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Kapaa High's head football coach, Kelii Morgado, has taken steps to prevent heatstroke during day games, including telling his players to drink lots of water starting three days before. When players come off the field, they're sponged with ice water. So far the teams have avoided major medical problems due to the heat. Even so, Morgado said one of his players got so hot and lost so much fluid during a game the coach thought he showed concussion symptoms. The student thankfully recovered after trainers put ice water on his neck and had him drink water. Travis Koga, Lori Koga's son, said high school players have it especially hard during day games because most of them on the field for both offense and defense. "It's hot. And you get all tired. You cannot focus," Travis Koga said after Kauai High defeated Kapaa High in a 14-13 nailbiter last Saturday. "I think it's best
-- Friday night lights. Not Saturday day football. It's Friday night lights." The Kauai Interscholastic Federation changed the football schedule as Kauai County was facing possible federal prosecution for failing to protect seabirds. The U.S. Justice Department said federal wildlife officials notified the county in 2005 its lighting was hurting the birds, in violation of the Endangered Species Act and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. The government said the county failed to install shielded lights that shine down on the field, not out, thus being less harmful to the birds. The county ultimately reached a deal with prosecutors in which officials will install shielded lights at Kauai's three football fields by next season. Any night games next year will have to be played under specially designed shielded lights, and the county must have an escrow account to cover fines for any birds downed during the games.
"This is a serious situation, and we are on a trajectory to extinction with this species if we don't take real responsible action," Fretz said. Meanwhile, island residents like Rich Rapozo warned that some people are talking about refusing to rescue birds they see on the ground in protest of the Saturday games. "They chose the bird over our keiki," he said after a Saturday game, using the Hawaiian word for children.
[Associated
Press;
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