SPRINGFIELD — The Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association is pushing back after a local judge issued a temporary restraining order blocking the high school sports governing body from skewing rankings amid an administrative dispute.
Not for the first time, athletic directors, parents and student athletes are at odds with the powerful agency over its rules and how they impact youth sports. Power rankings affect whether students play on home fields, and other advantages. If the rankings are skewed, those advantages can go away and the players can be forced to drive miles to other venues.
This time, the parents of more than a dozen local student athletes have sued MIAA over rankings the plaintiffs attribute to an “ambiguous” new rule requiring teams to speculate out their entire competitive season by a certain date, even if tournaments have yet to be settled. The fallout could affect several sports teams whose rankings could be hobbled by two forfeits.
By: Don Rebel Saturday, January 11, 2025 | 1:48 AM
LINCOLN — Nebraska lawmakers will seek to define “male” and “female” in state law, broadening a past effort focu
Rarely is there much value in defeat, but the Warriors have many reasons to be pleased with what they saw from their undermanned roster and makeshift
Colorado head coach Bill McCartney, pictured as he was carried off the field after a win against Nebraska in the 1989 season. (Photo by Cliff Grassmick/Digital