
Chicago Public Schools will not allow its sports teams to begin workouts according to an email sent to athletic directors on Sunday.
The Illinois High School Association’s return-to-play plan allowed schools around the state to open for voluntary strength and conditioning on June 6. The move was reliant on approval from the local school districts. While most districts have given approval, CPS has not.
A copy of the email was provided to the Sun-Times by several coaches. CPS did not respond to a request to confirm the information.
“Until further notice coaches must not conduct, organize, or mandate practice or conditioning activities with students,” the email reads. “Students can be encouraged to work out individually on their own. We understand that this gives a slight advantage to non district schools and we are mindful to attempt to keep the playing field as level as possible within our circumstances.”
Raby football coach Eric Harris began preparing for the workouts over the weekend.
“We were really looking forward to starting up this week,” Harris said. “I even met with our principal to set things up and make sure we were doing things right.”
Phillips football coach Troy McAllister says that CPS is probably destined to lag behind the rest of the state due to practicalities.
“It’s a major concern that CPS will be behind in everything but it’s not a blame game,” McAllister said. “With the size and increased risk here we will always be a little bit behind. This city is going to be the last to open up.”
Stage 1 of the IHSA’s plan mandates that temperatures be monitored at the start of the workouts and recommended that trainers be onsite.
“Those things are difficult for CPS to set up,” McAllister said. “It is such a big district. Who is going to provide temperature testing? Smaller districts can get that done immediately and funding is probably better for the athletic departments.”
McAllister said he has a remote workout plan in place for his team that they can follow individually.
“You just hope they are following the plan,” McAllister said. “In reality this is just conditioning we are missing out on now. It isn’t part of the summer contact days. Hopefully CPS is taking its time to make sure everything is safe for the students and will have a plan in place soon.”