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St. Theresa's gridiron players passionate about 'greatest of all sports'

'It’s a physical game and it teaches you to have lots of determination,' Thunder's Carter Ross says ahead of today's playoff game versus St. Joseph's in Barrie

St. Theresa's Catholic High School has proven that there are some passionate football lovers in northern Simcoe County.

Interest in what a coach calls "the greatest of all sports" is strong with the Midland school continuing to produce athletes passionate about the gridiron game.

Football manager and junior head coach Mike de Munnik and fellow junior coach Rob Coulis updated their safe-tackling course through Football Canada this year. The mandatory course allows them to teach safe-tackling skills to the boys in the program, so that players can enjoy the full contact sport.

"Ultimately, it's to try to minimize concussions," de Munnik says, noting the host of every game must pay for a certified trainer that oversees the athletes on both teams. “If a kid gets hit and they are not feeling well, the trainer assesses them and makes a decision if they are in or out of the game."

Adds Coulis: "They are being taken care of."

In addition to learning safe-tackling technique and having a trainer at every game, there is new technology in the helmets. They now have an air bladder under the plastic exterior rather than thick foam, and that offers greater protection.

The school started its program with a junior team in 2012, adding a senior team two years later. The St. Theresa's Thunder junior and senior teams won a Georgian Bay championship 10 and eight years ago, respectively.

But de Munnik says the teams face an uphill battle annually for two reasons. On the competition side, the AA school plays Barrie teams that are all AAA, so it's harder for them to win.

Secondly, there is no football club in the Midland area. In urban centres, many high school players learn the game through football clubs. The closest club is the Huronia Stallions, which plays at the Barrie Community Sports Complex in Midhurst. Some Thunders players have played there.

However, the majority of players coming into the junior program know very little about football.

"It's a steep learning curve in junior," said de Munnik. "There's a wide range of skills from guys who have played before to guys that don't even know what a first down is. Sometimes they don't know what the positions are or what five yards is."

However, many of the players on the senior team have been playing for four years.

Carter Ross is an offensive player who's in his fourth year on the team. He said this team is the best yet.

"The team is great. They are like my brothers," he said. “I love football. It’s a physical game and it teaches you to have lots of determination.”

Garret Ainsworth is also a fourth-year player on the team and says he's learned a lot about the game since beginning to play in Grade 9.

"This is by far the best team I've ever played with," said the defensive player. "You create a good bond with your teammates and that’s something you can’t buy with money."

Simpson switched from coaching junior to seniors this year, along with parent-coach Jim Weeks.

"I've been with this whole group since Grade 9," Simpson said. "it's been a great opportunity to work with them and see their game develop and see them grow up into men."

This season has been rewarding and memorable, Simpson says, because the team has improved greatly from the first couple of weeks by making adjustments and collaborating with coaches and players.

“I think it’s the greatest of all sports. It is such a test of their perseverance and their ability to stick with the program and support each other and collaborate and to understand that it depends on all of us coming together and not relying on a few individuals," he said. "The more we can foster that strength and that unity, the more it starts to come together and it’s a joy to watch,” says Simpson, noting the senior team has a good chance of getting to the Georgian Bay championships.

The Catholic School Athletics of Simcoe County (CSASC) semifinal games will be played Friday at Georgian College's J.C. Massie Field in Barrie. 

The top-seeded St. Joan of Arc Knights (5-1) will play the Patrick Fogarty Flames (2-4) today at 12:30 p.m., followed by the St. Theresa's Thunder (2-4) and the St. Joseph's Jaguars (5-1) at 3 p.m. The St. Peter's Panthers (1-5), who are the fifth team in the CSASC senior loop, did not qualify for the playoffs.

The CSASC senior final will be held Nov. 8 at J.C. Massie Field beginning at 6:30 p.m. The winner of that game will then move on to face the public board's Simcoe County Athletic Association (SCAA) champion for the Georgian Bay Secondary School Association (GBSSA) crown on Nov. 14.


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Gisele Winton Sarvis

About the Author: Gisele Winton Sarvis

Gisele Winton Sarvis is an award winning journalist and photographer who has focused on telling the stories of the people of Simcoe County for more than 25 years
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