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Mount Saint Joseph, Calvert Hall decide not to play St. Frances in football this fall, citing safety factors
Katherine DunnContact ReporterThe Baltimore Sun
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With the St. Frances football program growing into a national powerhouse, local rivals Mount Saint Joseph on Wednesday and Calvert Hall on Thursday became the second and third Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association teams to decide not to play the Panthers this fall. Loyola Blakefield withdrew from the MIAA in football in January.
Mount Saint Joseph school officials cited safety concerns and the perceived difference in the goals of the two programs as the reason for not being willing to play St. Frances next season. Calvert Hall cited similar concerns in a note to team parents regarding the Panthersâ âsize and athletic disparity.â
The move prompted criticism from St. Frances co-coach Henry Russell, who tweeted: âWe live in a world of cowards, who teach kids to run from their problems rather than face them. Make excuses for failure, use lies, and take their ball and go home. I will never be a coach who conforms to this behavior and thought. What are you teaching your student athletes?â
Last fall, St. Frances, located in East Baltimore and playing its home games at Utz Field in Patterson Park, overwhelmed most opponents with its skill, size, athleticism and depth, leading to the safety concerns of Mount Saint Joseph and other schools. The Panthers won the MIAA A Conference for the second straight season and finished 13-0. The Panthers were ranked No. 1 by The Sun and in the Maryland state media poll. They finished No. 4 in USA Todayâs Super 25 after defeating Bingham (Utah), 41-3, in the Geico State Champions Bowl Series in Phoenix on Dec. 23.
Mount Saint Joseph finished 6-4 last fall. The Gaels were 3-3 in the conference, but they came closer to St. Frances than any other team, falling, 37-22. No other team scored more than nine points and no other A Conference team scored more than a touchdown against the Panthers.
Lee Dove, executive director of the MIAA, confirmed that his office had been informed of the decision.
âThe league has been notified of [Mount St. Josephâs] intent not to play St. Frances and right now, the leadership of the league is taking that under advisement and we donât really have a comment at this time,â Dove said.
St. Frances co-coaches Biff Poggi and Russell declined to comment further than Russellâs tweet that referred to the situation Wednesday morning.
One Gaels player, Aamir Hall, who will be a junior wide receiver-defensive back in the fall, said of the decision in a tweet Wednesday: âI never been scared of competition especially against the best out of best. Went at them boys last year and Iâm definitely coming harder this year if we see yâall when all this bs blow off.â
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Mount Saint Joseph, Calvert Hall decide not to play St. Frances in football this fall, citing safety factors
Katherine DunnContact ReporterThe Baltimore Sun
Privacy Policy
With the St. Frances football program growing into a national powerhouse, local rivals Mount Saint Joseph on Wednesday and Calvert Hall on Thursday became the second and third Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association teams to decide not to play the Panthers this fall. Loyola Blakefield withdrew from the MIAA in football in January.
Mount Saint Joseph school officials cited safety concerns and the perceived difference in the goals of the two programs as the reason for not being willing to play St. Frances next season. Calvert Hall cited similar concerns in a note to team parents regarding the Panthersâ âsize and athletic disparity.â
The move prompted criticism from St. Frances co-coach Henry Russell, who tweeted: âWe live in a world of cowards, who teach kids to run from their problems rather than face them. Make excuses for failure, use lies, and take their ball and go home. I will never be a coach who conforms to this behavior and thought. What are you teaching your student athletes?â
Last fall, St. Frances, located in East Baltimore and playing its home games at Utz Field in Patterson Park, overwhelmed most opponents with its skill, size, athleticism and depth, leading to the safety concerns of Mount Saint Joseph and other schools. The Panthers won the MIAA A Conference for the second straight season and finished 13-0. The Panthers were ranked No. 1 by The Sun and in the Maryland state media poll. They finished No. 4 in USA Todayâs Super 25 after defeating Bingham (Utah), 41-3, in the Geico State Champions Bowl Series in Phoenix on Dec. 23.
Mount Saint Joseph finished 6-4 last fall. The Gaels were 3-3 in the conference, but they came closer to St. Frances than any other team, falling, 37-22. No other team scored more than nine points and no other A Conference team scored more than a touchdown against the Panthers.
Lee Dove, executive director of the MIAA, confirmed that his office had been informed of the decision.
âThe league has been notified of [Mount St. Josephâs] intent not to play St. Frances and right now, the leadership of the league is taking that under advisement and we donât really have a comment at this time,â Dove said.
St. Frances co-coaches Biff Poggi and Russell declined to comment further than Russellâs tweet that referred to the situation Wednesday morning.
One Gaels player, Aamir Hall, who will be a junior wide receiver-defensive back in the fall, said of the decision in a tweet Wednesday: âI never been scared of competition especially against the best out of best. Went at them boys last year and Iâm definitely coming harder this year if we see yâall when all this bs blow off.â
[email protected]
twitter.com/kdunnsun
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Preston: No sympathy for the MIAA schools complaining about St. Frances -
St. Frances football faces struggle to put together football schedule after MIAA departures
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