Category: Press Releases

  • CHSAA, iHeartMedia Denver announce deal to broadcast championship games on radio

    Rangeview Eaglecrest boys basketball generic
    (Matt Mathewes/MVPSportsPics.com)

    Colorado High School Activities Association and iHeartMedia Denver have joined forces to provide Colorado with its most comprehensive radio coverage in several years.

    The new deal covers CHSAA football, basketball and baseball championship games, along with several joint efforts on the public relations and marketing fronts. Stations included in the deal are Orange & Blue 760 AM and KOA News Radio 850 AM.

    “We see this relationship with iHeartMedia as another step in the educational outreach CHSAA has been making,” said CHSAA commissioner Rhonda Blanford-Green. “We see this platform creating better understanding for the community – students, parents and coaches – to experience the excitement and positive energy that high school educational activities bring to us all. It provides another way for us to share the Association’s vision for athletics and the non-athletic activities we sanction.”

    The partnership will be in effect from August 2017 through August 2020, with a joint agreement for an additional two years at the end of the agreement.

    “Orange & Blue 760 is proud to partner with the Colorado High School Activities Association for Colorado’s Championship Games. We support high school athletics and academic excellence of all Colorado students,” said Tim Hager, Region President of iHeartMedia Denver.

    Among the goals of the relationship, Blanford-Green said, is the development and airing of Public Service Announcements during the week, along with the potential development of a weekly radio show and, long term, perhaps looking at the viability of a state-wide prep radio network.

    KDSP will announce its regular season broadcast schedule in the coming days.

  • CHSAA Board of Directors approves drone policy

    The Colorado High School Activities Association Board of Directors approved the following policy on the use of drones at interscholastic events:

    The use of drones, also known as unmanned aerial vehicles, is prohibited for any purpose by any persons at all CHSAA‐sanctioned events, unless express written permission is obtained:

    1. From the host school district during regular season contests.

    (or)

    2. The CHSAA for any postseason/playoff contest.

    This policy includes not only the restricted playing area of the venue(s), but also the physical confines of the entire stadium/field/arena structure.

    For the purposes of this policy, a drone is any aircraft without a human pilot on board.

  • CHSAA statement on Denver East cheer program

    The Colorado High School Activities Association was asked to respond to the Denver East Cheerleading video and story aired on 9 News Wants to Know and has expanded to several national media outlets. Here is CHSAA’s position:

    Our office as representative of the 354-member CHSAA, has grave concerns regarding the content and portion of the video that was released to the public. We have been in contact with the Denver Public Schools administration and believe that the incident is being thoroughly investigated by the school district where any, and all disciplinary action should be taken.

    Any questions and inquiries should be directed to the DPS communications department.

  • CHSAA launches #BackMyTeam, a sportsmanship and school spirit contest for student sections

    Cherry Creek Arapahoe boys basketball
    (Jeff Tucker/jefferywtucker.zenfolio.com)

    CHSAA is launching a new contest where student sections can showcase their school spirit and sportsmanship.

    The new contest, called #BackMyTeam, is encouraging students to show how they best support their school’s athletic teams in sporting and creative ways.

    In order to enter the contest, students and school will submit photos or video (or both!) on Twitter and Instagram by including the hashtag #BackMyTeam and also mentioning the official @CHSAA account. Submissions must come from an official school, administrator or team account, not personal accounts.

    “Our goal is to recognize some of these great student sections we have throughout the state while also encouraging good sportsmanship and school spirit,” said CHSAA associate commissioner Tom Robinson, who oversees sportsmanship for the Association.

    #BackMyTeam will award seasonal winners, which are selected following a week-long vote of three finalists. The winners will receive an award for their athletic department, and will be recognized at some of the biggest events of the season. The fall winner will be announced at the 4A/5A football championships, winter’s winner will be recognized at state basketball, and the spring winner will be unveiled at state track.

    All winners will also be featured on CHSAANow.

    Each season will be split into three submission periods. One finalist will be selected each period. Those periods are detailed on the #BackMyTeam page.

