The Oklahoman

OSSAA should give more credit to parochial school athletics

- Pat Rupel was a coach for the Mount Saint Mary Catholic High School crosscount­ry team for several years and a 1975 USTFF All-American in the marathon. Your Turn Pat Rupel Guest columnist

For 10 seasons (2004-2012 and 20142016), as a coach for Mount Saint Mary Catholic High School (MSM) crosscount­ry team, it was my privilege to compete with some brilliant Oklahoma high school distance coaches. The MSM athletic director joked that he doubled my salary every year (0 times $0). My “coach’s office” was the cab of my pickup.

Before 2004, the oldest high school in Oklahoma had never had a cross-country program. That fall, to provide one student with an increased chance for success, we started a cross-country program and he won state. By the way, he was Catholic and had attended Catholic schools all his life. If he had lived in Texas, he would have been a parochial school student (not a private school student), because in Texas they call it TAPPS, the Texas Associatio­n of Parochial and Private Schools (note the distinctio­n).

Our cross-country program had to compete (like all small Oklahoma schools) with more glamorous sports like volleyball, softball, football and basketball. You have probably seen the Tshirt that says, “My sport is your sport’s punishment.” With this intra-scholastic competitio­n and low enrollment numbers, plus the fact that most Catholics go to public schools, we always had trouble making a team of seven (minimum of five to score) for girls’ or boys’ teams. Therefore, I never experience­d this “advantage” we were supposed to have from being able to “deny enrollment” to some students.

So, did the MSM team have an advantage over other Oklahoma schools of the same size, because it was “private?” Our team and individual runners competed well against same-size schools over a long period of time, simply because we had a developmen­t program, not a “conditioni­ng program” for other sports.

All of our All-State and All-Star runners, except the first one, were developed over four years. Each of those students had run no more than a mile when they had entered as freshmen. And they were all Catholic, save one. As it turns out, he was a “kissin’ cousin” (Episcopali­an). So it seems more logical (though wrong) to say that Catholics are better distance runners than to say parochial schools have an advantage due to enrollment requiremen­ts.

I went to Catholic schools from grades three through 12, because we are Catholic. My high school cross-country coach was not paid as well as his public school peers, but he had been an experience­d collegiate runner. He was a great coach and worked us hard with two-aday workouts. Although we were not as good as the public school team from J.J. Pearce High School, our Bishop Lynch High School team, made up of all Catholic boys, won our division of the University Interschol­astic League (Texas) cross-country state championsh­ip in 1970. Four of us have All-State medals. However, because we were a Catholic school, we were not given credit for the team victory.

Hopefully, the Oklahoma Secondary School Activities Associatio­n (OSSAA) will give Oklahoma parochial schools more credit for having good programs and examine more carefully the logic and proofs of so-called “advantages” that private or parochial schools have in interschol­astic competitio­n.

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