St. Paul, like Minneapolis, will have one combined high school team next year

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SpreadOut!
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St. Paul, like Minneapolis, will have one combined high school team next year

Post by SpreadOut! »

Local news person Vineeta Sawkar, whose kids play(ed) for Highland Park, just broke the news on X that St. Paul, like Minneapolis, will have one high school team starting next season for all St. Paul high schools combined. I think this is a positive development for urban hockey, as it’s certainly worked well for Minneapolis.

Here’s my beef, though. Like they allow Minneapolis to play Class A, I assume the MSHSL will allow St. Paul to play Class A. The combined enrollment of all St. Paul public high schools and all Minneapolis public high schools clearly would make these teams Class AA in size, but I assume the MSHSL lets them play Class A due to demographics, the number of kids who were previously eligible for free and reduced price lunches (before all lunches became free), etc.

I totally get this and support it. But, if the MSHSL is gonna allow this for these teams, they must also allow it for fully developed inner ring suburban schools with similar challenges, for example Armstrong-Cooper and Tartan-North St. Paul. The demographics of South Minneapolis and Highland Park are wealthier than the demographics of Robbinsdale, Crystal, Oakdale and North St. Paul.

The MSHSL needs to be consistent in how it treats all teams and not just give Minneapolis and St. Paul breaks.

Thoughts?
BSUBeaver
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St. Paul Public Schools

Post by BSUBeaver »

It is being reported on the Star Tribune website that SPPS is taking St. Paul Johnson and St. Paul Highland Park and combining them into one program.
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St. Paul Johnson boys hockey is no more.

A tradition-rich program with state titles in 1947, 1953, 1955 and 1963 was the latest boys hockey causality, bowing to changing eras and demographics on St. Paul’s East Side.

“We hung on as long as we could,” Johnson coach Steve “Moose” Younghans told the Star Tribune on Thursday morning.

St. Paul school district leaders sent an email to students and families announcing the news Thursday morning. In the email, obtained by the Star Tribune, district leaders wrote that they believe all St. Paul players will have an opportunity to play next season on this single team without cuts.

Highland Park will be the host school, with practices and games being held there. St. Paul Central also feeds into Highland; Como Park previously fed into Johnson. The Highland coaching staff will lead the team, the district’s email said.

Johnson will have only four players for the upcoming 2025-26 season, Younghans said, plus two from Como Park who fed the co-operative program, and one from Open World Learning Community.

“It has been decided St. Paul Public Schools and the athletic directors to combine (co-op) the hockey teams and create one SPPS team starting the 2025-26 season” Highland athletic director Pat Auran wrote in the email.

This news continues a trend of dissolving inner-city and first-ring public school hockey programs. Minneapolis has put one team on the ice representing seven public schools since the 2010-11 season. Bloomington Kennedy is on the same track as St. Paul Johnson: the Eagles players will fold into Bloomington Jefferson next season. Richfield disbanded its team, and in Robbinsdale, Armstrong and Cooper form a single co-op.

Half of the eight 1991 state tournament participants will not field a team next winter: Richfield, Kennedy, St. Paul Johnson and Burnsville.

How rich is Johnson’s history? The great Herb Brooks played there, on the 1955 team, before going on to become hockey royalty.

“It’s a sad day, a real sad day,” said Skip Peltier, a standout member of the 1963 championship team.

More recently, Highland Park was on the opposite side of the sliding-participation trend in boys hockey. In 2016, the school completed construction of a privately funded locker facility, the centerpiece of its remarkable program comeback. The varsity program had ended in 1987 and formed a co-op with Central that lasted until 2007, when both schools decided to send their hockey players to Como Park’s program.

Strong youth program numbers led to Highland Park varsity hockey relaunching in 2010-11, and soon it will stand as the single host for all.

The Johnson and Highland Park programs posted losing records this season, with the Johnson Governors going 9-14-2 and the Highland Park Scots 8-17-2. Across the river, Minneapolis has posted successful seasons recently with its one co-op city team, formed in 2010, and now St. Paul will try to follow suit.

“In the inner city, there’s a lack of interest, skills and parent involvement in some sports,” former Como Park interim activities director Nate Galloway told the Star Tribune in 2016. “I’m not making predictions, but I think you’ll see more consolidation.”
elliott70
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Re: St. Paul Public Schools

Post by elliott70 »

It's too bad but it is the times.

Johnson was one of my favorite teams.
ClassAGuy
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Re: St. Paul, like Minneapolis, will have one combined high school team next year

Post by ClassAGuy »

It will be interesting to see what Class A they are in the section realignment done by the MSHSL this coming April.
East Side Pioneer Guy
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Re: St. Paul, like Minneapolis, will have one combined high school team next year

Post by East Side Pioneer Guy »

If your Dad grew up in a place without a winter, it's very unlikely that you will play youth hockey.
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