  • New courses on APEDS, mental training available through NFHS Learning Center

    INDIANAPOLIS — New online education courses on “Mental Training for Performance” and “Appearance and Performance Enhancing Drugs and Substances” are now available through the NFHS Learning Center at NFHSLearn.com

    The “Mental Training for Performance” course, which was developed in partnership with the United States Olympic Committee (USOC), provides an introduction to fundamental mental skill techniques developed by USOC sport psychologists and designed to sharpen athletes’ mental games to impact performance and gain a competitive edge.

    Key areas of the course, which is available for $30 through the NFHS Learning Center, include goal-setting, self-talk and energy management. The course also includes bonus resources like self-talk and energy management skills that coaches can take back to their players. Other resources illustrate a goal-setting pyramid along with energy balance and gauging. The course continues the USOC’s commitment to providing the support and training services that athletes need to excel and realize their full potential.

    “The USOC continues to work with America’s elite athletes and coaches to identify key gaps in training across all sports, specifically in the area of mental training and skill development,” said Chris Synder, USOC director of coaching education. “This course is designed to provide coaches with effective methods of identifying and delivering key mental skills to athletes in a way that complements their coaching.”

    The “Appearance and Performance Enhancing Drugs and Substances” course, which is available for free through the NFHS Learning Center, was created in partnership with the Taylor Hooton Foundation, a non-profit organization that is widely recognized as the national leader on this topic. The foundation is leading a national campaign to educate youth and their adult influencers about the dangers of Appearance and Performance Enhancing Drugs and Substances (APEDS).

    Highlights of the online course include an explanation of APEDS, what forms they take and their effects on students, as well as reasons why students use APEDS – both in and out of athletic competition. Guidance and resources for detecting and preventing APEDS use are also discussed in the course.

    “We are thoroughly excited about the introduction of the new NFHS course on APEDS,” said Don Hooton, founder and executive chairman of the Taylor Hooton Foundation. “Our youth are turning to these drugs in record numbers, and this usage is on the increase driven by their desire to compete socially as well as in athletics. The NFHS team has the ability to reach more youth leaders than almost any other organization in the country. We are happy to have the opportunity to work with the NFHS in developing this important new course that will provide coaches and athletic directors with tools that they can use to affect youth behavior in a positive way.” 

    “We are thrilled to be able to expand our course offerings and offer additional opportunities for the interscholastic community to become involved in professional development,” said Dan Schuster, NFHS director of educational services. “We appreciate the contributions of the United States Olympic Committee and the Taylor Hooton Foundation for making these courses available on NFHSLearn.com, as we believe these courses will have a positive impact.”

    After starting with two courses – Fundamentals of Coaching and First Aid for Coaches – in 2007 through the NFHS Coach Education Program, the NFHS Learning Center now offers 53 online courses – including more than 20 of which are free – and has expanded its reach to contest officials, students, administrators and music adjudicators. Since the launch of NFHSlearn.com in 2007, the NFHS has delivered more than 4½ million courses.

  • Ranking from Korey Stringer Institute not representative of CHSAA’s leadership in sports medicine

    Colorado has long been a national leader in many of the advances in player safety and sports medicine. The ranking released Tuesday morning by the Korey Stringer Institute is not an accurate reflection of what is happening in the state of Colorado surrounding sports medicine and player safety.

    “It is my understanding that, last year, the CHSAA chose not to submit or participate with the questionnaire involved with this ranking,” said CHSAA commissioner Rhonda Blanford-Green. “We respect all the work that the Korey Stringer Institute does to educate nationally on these areas, but it was not clear to our Association how these statistics and numbers would be used.

    “Our Association has been at the forefront of sports medicine platforms and we would invite members of the Korey Stringer Institute, and anyone else in the sports medicine field, to attend our committee meetings, or visit our website, CHSAA.org, to see the comprehension of our safety outreach.”

    Specifically, there are dozens of links to best practices available to our member schools at CHSAA.org/sports/medicine, including a direct link to the Korey Stringer Institute.

