FARIBAULT, MINN. – Mounds View senior Tyler Fairchild, eager to apply three years of American Sign Language outside the classroom, did not expect a basketball game to be his proving ground.
The Mustangs played the Minnesota State Academy for the Deaf (MSAD) on Jan. 9 in what was likely the first time a Class 4A metro-area program came to the tiny Faribault school. Mounds View's enrollment of 1,650 students dwarfs the 50 who attend the academy.
Fairchild, a guard, watched whenever possible as academy players and coaches communicated with fluttering hands during stoppages, timeouts or during play.
"Their finger spelling is a lot faster than what we see in class," Fairchild said.
Getting players to see a different reality was the point of scheduling the game, Mounds View coach David Leiser said. He became intrigued after watching the team defeat his former assistant coach and the Academy for Science and Agriculture of Vadnais Heights last February.
"I was honestly mesmerized," Leiser said. "I thought it was so cool how they communicated with each other. And they were good, too. They can compete. And one of the great things about basketball is that it brings people together from different cultures, communities and cities."
The academy, which opened in 1863, sits just south of the Shattuck-St. Mary's campus. Academy students come from all over Minnesota. This season's basketball team includes players from Kittson County and Cook.
The game was played in the Lauritsen Gymnasium, a small building built in 1931. Banners recognize the academy's success in sports ranging from basketball to football to volleyball.