By Jason Gonzalez • jason.gonzalez@startribune.com
Mualigbe Keita's message was clear. Prairie Seeds Academy will move forward no matter how hard outsiders try to bring it down, he said. ¶ "United," added Keita, a senior soccer player speaking in the distinctive accent of his native Guinea, on the African continent. "We are family here."
Prairie Seeds, entering its sixth year of competition, is a boys' soccer family like no other.
The program has been marred by accusations of fielding ineligible players and last fall was at the center of an unprecedented disqualification from the 2012 state tournament. The school's administration says it is tired of fighting the system and is doing all it can to strip away any negativity attached to its name.
Charged with leading this task is 23-year-old Jason Obarski, a former Apple Valley all-state soccer and all-state football player. Obarski was hired in July after Youssef Darbaki, who remains as the team's coach, was stripped of those duties.
Changing Prairie Seeds from within won't be as hard as transforming the outside perception, Obarski said. The Lycans' troubles getting games scheduled are worse than ever. Obarski made 50 requests for games this season that were either denied or ignored.
"I'm catching everyone up to speed with what's right and what's wrong," he said. "The school is very young. It's a new process. And there are a lot of rules in the state high school league handbook."
Success, then eligibility scrutiny
Scheduling games has been a challenge for Prairie Seeds since it went 22-0 in its first season in 2008. Blowout victories against Minnetonka, Coon Rapids and Anoka kept teams from scheduling similar fates.