With CHS winning the IHSAA State Football Championship 54-0 over Penn-Harris, the football season is over, and football players can now begin their intramural seasons, according to Matt Petersen, co-supervisor of intramural sports and special education teacher.
“The schedule won’t change (now that the football players can participate). The teams that are made of football players- we had suggested that they add people to their roster that aren’t football players so they don’t forfeit games. Some of them chose to and some of them chose not to, so they will just be 0- and whatever when they start playing,” Petersen said.
According to Petersen, the dates for the 3 vs. 3 basketball tournament to raise money for Dance Marathon are still in the process of being confirmed.
Even though it is too late to join, spring sports are just around the corner.
Stephanie Irwin, member of the intramural sports Student Council and senior, said she encourages students to get sign up in the future.
“It will be a lot of fun getting a lot of people so just come and get involved,” Irwin said.
Related Posts:
- Q&A with sophomore Stephanie Tan and sponsor Fernando Yañez on pickle-pong club, racket sports Stephanie Tan, co-founder and sophomore What inspired you to start the pickle-pong club? I really like both pickleball and ping pong—I’ve played ping pong since I was eight and I’ve played pickleball for around two years now. (Pickleball) is something…
- Athletes, College and Career Counselor consider motivations behind playing sports in college When senior Amanda Ailes first began thinking about college, she had never heard of Huntington University, the school she is now committed to for volleyball. Next year, however, Ailes will be one of the 65,000 student-athletes competing at a National…
- Partisan influences in school board election shape prospective policies for students, affect potential school… In the past few years, school districts across the United States, which have typically been nonpartisan entities, have become increasingly politicized. In 2023, Pew Research quantified a striking partisan divide between the way Democrats and Republicans viewed public education. In…