    Additionally, members of the CHSAA Sports Medicine Committee and the CHSAA staff have routinely been asked to serve on the national sports medicine committee. CHSAA staff also attends the National Athletic Trainers’ Association conference each year.

    As part of our annual All-School Summit last week, we prominently featured presentations on Emergency Action Plans as an additional way to extend the sports medicine education we provide our schools.

    “We are confident in the work our Association does with sports medicine and player safety, and will continue to stand among the national leaders in that area,” Blanford-Green said.

  • NFHS responds to Korey Stringer Institute ranking of high school associations regarding managing injury risk

    INDIANAPOLIS — In response to the Korey Stringer Institute’s ranking of state high school associations in the area of managing injury risk to high school student-athletes, NFHS Executive Director Bob Gardner has released the following statement and accompanying support information.

    NFHS STATEMENT ON MANAGING INJURY RISK IN HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS

    In order to provide the safest and most enjoyable experience for the 7.9 million participants in high school sports, it takes a concerted effort on the part of every organization connected to interscholastic athletics.

    For a number of years, the NFHS and its member state associations have worked cooperatively with organizations such as the National Athletic Trainers’ Association (NATA) and the Korey Stringer Institute (KSI) to provide as much information as possible for the nation’s 19,000-plus high schools regarding heat illness awareness and prevention, as well as other safety issues related to the heart and head injuries.

    Unfortunately, the Korey Stringer Institute has proclaimed itself as judge and jury of heat-illness prevention and other safety issues by ranking the 51 NFHS-member state high school associations – these very associations that have been promoting risk-minimization precautions in their schools’ athletic programs for many more years than the seven-year existence of the KSI.

    The overall safety of student-athletes competing in high school sports is a key objective of the NFHS and all 51 state associations. Information on precautions related to heat and head issues is regularly shared with schools across the country. While the 19,000 high schools range in size from 50 students to 5,000, there has never been a time that coaches, athletic directors and school administrators were more focused on risk minimization.

     Very simply, a review of state association websites, such as the one employed by KSI, is an incomplete measurement of the efforts employed by states to assist their member schools with heat, heart and head issues. Providing more research data, as well as funds to enact more prevention programs, would be much more useful than giving grades to these associations.

    For the past three years, the state high school associations have attended annual sports medicine meetings with KSI, the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine, and the National Athletic Trainers’ Association. The meetings have been entitled “Collaborative Solutions,” and they have been intended as an opportunity to share ideas about heat illness, cardiac problems and head injuries. The participating organizations have worked together, and the nation’s young athletes have benefited.

    Now, KSI has utilized a new approach. By “grading” state high school associations based on a limited number of criteria, KSI has chosen to shine a light on certain areas, but it has left others in the dark. Thus, the information provided today gave an incomplete view. The full picture is much more positive. In fact, the state high school associations, and their respective sports medicine committees, post guidelines, speak at seminars, give warnings and alerts, and otherwise promote the health and well-being of young people. Certainly, there is room for improvement, and the American educational system will continue to be resource-challenged. Schools will need more funding, more defibrillators, more athletic trainers and more constructive legislation. With the assistance of everyone who cares about young athletes, including KSI, we can keep getting better.

    The NFHS and its 51 member state associations are disappointed that KSI is, in essence, criticizing many states in this area rather than continuing to work with these groups in a collaborative relationship.

    Protecting the health and safety of our nation’s high school student-athletes is an ongoing focus of all NFHS state associations. Following are some of the numerous initiatives undertaken by the NFHS in conjunction with its member state associations in the area of managing risk for the 7.9 million participants in high school sports.

    HEAT ISSUES

    Through the NFHS Learning Center at www.NFHSLearn.com, the NFHS offers a free course titled Heat Illness Prevention at https://nfhslearn.com/courses/34000/heat-illness-prevention as well as its core course First Aid, Health and Safety at https://nfhslearn.com/courses/26/first-aid-health-and-safety, which was developed with its partner, the American Red Cross.

