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Posts Tagged ‘high school sports’

Deaf Football Team’s Record-breaking Season

Thursday, December 9th, 2021
Sophomore Joshua Cypert, left, signs to freshman Xavier Gamboa, right, members of the Cubs, the California School for the Deaf, Riverside's varsity football team, during their game against the Desert Christian Knights in Riverside, Calif., on Friday night, Nov. 12, 2021. Credit: © Adam Perez, The New York Times/Redux Pictures

Sophomore Joshua Cypert, left, signs to freshman Xavier Gamboa, right, members of the Cubs, the California School for the Deaf, Riverside, varsity football team, during their game against the Desert Christian Knights in Riverside, Calif., on Friday night, Nov. 12, 2021.
Credit: © Adam Perez, The New York Times/Redux Pictures

In a true underdog story, the varsity football team from the California School for the Deaf, Riverside, in Riverside, California, made its way to the division championship for the first time in the 68-year school history this fall. Riverside is the only school for the deaf in southern California. It ranges from preschool through high school and only has 168 students. The football team plays in an eight-player league designed for smaller schools.

The California School for the Deaf (CSDR) Cubs rely on American Sign Language to communicate in huddles and on the field. Coach and physical education teacher Keith Adams is also deaf and has two sons on the team. The team’s closeness and mastery of coded hand signals led them through the record-breaking season.

The CSDR coaches and players have switched the narrative. Instead of hearing impairments being an obstacle to the game, they view them as an advantage. Some of the coaches have explained that hearing impairments lead to heightened visual senses, enabling players to take in more of what is going on around the field. Playing against hearing teams, they also do not have to make calls or run to the sidelines to get instructions from their coach.

The Cubs were undefeated 12-0 until they faced the Faith Baptist Contenders on Nov. 27. While the Cubs lost to the Contenders 74-22, the team counts it as a win for their school and the deaf community. The team is still reeling after the unprecedented season. With 21 of their 23 players eligible to play again next year, the Cubs are looking forward to next season, making plans to become an even stronger team.

 

Tags: American Sign Language, deafness, football, high school sports
Posted in Current Events, Recreation & Sports | Comments Off

Baseball in Japan: The Kōshien

Thursday, August 24th, 2017

August 24, 2017

Yesterday afternoon, on August 23, the baseball team from Hanasaki Tokuharu High School in Saitama Prefecture (an administrative unit near Tokyo) captured Japan’s ultimate amateur prize: the summer Kōshien championship. The summer Kōshien, formally known as the National High School Baseball Championship, is one of Japan’s biggest sporting events. The two-week tournament is played every August near the port city of Kobe in Hyōgo Prefecture at Hanshin Kōshien Stadium—a ballpark built specifically for the tournament. The boys from Hanasaki Tokuharu downed Hiroshima Koryo High School 14-4 to win the school’s first national title.

Summer Kōshien 2009 Final, 24 August 2009. Kōshien Credit: 百楽兎 (licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0)

Hanshin Kōshien Stadium, seen here during the 2009 summer Kōshien final, has hosted the national high school baseball tournament since 1924.
Credit: 百楽兎 (licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0)

Japan’s first national high school baseball tournament took place in 1915. The tournament quickly grew in size and popularity, and a large, centrally located ballpark was built in the Kōshien neighborhood of Nishinomiya, near Kobe, to host it. Kōshien Stadium opened for the 1924 tournament, and with seating for some 50,000 fans, it was the largest sports park in Asia at the time. A second, much smaller invitational high school baseball tournament has been played in March at Kōshien since 1925. The two tournaments are distinguished by their seasons—the spring Kōshien and summer Kōshien. The summer tournament, which begins with nearly 4,000 teams, is a much larger event. Only 36 teams participate in the spring Kōshien. This year marks the 99th summer Kōshien—a few years were missed during World War II (1939-1945). Before the war, teams from Korea, Manchuria, and Taiwan also participated in the tournament.

The 93rd National High School Baseball Tournament Kōshien Championship Final (Kobo Star College vs. Otsumi Ozaki), 20 August 2011. Credit: Kentaro Iemoto (licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0)

Ballplayers compete during the 2011 National High School Baseball Championship at Hanshin Kōshien Stadium in Nishinomiya, Japan. Credit: Kentaro Iemoto (licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0)

Every year beginning in June, high school baseball teams throughout Japan begin the road to Kōshien with tournaments to decide the prefecture champions. By the beginning of August, the single-elimination tourney has pared the teams down to 49—one from each prefecture except Hokkaido and Tokyo, which each get two teams. On August 8, the intense summer Kōshien began sending losing teams home. Millions of people follow the tournament on television each year, and the ballpark is consistently filled during the busy two-week schedule. Without losing a game, Koryo and Hanasaki Tokuharu reached the championship final, always a highly anticipated and tension-filled game. The boys from Hanasaki Tokuharu dominated the final, giving Saitama Prefecture its first Kōshien champions. For Koryo, the loss in the final left a familiar sour taste. The Hiroshima school has now reached the final four times but never won. Koryo’s previous final losses came in 2007, 1967, and 1927—the run of unlucky sevens has continued.

Miami Marlins outfielder Ichiro Suzuki watches his 3,000 career hit fly during the game against the Colorado Rockies at Coors Field on August, 7, 2016. The triple was the 3,000 hit in Ichiro's career. Major League Baseball star Ichiro Suzuki, seen here with the Miami Marlins in 2016, led his high school team from Nagoya to the summer Kōshien in 1991. Credit: © Michael Reaves, The Denver Post/Getty Images

Major League Baseball star Ichiro Suzuki, seen here with the Miami Marlins in 2016, led his high school team from Nagoya to the summer Kōshien in 1991. Credit: © Michael Reaves, The Denver Post/Getty Images

Hanshin Kōshien Stadium has been home to the Hanshin Tigers (formerly the Osaka Tigers) professional baseball club since 1936. The name Hanshin comes from the Hanshin Electric Railway Company, which owns the stadium and the team. Each August, the Tigers—a top-flight pro club—must go on the road for two weeks to accommodate the summer Kōshien.

Tags: baseball, high school sports, japan, koshien
Posted in Current Events, History, People, Recreation & Sports | Comments Off

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