. educationa­l system.

Alas, Pan Am, Woolworth’s and Blockbuste­r all once seemed indispensa­ble; all are gone. A couple generation­s from now, could football be looking at fourth down-and-86 to go?

We are facing an existentia­l crisis. You lose high school football, you lose the homecoming game.

You lose the homecoming game, you lose the homecoming queen.

You lose the homecoming queen, you lose the first step in America’s centuries-old tradition of objectifyi­ng, denigratin­g and holding down women.

So what is the exact cause of prep football’s dwindling participat­ion numbers? Most likely, safety concerns — and that’s even before we get to emerging data in regard to brain injuries.

Ever watch the brilliant docu-series “Friday Night Tykes”? Available on Netflix, it is more frightenin­g than Bob Woodward’s “Fear.” And it’s the parents and coaches that will scare you halfway to MMA.

Pop Warner football — for ages 5- 16 — also is in decline, with many making the argument to ban youth tackle football. I am late to come to this position; rather misguided, previously I had proselytiz­ed only on banning pre-teen Twister.

(Column intermissi­on: Stepson of Destiny Isaiah Eisendorf played football and basketball in high school. Much to his mother’s delight, he chose basketball over football after that, eventually leading him to Le Moyne College, which now leads him to a profession­al basketball contract with Hapoel Haifa in Israel’s second-tier league. I don’t know what the Hebrew word is for “caramelize­d French toast,” but those folks better triple their order for the next eight months.)

Although our glorificat­ion of sports culture begins at a young age, it is fully enabled at the high school level. This is the springboar­d to athletic scholarshi­ps, Roll Tide-obsessed Saturdays and Heisman hype.

Note II: In high school, I was miffed when I got inside intel from the senior class committee that I finished runnerup for “Most Likely to Succeed” — to a football captain. Really? Forty-odd years later, I am an almost award-winning columnist watching TV most days while Mr. Jock Strap is selling life insurance out of the back of his ’83 Buick.

Anyhow, more and more high schoolers are turning their backs on football. So what are they doing with their spare time then?

(a) Trying to score iheartradi­o concert tickets.

(b) Taking SAT prep courses.

(c) Downloadin­g cat videos on their smartphone.

(d) Rereading Ayn Rand’s “Atlas Shrugged” for small talk at the next Sadie Hawkins dance.

(e) Online poker by day, esports by night.

If you answered (b) or (d), I assume you have been living under a rock for 25 years and, upon emerging, are thrilled to see “Murphy Brown” on your Thursday night CBS schedule.

In 2017, 20 schools nationwide dropped football. In 2018, from California, Texas and North Carolina to Maryland, Virginia and New Jersey, another dozen or so schools have canceled the season, largely due to lack of participat­ion.

Healdsburg (Calif.) High started with a roster of 18, lost its first two games by a combined 102-0 and, after several players left the team, the remaining voted, 7-4, to end the season. Were they quitters? No.

They were smart.

The school has an acclaimed culinary arts program, an on-site vineyard is being built to allow the study of viticultur­e and nearly one-fifth of the student body takes music classes.

It was an easy call: Good food, good wine, good music, and minimal chance of bodily harm.

Ask The slouch

Q: If the designer sunglasses companies ever gained the inf luence in the poker world that the athletic shoe companies have in basketball, do you see yourself signing a six- or seven-figure deal with the likes of Oakley or Rayban, or will you stand for the integrity of the sport by wearing a pair of offthe-rack, $2.50 shades from Walmart? (Perry Clark, Princeton, W.VA.)

a: Heck, I would sign a three-figure deal to drink a case of Fresca at every poker tournament.

Q: Is Las Vegas taking action yet on Oscar De La Hoya vs. Donald Trump in 2020? (Harrison Roy; Tucson, Ariz.)

a: Wow. That could be the first payper-view presidenti­al election.

Q: In the first half of the U.s.-mexico soccer match, the U.S. set up a wall to defend a Mexican direct kick. Did that fulfill one of POTUS’ campaign promises? (John King; Damascus, Md.) a: Pay the man, Shirley.

You, too, can enter the $1.25 Ask The Slouch Cash Giveaway. Just email asktheslou­ch@aol.com and, if your question is used, you win $1.25 in cash!

 ?? Hans Pennink / Special to the Times Union ?? High school football is still a part of the Capital Region picture, but participat­ion throughout the United States is down 6.6 percent over the past decade.
Hans Pennink / Special to the Times Union High school football is still a part of the Capital Region picture, but participat­ion throughout the United States is down 6.6 percent over the past decade.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States