The HHSAA hammer dropped on Saturday, nailing shut the hope that teams across the state could compete for state championships in air riflery, basketball, bowling, cheerleading, cross country, canoe paddling, soccer, swimming and diving, and wrestling.
Those sports are slated to begin on Monday. The BIIF has yet to release schedules in any of those sports, and it’s unlikely there will be BIIF championships.
One thing is for certain: the Kohala boys basketball won’t get a chance to repeat, and the Hawaii Prep girls soccer team’s state winning streak is snapped after seven years.
HHSAA Executive Director Chris Chun pointed to travel restrictions and the leagues already conducting shortened seasons.
“Our intent for canceling the first set of state tournaments was to allow our member schools the opportunity to participate in a longer league season, rather than a truncated one with regional and state tournament play for only a limited number of schools,” Chun said in a press release. “Although the state tournaments are canceled, leagues are not restricted in conducting their seasons if it is deemed safe to do so. We will continue to work with the Department of Health and government officials for the possibility to hold state tournaments for the remaining sports in late May.”
The sports scheduled for March to May include baseball, football, golf, judo, softball, tennis, track and field, water polo, and volleyball.
The news came as a shock to Kohala coach Kihei Kapeliela. One day he’s reading that his Cowboys were the top sports story for 2020. Less than 24 hours, he’s digesting how to break the news to his five seniors.
“That’s too bad for the seniors (Moses Emeliano, Zhane Ellazar-Ching, Jeffrey Francisco, Keoni Barco, and Molonai Emeliano),” he said. “I had a pretty good returning class.”
The Cowboys still return O’shen Cazimero, Koby Agbayani, and La’akea Kauka for their senior seasons next year, but that’s little consolation for the trio who don’t get the chance to play with their lifetime friends in a state title repeat quest.
That punch to the gut feeling could be felt in Waimea, where only the coronavirus pandemic could stop HPA’s state championship collection.
“Deep down, I knew this was coming,” HPA coach and athletic director Stephen Perry said. “We were playing next to the fall sports, unfortunately. I hope that’s it.
“I feel for the kids. They don’t get it back.”
One of the complications is that the BIIF and the HHSAA are waiting on the Department of Health to allow students back in the classroom.
Another issue is that coronavirus infections aren’t slowing down. On Saturday, there were 171 new infections reported, including 20 on the Big Island.
If the Department of Educations continues on a cautious path, waiting for the state to get vaccinated, it’ll probably be in 2022 when students are given approval to return to school.
For now, it’s more likely than not that the private schools (HPA, Kamehameha, Christian Liberty, Makua Lani, and Parker) may play each other.
There likely won’t be a BIIF championship. But participation is the next best thing during the pandemic, which reached a high of 354 cases on Aug. 4.
On Thursday, the ILH canceled the seasons for basketball, bowling, canoe paddling, soccer, and wrestling.
“Schools are still competing against each other,” Perry said. “We could have the same thing here. If we have three schools, we could have a sport. Each school has their own prerogative, what they feel is right.”
The HHSAA’s decision to cancel the March state championships was definitely felt from Honolulu to the BIIF.