Coon Rapids was set to finally open its high school baseball season Thursday, with star pitcher Logan Shore taking the mound in the weather-protected Metrodome. The 11 p.m. start time owed to the stadium's huge popularity with high school and college teams escaping what many coaches are calling the worst run of spring weather they've ever seen.
But the game against Prior Lake was canceled due to travel problems from Thursday's snowstorm. Not even a roof can fend off the wintry spring of 2013.
Nearly four weeks after they began practice, many high school teams have yet to take the field for a game, meet, match or round — let alone step outside to practice. What few games have been wedged in have been played in cold, miserable conditions.
Thousands of games have been canceled statewide. Top athletes have missed chances to impress scouts and attract college attention. Seniors see their final seasons slipping away. At many schools, athletes paid hefty activity fees for what has so far been mostly gym time and now the prospect of shorter and fewer games.
As coaches and athletic directors frantically reschedule games into fewer remaining weeks, some teams have had to dig deeper to pay for expensive indoor practice facilities or have made do with such activities as golf putting in classrooms.
Tom Franta, the girls' track and field coach at Irondale in New Brighton, said his assistant coach Bruce Moore "has been coaching or participating in track for 51 years and he said that he has never seen anything like this."
For Kara Stuckmayer, this is supposed to be the year she gets noticed. Stuckmayer, who plays third base for Champlin Park and has loads of potential as a power hitter, has high hopes for a senior season that she believes can be a breakout year. If the Rebels ever get the chance to play, that is.
"This being my senior year, I obviously want to play hard and do great," Stuckmayer said. "This weather has put a little stop to that.''