We are fresh from the section basketball phase of the high school post-season. So invigorating of course. Therapeutic, you might say.
I awoke to fog this morning (Thursday). Another day for a funeral for yours truly. It's Chris Juergensen for whom I'll say "rest in peace" today. Guy was quite close to local athletics. Supported the UMM Cougars for sure.
On the high school front, isn't it maybe time to consider simplification of our sports identity? I mean, to shift away from the cumbersome "Morris Area Chokio Alberta?" Any hyphens or slash marks recommended in there? Is there a standard form? "MACA" is the short version. The West Central Tribune has never bought the shortened version. It sure has not been effectual that I have directed messages to them in my blogging.
I mean no disrespect to Chokio-Alberta here but maybe it's time to remove that reference. Oh, I know there are reasons behind the terminology as it now stands. Should I say "nomenclature?" You see, "Morris Area" has a history by itself. We used the "MAHS" reference for a long time.
Yes there is logic or reason behind the "MACA" thing. Chokio-Alberta continues to have its own school in Chokio up through the 12th grade. So it's essential to make a gesture toward them? I fail to see what is really being accomplished. It is well understood that schools in towns as large as Morris in rural MN aren't just "local." When you hear "Morris" you can assume there's an umbrella that takes in not only "Motown" but Cyrus and Donnelly in addition to Chokio and Alberta.
Do we really have to get caught up in all these town names? Do the very small towns really want to clutch their "town identity" so much? In a past time maybe yes, to an extent. Those were the days when "mom and pop" businesses prevailed on your typical main street. The local bank president waved the flag of community. Today the banks are headed by "managers" who answer to higher-ups heaven-knows-where. And isn't it almost funny how the banks in our Motown are changing hands so often? Such a fluid world in our digital age.
In a past time you had special status in your town if your family was established there a long time, like decades. Think "Peyton Place." Think of the local cemetery where names on stones are reminders of old iconic people. That had its charms. But it might be tough for newcomers or people just passing through.
Remember the scene in the movie "Hoosiers" where a referee berates the Hackman character who was trying to protest a call? The ref said "you haven't been around here long enough." (That was just before a fight scene, if I may jog your memory.) IMHO the movie scene illustrates perfectly the point I seek to make.
So, in those past times it made perfect sense for very small towns to be, well, parochial to the extent that they guarded "town identity."
Our Morris school system once went by "Morris-Donnelly." But I was eventually elucidated how this was never "legal." Rather, the name was just a "gentleman's agreement," I was told by an insider. Gentleman's agreements don't fly so well today. So long to "Peyton Place" I guess. For the better? Well in some ways.
I have read that people are drifting away from traditional funerals and burials because "we live in a more mobile society today," i.e. people "come and go" and there is no handicap associated with this.
Maybe if Chokio and Alberta sought real meaningful commercial activity, well the identity would mean more. As it stands I don't think it should matter.
Maybe the West Central Tribune avoids our sports teams these days because they are befuddled by "Morris Area Chokio Alberta." It's no excuse but at least I can understand it some. I have some prejudice about that paper's owners. Just think of a word that Donald Trump uses for people he does not like. I'm too civilized to want to type such a word here. But that's how I'd describe the newspaper outfit in Willmar.
The WC Trib dropped us. But they report on games all the time where the Tigers are competing. I mean all the time. Mostly they put "stats not available" for MACA while the opponent gets the full meal deal. All I can do is comment about that. But I think it's time for our sports teams to simply be known as "Morris" again.
No offense to C-A where I devoted lots of attention as a sportswriter once. Worked with Neal Hofland, Paul Daly, Jill Willis and others. The C-A Spartans! I remember getting on the motorcoach bus at an ungodly early hour at the Old Lumber Yard to make the trip to the Metrodome for Prep Bowl. Glory days of the Spartans!
But hey, we can be the "Morris Tigers" again. Just like when our basketball team made the state tournament in the one-class system in 1955! Forget that the Tigers did poorly in state, it was phenomenal getting there!
KLQP
Radio posted this photo of Star Tribune columnist Patrick Reusse with
notable Morris alum Bart Hill. Photo was taken when the MACA Tigers
played for the Section 3AA title at Southwest State University. Bart had
a tremendous baseball coaching career at Lac qui Parle Valley. I
remember covering him in his MAHS athletic career. This photo was
provided by Paul Raymo of KLQP. Thanks to Del Sarlette for making me
aware of the photo.
- Brian Williams - morris mn minnesota - bwilly73@yahoo.com
















