Chisago Lakes volleyball coach Hannah Lindstrom expected a victory.
In a season that was first delayed from fall until March, then started up in late September before being almost immediately sidelined when COVID-19 pushed the high school into distance learning. Then the season restarted for three matches before it was suddenly put on hold again last week by an immediate return to distance learning. A school board meeting last Thursday would determine the next move.
Encouraged that other schools had recently kept playing sports despite such a shift, Lindstrom, in her third year as head coach, believed going into the meeting that something would be worked out.
That's why she and athletic director Jodi Otte spent the day reworking the team's schedule, not only to make up a match that was canceled that evening, but to find room for others wiped out in the first COVID shutdown.
She and her assistants made plans to celebrate Friday during practice with the team, which was scheduled to play Monday at Princeton. The Wildcats — led by nine seniors, many with college-playing plans — held realistic hopes of winning the program's first conference championship in 33 years.
During the virtual board meeting, Lindstrom and football coach Bill Weiss both called in to speak. Lindstrom, a 2013 graduate of the school, cited letters written by several players, submitted earlier because they thought they would be playing that night. They sent a video they made on their own, urging the board to let them play on and pledging to do so safely. Lindstrom provided an online petition, started by her husband, Hunter, with more than 1,700 signatures gathered in only a few days.
None of it mattered.
Rising COVID cases, and the disruption of resulting quarantines on attendance, is hitting school districts all over the state with increasing force. That has pushed many to shift back to teaching students exclusively at home, as they did when the pandemic hit last spring.