The Florida High School Athletic Association could potentially sanction competitive video gaming, or esports, as an official sport, amid growing interest from member schools.
The FHSAA Board of Directors held a discussion about esports during a meeting in Gainesville Monday, with talks focusing on the share of Florida schools that would be interested in offering programs if the games are sanctioned as an official sport.
The organization distributed a survey and received responses from 425 schools, which accounted for 58 percent of its combination and senior high schools.
“Two questions were about current participation and interest, while several other questions were asked to guide future research and decision making, if necessary,” a document included in the board’s agenda said.
Overall, 26.4 percent of schools that responded reported sponsoring an esports team or club. Of that overall number, 24.9 percent of public schools have teams or clubs, while 25.2 percent of private schools and 39.1 percent of charter schools said they have such programs.
The FHSAA requires at least 20 percent of schools in at least two of its four “sections” or regions of the state offering a sport in order for it to be eligible for sanctioning.
Interest in offering esports is high among the member schools that did not report having programs.
More than half — 54.6 percent — of the schools surveyed said they would be interested in offering esports to students if the FHSAA sanctioned the games. Nearly 50 percent of public schools surveyed indicated interest, while more than 56 percent of private schools and 82 percent of charter schools expressed interest.
Of the state’s four FHSAA regional sections, schools in Section 4 encompassing South Florida expressed the highest level of interest at 69 percent.
FHSAA board member Trevor Berryhill, who also is athletic director for Oviedo private school The Master’s Academy, was among the members who voiced support for sanctioning esports.
“Last year we had a student get a scholarship to Florida State (University) in esports. He also is a part of their NIL (name, image and likeness) collective,” Berryhill said, referring to student-athletes at the collegiate level being able to earn money from business agreements such as endorsement deals.
“So it’s just another opportunity for kids to be involved in something,” Berryhill added.
The FSU Esports program is a student-run organization, according to its website, that “provides a foundation for our school’s many competitive gaming teams.”
Esports programs also are increasingly being recognized by sanctioning bodies across the country.
There are 21 states that are members of the National Federation of State High School Associations that have sanctioned esports in their schools, according to FHSAA documents. Southeastern states that have signed off on the programs include Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama and Louisiana.
Gulf County Schools Superintendent David Norton also backed the idea of sanctioning esports, calling the proposal a “win-win” for the FHSAA and saying he hopes the board will “move forward on this sooner than later.”
“This would be a way for us to reach us and bring some more student athletes in,” Norton, who also serves on the board, said during Monday’s meeting.
FHSAA officials did not indicate during Monday’s discussion when a potential decision could be finalized on sanctioning esports, but said the organization is in the early stages of the process. The next step would be requesting official petitions from member schools that would announce their intent to add esports programs.
“The debate about whether competitive gamers can be considered athletes may never end. In the meantime, though, gamers are increasingly acting like them,” The New York Times reported in 2019, on a movement whose most ardent origins hail from South Korea. “Eating right, sleeping right, exercising, cleaning up for sponsors — these ideas have undergirded traditional sports for generations. In e-sports, they are regarded as almost radical.” The pandemic only accelerated the attraction to esports.]
–Ryan Dailey, News Service of Florida
Joe D says
Although e-sports can offer great entertainment and can increase the development of the player’s eye/hand coordination, I fall short of considering it a competitive SPORT. But like the DEBATE CLUB or Chess Club…I don’t see any problem with Schools competing. Good socialization experience if all the gamers are in one place ( not remote). Times ARE changing.
JimboXYZ says
It’s never going to be a sport, regardless of what they want to classify it as. It’s like board games for academic competition, like the chess club. When one physically isn’t launching a ball into a basket or actually running the play with their feet & legs, that’s not a sport. Might as well call Fantasy Leagues for real sports an esport ?
Pogo says
@FWIW
Drone operators! This is not a drill, battle stations — now.
Related
Then
https://www.cnn.com/2001/TECH/ptech/09/14/microsoft.flight.sim/
Now
https://www.google.com/search?q=flight+sim+911
Marek says
Recognizing video gaming as a sport is a mistake . Sport involves some kind of the physical activity.
Ellie & Joel says
It’s a great idea. I’ve been a gamer my entire life. My father was a gamer. He started playing arcade games in pizzeria shops in the mid-late seventies. I was born in 1978. When I was a baby, not even 6 months old, I have a picture of me and my dad, at an arcade game. I have a picture of me sitting in front of a home PC when I was a 1 year old. I’ve been literally gaming my entire life. I had them all. Computer games. Atari. Sega. Nintendo. PlayStation. XBOX. Every release. Every iteration of console and handheld. Even now, I game 1-2 hours a day. There’s a certain mentality that goes with gaming. It helps with problem solving, strategizing, figuring out what works and doesn’t, and helps with memory (remembering the different controller schemes for each console or even each game, your quests, where to go, what to do, etc). Not everyone gets gaming or can do it successfully. It’s not something mindless. It’s quite the opposite. It helps free the mind.
All this talk of video games increase violence is rubbish. There will always be people that cannot discern reality from fiction. They don’t need video games to blur that reality it just so happens some violent people are gamers. I’m sure they watch and listen and do many others things that statistics can make something up for grouping. I’ve played and still play some of the most violent video games and I’m the most non-violent person but then again, I’m intelligent and can differentiate between a game and real life. I wish they had this option as a sport when I was in school.
If chess is a sport, so too are video games.
Callmeishmael says
What’s next! Speed Texting?
c says
\sarcasm on
But, but, but … This is Florida !! How are we gonna know the gender and race and citizen status of these ‘Athletes’? Our young children could unknowingly be tainted by electronic association with the Godless transgenders. Or even illegal aliens. Or worse, Aliens of a different color (legal or otherwise).
Does Uncle Ronnie know about this? Are our ever-vigilant (or is that vigilante?) State Legislature prepared to enact any and all restrictive laws and requirements necessary to ensure that this abomination of the purity of Florida Sports is not allowed to prosper?
Call your CongressMan (or CongressWoman, or CongressPerson) today.
Floriduh for the Floridodos
/end sarcasm