Emergency motion denied, football state finals will be played this weekend

SHARE Emergency motion denied, football state finals will be played this weekend
ob_cst_090818_3002.jpg

Simeon’s Derek Flowers (9) runs hard. Allen Cunningham/For the Sun-Times.

A Cook County Circuit judge has denied an emergency motion order to hear the Simeon Alumni Association’s case against the Illinois High School Association.

“The judge believed there wasn’t an emergency,” Shay Allen, an attorney for the Simeon alumni said. “We are still going to pursue the injunction as soon as we can. We are going to argue it as a motion and not an emergency motion.”

That means there is no chance that the lawsuit will hold up this weekend’s state football finals in Champaign.

The Simeon Alumni Association and parents of Simeon football players sued the Illinois High School Association on Friday. The lawsuit claims that a Nazareth parent dressed as a football official, stood on the sideline and influenced the referees in the Roadrunners’ 34-27 win against the Wolverines in the Class 7A state quarterfinals on Nov. 10.

Nazareth won in the semifinals last weekend and is scheduled to play St. Charles North in the state title game on Saturday in Champaign.

The lawsuit calls for the IHSA to strip Nazareth of the win and refrain from employing the officiating crew that worked the game.

The IHSA finally commented on Tuesday evening, breaking several days of silence.

“The IHSA declined to comment as we awaited the opportunity to exonerate the officials who worked the contest in open court,” Craig Anderson, the IHSA executive director said in a statement. “It now appears that no hearing will take place prior to this weekend’s state championship games.”

Anderson says the IHSA has investigated the matter and “has uncovered no impropriety on the part of the officials assigned to work the game as well as no influence over the referees by any individual in attendance. We look forward to providing more clarity on the situation following the resolution of the litigation.”

The Latest
Rain will begin to pick up about 6 p.m. and is expected to last until midnight, according to meteorologist Zachary Wack with the National Weather Service. The Cubs game was postponed, and Swifties are donning rain gear.
The Chicago Park District said April’s cold and wet weather has kept the buds of 190 cherry blossom trees at Jackson Park from fully opening.
Bedard entered the season finale Thursday with 61 points in 67 games, making him the most productive Hawks teenager since Patrick Kane in 2007-08, but he’s not entirely pleased with his performance.
The contract would include raises across the union body — including annual wage increases — a new minimum wage of $19.23, insurance for part-time employees, two weeks of paid leave for gender-affirming care, a union rights clause and protections against layoffs, among other things.