In SC high school sports, debate persists about public charters and competitive balance
Posted: Wed Sep 20, 2023 4:27 pm
It’s a point you hear debated all the time in South Carolina high school sports.
You can’t comb through a high school sports Facebook thread or attend a 2A athletic event without picking up on the obvious theme.
That theme is that many residents aren’t happy with the perceived competitive imbalance at the 2A level, where public charter schools often face off with traditional public schools. Many have expressed frustration that public charters are racking up state title wins and appearances playing against schools that operate differently and have different restrictions on where they can get their players.
Two schools that get tagged with this consternation a lot are Oceanside Collegiate Academy in Mt. Pleasant and West Columbia’s Gray Collegiate Academy, right here in Lexington County.
This perceived lack of competitive balance, heightened by instances when Gray Collegiate or Oceanside Collegiate win in incredibly lopsided outcomes, creates tension that often feels irreparable, exemplified by the aforementioned forfeitures of Fairfield Central to Gray Collegiate in multiple sports (with other 2A schools very likely to follow suit).
Full article here https://www.lexingtonchronicle.com/stor ... ance,58561
You can’t comb through a high school sports Facebook thread or attend a 2A athletic event without picking up on the obvious theme.
That theme is that many residents aren’t happy with the perceived competitive imbalance at the 2A level, where public charter schools often face off with traditional public schools. Many have expressed frustration that public charters are racking up state title wins and appearances playing against schools that operate differently and have different restrictions on where they can get their players.
Two schools that get tagged with this consternation a lot are Oceanside Collegiate Academy in Mt. Pleasant and West Columbia’s Gray Collegiate Academy, right here in Lexington County.
This perceived lack of competitive balance, heightened by instances when Gray Collegiate or Oceanside Collegiate win in incredibly lopsided outcomes, creates tension that often feels irreparable, exemplified by the aforementioned forfeitures of Fairfield Central to Gray Collegiate in multiple sports (with other 2A schools very likely to follow suit).
Full article here https://www.lexingtonchronicle.com/stor ... ance,58561