    In addition, the NFHS Sports Medicine Advisory Committee provides state associations and its member schools additional heat-related guidelines on the sports medicine page of its website at http://www.nfhs.org/resources/sports-medicine/ as well as the NFHS Heat Acclimatization and Heat Illness Prevention Position Statement at https://www.nfhs.org/media/1015653/heat-acclimatization-and-heat-illness-prevention-position-statement-2015.pdf and the NFHS Position Statement and Recommendations for Maintaining Hydration to Optimize Performance and Minimize the Risk for Exertional Heat Illness at http://www.nfhs.org/media/1014751/nfhs_smac_hydration_position_statement_october_2014.pdf.

    The cover story of the May 2017 issue of High School Today – “Dangers of Heat Illness Reduced by Following Proper Guidelines” by David Csillan – offered some tremendous resources: http://www.nfhs.org/articles/dangers-of-heat-illness-reduced-by-following-proper-guidelines/.

    HEART ISSUES

    In 2015, the NFHS provided the “Anyone Can Save a Life” emergency action plan toolkit originally developed by the Minnesota State High School League to member state associations for distribution to the nation’s schools. Through this program, schools have activated Emergency Action Plans, including the use of Automated External Defibrillators (AEDs). More information on the “Anyone Can Save a Life” program is available at http://www.anyonecansavealife.org/.

    The NFHS also offers its free course on Sudden Cardiac Arrest at https://nfhslearn.com/courses/61032/sudden-cardiac-arrest, which was developed with its partner, Simon’s Fund. 

    HEAD ISSUES

    • 2005-present – Through the National High School Sports-Related Injury Surveillance System (High School RIO) http://www.ucdenver.edu/academics/colleges/PublicHealth/research/ResearchProjects/piper/projects/RIO/Pages/default.aspx and Dr. Dawn Comstock, the NFHS and its member associations have used comprehensive injury data as a resource in the rules-writing process to reduce risk of future injuries. High School RIO is a sports-injury surveillance system that has accumulated data from a large national sample of high schools annually since 2005-06. Since that time, High School RIO has captured information on nearly 80,000 injuries sustained during more than 40 million athlete exposures. The NFHS Sports Medicine Advisory Committee and individual NFHS rules committees use data from High School RIO to better understand which athletes are at risk of injury during various types of sports activities. As a result, evidence-based decisions can be made to limit risk. High School RIO data is used to monitor injury rates over time, to identify new concerns and to evaluate the effectiveness of rules changes.
    • Data from High School RIO during the 2015-16 season indicated that attempts by the NFHS and its member state associations to reduce the risk of head trauma and concussions in football have proven effective. Surveys from 2015-16 indicated that the rate of concussions during practice dropped below 5.0 per 1,000 athletic exposures (to 4.77) for the first time since 2010-11. Also, a 2015 study by the University of Wisconsin, Madison, revealed that the rate of concussions was reduced by more than 50 percent from the previous two seasons. These studies came on the heels of the 2014 NFHS Concussion Summit Task Force, which recommended that state associations adopt plans for limiting contact during football practices. 
    • In addition, The National Center for Catastrophic Sport Injury Research (NCCSIR) seeks to enhance the understanding of sports-related catastrophic injuries, illnesses and fatalities through active surveillance and research, with a focus on head/neck injuries, commotio cordis injuries, fatal/near-fatal cardiac conditions and fatal/near-fatal heat-related conditions. NCCSIR is committed to providing timely and useful information to the NFHS, its member state associations and high schools. The development of an online portal in 2015 enables state high school associations and their member schools to report the basic details surrounding catastrophic sports events (www.sportinjuryreport.org). Ongoing, active surveillance to monitor the incidence of catastrophic injuries, illnesses and fatalities is critical to identify areas for prevention and further study. Continued and improved efforts for detailed information and record-gathering is also critical to prevention.
    • 2008 – The NFHS Sports Medicine Advisory Committee advocated that a concussed athlete must be removed from play and not allowed to play on the same day.
    • 2009-present – All NFHS rules publications have contained guidelines for management of a student exhibiting signs, symptoms or behaviors consistent with a concussion. Such player shall be immediately removed from the contest and shall not return to play until cleared by an appropriate health-care professional.
    • 2010 – The NFHS developed its “Concussion in Sport” online course at https://nfhslearn.com/courses/61064/concussion-in-sports. In addition, a related course specifically for high school students – “Concussion for Students” – is available at https://nfhslearn.com/courses/61059/concussion-for-students. More than three million courses have been taken since that time. In addition, a recent study indicated individuals who took the free course demonstrated a 40-percent higher level of understanding of concussions as compared to their pre-course knowledge base.
    • 2010-present – The “Suggested Guidelines for Management of Concussion” have been published in all NFHS rules books. That statement is available at http://www.nfhs.org/media/1018446/suggested_guidelines__management_concussion_april_2017.pdf.
    • 2011 – A six-page section on Concussions was added to the fourth edition of the NFHS Sports Medicine Handbook, which was distributed free to all high schools in the country.
    • 2011-2012 – The NFHS Football Rules Committee adopted “Concussions Related to Proper Use of the Helmet” as a Point of Emphasis.
    • 2014 – The NFHS Concussion Summit Task Force met in Indianapolis and adopted recommendations for reducing the amount of full contact in practices. State associations crafted their own policies based on these recommendations for implementation in the 2015 football season.
    • 2014 – By January 2014, all state governments had enacted concussion laws which established mandatory protocols.
    • 2014 – The NFHS Football Rules Committee adopted a definition and penalty for targeting aimed at preventing players from hitting an opponent – primarily with the helmet – above the shoulders.
    • The NFHS Sports Medicine Advisory Committee, which is composed of six medical experts, three certified athletic trainers, four administrators from state high school associations, as well as one high school coach and one official, has been invaluable in providing important information for NFHS rules committees and state association sports medicine committees in writing rules that minimize risk of injury for high school student-athletes. All member state associations have sports medicine committees that work with schools in their states to minimize risk of injury to student-athletes.
  • High school officials organizations, seeking new members, set up training classes

