Some good ideas here. I appreciate it. One of the problems I'm having with it is how to detail the impact of this kid's transfer -- the coach seems to think it'll be huge, and it should fill a gaping hole at running back on a pretty good team -- without embarrassing him by making it seem like he's a total washout at the public school. He's actually a pretty good-sized athlete who was a starter or contributor in a couple other sports. He should do well in private school and might do well at a smaller public school.
We're doing regular training camp updates on our teams, so I'll probably end up tying it into the running back angle.
On the transfer rules, our state has separate public and private school organizations, so there's really no story there. All a kid has to do is enroll at the private school and he's good to go. This particular school gets at least two or three athletes a year from our much larger public schools -- a lot of times, these same types of players who are marginal talents (or failing, or in trouble, or whatever) at the public schools and end up running amok at the private schools.
That's another thorny issue that I'm curious to ask how people deal with. When a kid transfers high schools because he's flunking out or was expelled, and ends up at the private school, how far do you go into it when the story has to be done (i.e., that one athlete that is a star at the public school)? What's a good balance between letting people know the full background of the situation and letting a teenager keep some shred of dignity?