Wheatley School, Carle Place, Form Athletic Partnerships
For a small school tucked away in a corner of a small village, The Wheatley School in Old Westbury has accumulated a rich athletic history. The gymnasium has scores of banners hanging, saluting the school’s achievements over the years.
“Two seasons ago, we reached the New York State finals in soccer,’’ athletic director Tom Fitzpatrick said. “We were Nassau County champions in baseball two years ago. Our teams make the playoffs every year. We’re competitive.”
Wheatley is proud of the opportunities it offers its students.
“Seventy percent of the kids in grades 7-12 participate in some type of interscholastic activities,” Fitzpatrick said. “We offer 22 sports and we have 59 teams beginning in middle school. For a kid in this district, it’s difficult not to participate. Our kids’ combined grade-point average is the highest in New York State. So they’re not only athletes but very good students, too.”
Sports are important but so are academics at Wheatley. Two brothers, Christian and Josh Hyon, are headed for an All-State music competition, which will take them away from the basketball team for a while. “You don’t punish a talent in another area,” Fitzpatrick said. “You want opportunity – athletic, academic and socially. You want a well-rounded student coming out of this school.”
There was, however, a significant sport missing on the Wheatley menu. The school dropped football in 1989 and after a failed effort to re-establish a team two years later, football remained dormant.
“At the time, it was determined that we could not do it. There were not enough students interested in playing,” Fitzpatrick said. “Football and wrestling require a major commitment in training. You hurt on every play. It’s repetitive motion over and over. You beat up your body.”
But football has become the top sport in America and there was a hard-core group of students who wanted to play. So Wheatley went shopping for an athletic partner. There were talks with Friends Academy and Herricks High School before it settled on Carle Place High School.
“Carle Place is one mile away,” Fitzpatrick said. “It lent itself to a merger.”
So a hard core group of two dozen or so Wheatley students from ninth through 11th grades, bus over to Carle Place each day during football season, practice, then bus back to Wheatley and go home. “They play JV or varsity,” Fitzpatrick said. “We’re now in our seventh or eighth year.”
The football marriage between the schools worked so well that it was extended to lacrosse with the commute reversed and Carle Place players bussing over to Wheatley.
The athletic arrangement also offers a lesson in sociology.
“They all want to win but there’s no animosity,” Fitzpatrick said. “There’s a certain level of competiveness they wouldn’t have otherwise. It’s nice to see people compete for the right reason. It’s been a beneficial relationship for both schools.”