    Kent Denver Wheat Ridge boys lacrosse
    (Cindy Betancourt/eStudioWest.com)

    AURORA – Like every other state in the country, Colorado high school sports are facing an officials’ crisis.

    There aren’t enough officials to cover all the games the kids are playing, says CHSAA associate commissioner Tom Robinson who oversees sports officials in the state.

    “We are having to ask schools to alter varsity schedules just to ensure that we can cover those games, but there will be sub-varsity games that won’t have complete crews on some of them. That isn’t fair to the athletes and to the officials, because that level is a training level for both,” Robinson noted.

    The officials’ organizations that serve Colorado’s high schools have developed classes for those interested in becoming an official. In most sports, these classes are local and the leadership will assist in registration, training and can answer any questions that might arise.

    Classes start this month. Please see below for dates, sites and locations of these.

    [divider]

    Download: PDF

    https://old.chsaanow.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/new-officials-meetings.pdf

  • Alternate two-piece uniform approved for high school wrestling

    State wrestling Pepsi Center generic
    (Ryan Casey/CHSAANow.com)

    INDIANAPOLIS — An alternate two-piece uniform consisting of compression shorts or shorts designed for wrestling and a form-fitted compression shirt has been approved for the 2017-18 season in high school wrestling. Wrestlers will have the option of the new two-piece uniform or the traditional one-piece singlet.

    This revision to Rule 4-1-1 was one of 11 rules changes recommended by the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Wrestling Rules Committee at its April 2-4 meeting in Indianapolis, and all changes were subsequently approved by the NFHS Board of Directors.

    The compression shorts or shorts designed for wrestling shall be school-issued and shall have a minimum 4-inch inseam that does not extend below the knee. The form-fitted compression shirt shall not cover or extend below the elbow and shall have a minimum 3-inch tail. The shirt may be worn under a singlet or with compression shorts or shorts designed for wrestling. 

