After outcry last year, dance team rules revised
Published 10:47 am Friday, February 12, 2016
By David La Vaque
Minneapolis Star Tribune
An unprecedented protest. Local outcry. National attention.
Drama surrounded last year’s Minnesota dance team state tournament after coaches and girls from five top metro-area teams stood off to the side of the Target Center floor holding hands in protest as Faribault was named high-kick champion in Class 3A.
The teams, later disqualified for their actions, felt Faribault copied choreography, uniforms and music from a Utah team. They also were upset that an investigation by the Minnesota State High School League (MSHSL) before the tournament cleared the team of any violations.
The protest resulted in one-year suspensions for coaches at Chaska, Eastview, Lakeville South and Wayzata. Eden Prairie’s coach resigned. League associate director Kevin Merkle said he knew rules needed tightening before the spectacle. Eager to get past the publicity stain, the league has since created a new scoring rubric to ensure performances, when influenced by another team, are not overly similar.
A five-person review panel tallies points for borrowed choreography, music or uniforms. Too many points can result in disqualification at the league’s discretion. Teams are also required to list influences for their performance on a form the league keeps on file.
The scoring rubric and listing of influences come from a hybrid of suggestions made by the Judges Association of Minnesota Dance Teams and the Minnesota Association of Dance Teams (MADT).
“We leaned on our four rule coordinators last year, but there wasn’t the process we have now,” Merkle said.