FARIBAULT, Minn. – The Faribault Emeralds dance team and the community rallied Tuesday to buoy a state championship team trying to shake off the hurt of a bizarre medal ceremony and social media maelstrom.
The high school held a pep rally to honor a team engulfed in controversy, and school officials celebrated the dance team's victory during a basketball game later in the evening.
"We wanted to make sure they felt good about their championship," Superintendent Todd Sesker said. "These are young kids. They shouldn't have to go through what they went through last week."
On Saturday, after Faribault's dance team won the state high kick-dance competition, girls from five other teams stood off to the side of the Target Center floor holding hands in protest of what was alleged to be a plagiarized routine by the Emeralds. Their action left Faribault's dancers shaken and alone for what should have been their triumphant medal moment.
The scandal has consumed the state dance community as the Minnesota State High School League (MSHSL) investigates the unusual public boycott of an award ceremony.
The Faribault dancers, who range in age from 13 to 18, participated in a rally that included a re-enactment of the medal ceremony in front of some 1,300 students and supporters.
Afterward, Faribault junior varsity dance coach Molly MacKay rebuked the losers.
She called the coaches from the five teams "disgraces" who should lose their jobs. "The coaches fully orchestrated this," MacKay said. "It was full-out plotted the entire time."