IHSA may release a sports schedule Jan. 27; believes sports could resume statewide in February

Basketball with face mask

CHICAGO (WBBM NEWSRADIO) -- Once again, the Illinois High School Association is delaying the release of a schedule for restarting sports, but could do so in the next couple of weeks.

As student athletes, parents, and coaches continue to be frustrated by the lack of high school sports in Illinois, the IHSA said it still hopes to get in all sport seasons this year.

At the Illinois High School Association’s regularly scheduled January board meeting Wednesday, the Board did not release new schedule because Governor Pritzker and the Illinois Department of Public Health have not given the green light to resume sports. The IHSA said it "did not think it was prudent to set the schedule for the remainder of the year, although they realize time is drawing short;" but did say they may release a sports schedule Jan. 27.

It is possible, the organization said, that low-risk sports may begin as early as Friday in some parts of the state, as Governor Pritzker announced that would be the earliest regions could drop from Tier 3 to Tier 2 mitigations.

The IHSA Board said a more likely scenario is that sports could resume statewide sometime next month.

The last schedule the IHSA announced had the winter season, which features basketball, ending on Feb. 13 and the spring season, which contains football, starting Feb. 15.

The board released a joint statement:

“We realize there is a desire for finality on a sports schedule for 2020-21, however, we did not believe it would be prudent to lock ourselves into a schedule at a time when IHSA schools are unable to conduct any sports. Per Governor Pritzker, we have hope that low-risk sports may be permitted in certain regions of the state as early as this Friday [January 15]. With that in mind, February seems like a realistic timeline to have sports resume statewide. We expect that the events of the next two weeks will go a long way toward informing our opinion on which scheduling option we decide to proceed with. We recognize that if no sports have resumed by February, season lengths could be impacted in certain sports, and that we may need to take a longer look at the likelihood of true seasons being conducted in high-risk sports this year. Our overall goal remains unchanged, as we hope to conduct all IHSA sports during the remainder of the school year calendar. Please know that we see and read many of the comments and messages from student-athletes, coaches, and parents, and that we are doing everything we can to try and bring IHSA sports back within the current parameters we are working in.”

The IHSA has voted to allow the resumption of contact days in all sports that are not in season, as soon as IDPH allows.

“The IHSA acknowledges the immense mental, emotional and physical strain that a lack of contact with school programs is causing Illinois high school student-athletes,” IHSA Executive Director Craig Anderson said in a statement. “It is our intention that these contact days provide sport-specific training under the leadership of high school coaches. This is an effort to provide a viable sports option to high school athletes given the growing number of student-athletes opting for higher risk opportunities within the state and across state lines.”

Golf, girls tennis, cross country, and girls swimming were all played in the fall before Gov. Pritzker paused all sports on Nov. 20.

“We remain collaborative in our efforts with IDPH and the Governor’s office,” Anderson said. “We are trying to do our part to fight the pandemic, while simultaneously seeking safe participation opportunities for our student-athletes.”