gahs4ever wrote:Question: How did BJ Mullens get to Canal Winchester and where did he come from?
On another note, has it ever occurred to anyone that the DIII and IV basketball schools in the metro areas are benefitting from more talent being in a much more compressed area? There are more student athletes within a 20-30 min drive of each other in Columbus than there are in the entire SE Oio quadrant. Better competition breeds better athletes.
You would have a real hissy fit if you lived in states where there is only one state champion regradless of enrollment.
Take the private schools out and your state champion will be a joke because everyone will know who the REAL state champion is.
I don't believe these Catholic schools in big cities are the "real" champions in DIII and DIV. I think they're D1 and D2 teams that take advantage of a poorly structured system and treat student athletes like free agents.
I enjoyed the SI article posted, and for the record I also don't like open enrollment. I think in high school athletics, your players are representing your school and community, your neighborhood, your town, whatever. If a kid's parents want him of her to attend another school to have better prospects for college sports, they should move there. I'm sure we all know people that have done this.
I think I accidently deleted your quote about Berlin hiland (sp.?), but you're right to give those teams all the accolades in the world (there's a great SI article about hiland from '02 btw). The fact those programs and those kids have been able to win in a system that is so strongly against teams like them is a credit to them.
If I lived in a state where there was one champion regardless of enrollment, we wouldn't be posting on here, would we? Fact is, I live in Ohio, where we do have different divisions for our schools in an attempt to level the playing field for small communities, and these DI schools in DIII clothing detract from that.
Oh, and I'm not intimately familiar with the programs and recruiting practices of local catholic schools like St. Joe's, etc., but I'm willing to guess two things: 1) Their potential pool of players is much smaller than the city schools that abuse the system, and 2) The area catholic schools' athletic programs Unger (massive congrats on being first team btw), seaman, justice, quinlan, and smith, lamb, brabson all on the same team, thumping small town teams like they're pee wee fodder.