    Specific language was developed regarding undergarment requirements for female contestants wearing a one-piece singlet or a form-fitted compression shirt, as well as for male contestants wearing shorts designed for wrestling.

    The committee approved use of the alternate two-piece uniform in the hopes of increasing boys and girls participation in the sport after receiving favorable results from experimentation and positive comments from schools, students, coaches and officials.

    The committee approved several rules related to minimizing risk of injury in the sport. Rule 4-5-3 now prohibits any activities that promote weight loss or weight gain when an athlete misses weight on his or her first attempt on the scale. In addition to activities that promote dehydration or drinking fluids to gain weight, the rule now prohibits activities such as cutting hair, modifying clothing, etc.

    Another change designed to reduce risk of injury was elimination of the straight-back salto, regardless of which body part (head, neck or shoulder) hits the mat first. The straight-back salto in the rear-standing position that brings the defensive wrestler straight back with feet in the air is intended to have the defensive wrestler’s head, neck or shoulder(s) hit the mat first, and is now an illegal move.

    In addition, added to the list of illegal holds/maneuvers in Rule 7-1-5 was a front flip and/or front hurdle over an opponent in the standing position.

    “The attempt to flip or hurdle an opponent from a neutral position is not only an elevated risk to the wrestler attempting the maneuver, it also places the opponent in a disadvantage position as he or she is not only left to counter the scoring attempt, but is placed in a position of responsibility for not reacting in a manner that may cause a slam or unsafe return to the mat of the wrestler who actually initiated the maneuver,” said Elliot Hopkins, NFHS director of sports and student services.    

    The committee approved two changes in Rule 5-11 related to falls and near falls. In 5-11-1, the shoulders or scapula of the offensive wrestler no longer must be inbounds to earn a fall. The committee agreed that wrestling should continue if the offensive wrestler’s supporting parts remain inbounds and no body part of the defensive wrestler goes off the mat. In 5-11-5, “unless any part of the shoulders or both scapulae of the defensive wrestler is inbounds” was eliminated. If wrestling is continuing during a match, near falls and falls will be awarded/earned regardless of the out-of-bounds line.

    In a related rule, Rule 5-15-2b, c was changed as follows: “Near-fall points or a fall shall be earned while the supporting points of either wrestler are inbounds.”

    “The committee agreed that offensive wrestling should be rewarded,” Hopkins said. “If wrestling is continuing, as allowed by current rules, and points for escapes and reversals are allowed, the ability to earn a fall or near fall should be there as well, with no deference to the out-of-bounds line.”

    Other changes approved by the committee include the following:

    • Rule 5-19-10: The referee no longer may be behind the contestants when starting the wrestlers from the down position, which has led the false starts by one or both wrestlers.
    • Rule 6-6-4a(1) and 6-6-5a(1): Errors by the timekeeper, official scorer or referee must be corrected prior to the offended contestant leaving the mat area and before the start of the next match on that mat.
    • 7-6-4d: Stalling occurs when the contestant in the advantage position stays behind the opponent while on his/her feet, making no attempt to bring the opponent to the mat.

    “The wrestling rules committee did another phenomenal job in taking the necessary strides to promote participation by approving a two-piece alternate uniform to be worn,” Hopkins said. “The committee also continued its commitment to reducing risk by making the straight-back salto and suplay illegal maneuvers, as well as prohibiting weight loss or gain in the weigh-in area. In addition, scoring a fall or near-fall is strengthened by the modifications to the definition and location of fall and near-fall in our rules book.”

    Wrestling ranks seventh in popularity among boys at the high school level with 250,653 participants, according to the 2015-16 NFHS Athletics Participation Survey. In addition, 13,496 girls participate in the sport throughout the nation.

  • Assistant commissioner Harry Waterman resigns from CHSAA

    Assistant commissioner Harry Waterman has decided to pursue new career opportunities, and has resigned his position with the Colorado High School Activities Association for next school year.

    The staff wishes him well in his new pursuits, and knows he will be an asset wherever he lands.