Chanhassen football coach Bill Rosburg feels stirred up yet sentimental about playing Chaska, his team's chief rival, Friday.
Rosburg, a former teacher and assistant football coach at Chaska, showed "my favorite picture from coaching" to his Chanhassen science classes earlier this week.
"It's of a third-grade football team which has a handful of those knuckleheads, my own son [Joe], and a handful of our knuckleheads," Rosburg said. "How rare is that?"
Chaska and Chanhassen became instant rivals when the latter opened in 2009. The Eastern Carver County Schools' senior highs sit barely 2.5 miles apart on opposite sides of Hazeltine National Golf Club.
Youth sports in those neighboring communities are combined through the third grade, Rosburg said. Once in fourth grade, however, young athletes are funneled into pipelines headed for either high school.
Familiarity, coaches and players from both schools say, breeds a certain camaraderie. It also intensifies on-field meetings; neither side wants to lose before loyal fans from both communities. Storm activities director Austin Tollerson said more than 5,000 people are expected for the game at Chanhassen, despite seating for only 2,800. Ticket sales began Thursday.
"It's the most memorable game we play," Chaska quarterback Justin Arnold said.
Chaska won the first two games, including a 47-7 blowout of senior-less Chanhassen in 2009. Rosburg pointed out that Chaska's defensive starters were playing in the fourth quarter, a subtle mention that spoke to a growing rivalry.