Van High School in West Virginia made a tough but brave decision to cancel its 2025 football season due to not having enough players to ensure the team’s safety.
With a football tradition dating back to 1927, this wasn’t easy. After trying to recruit more students, they ended up with only 13 players far too few for a safe game.
The school put safety first, and many people, like local leader Mike Stuart, cheered this choice but the story doesn’t end there.
The West Virginia Secondary School Activities Commission (WVSSAC) stepped in with a ruling that has sparked rage.
The WVSSAC is stopping Van’s student athletes from playing football at other schools, like Scott High School, without transferring.

Mike Stuart, in a passionate Facebook post, called this rule “unfair and dumb.” He believes these kids are victims of circumstance and deserve a chance to play elsewhere without leaving their community school.
Stuart’s post highlights a glaring problem. He points out that private school students can join public school teams if their school doesn’t offer a sport but public school students, like those at Van, don’t get the same break.
If Van doesn’t have a team, they’re out of luck unless they transfer something Stuart sees as punishing kids for a situation they can’t control.
He even suggests the WVSSAC might be pushing to weaken small schools like Van, forcing them to merge with bigger ones, which he says hurts students and communities.
To back up his argument, Stuart shared a letter from Wayne Ryan, the WVSSAC Executive Director.
The letter, sent to Allen D. Sexton, denies a request to let Van students play at Scott High.

The WVSSAC’s Rule 127-3.1.a requires schools forming a combined team to have enough players, and Van and Scott together don’t meet the minimum.
No other nearby public schools can join either. However, the letter offers hope an appeal can be filed by August 11, 2025, giving Van a chance to fight back.
Stuart’s Post Didn’t Just Stir Thoughts but also Triggered Numerous Comments
Daryl Cowles questioned the private school rule, noting that private students also need to transfer to play outside their district, limiting their options to their home public school.
“A private school student would also need to “transfer” to play at a school outside of their home district. A private school athlete is not allowed to choose between Van, Sherman, or Scott. They would only be allowed to play in the public school of their home district, right?”
Via Facebook
Roy Ramey took a bolder stance, suggesting sports should break free from schools altogether.
He imagines communities, like St. Albans or Dunbar, running their own teams where any kid public, private, or homeschooled can play based on where they live.
Ramey argues schools should focus on education, not sports politics, and let communities handle the games.
“Schools are for education, not the politics of sports. Since government schools are struggling so bad that people are disenrolling in droves, maybe they should just have non-educational programs removed so they can focus on that ONE THING. Let the community at large figure out how to play Sportsball.”
Via Facebook
Then there’s Alvin Messinger, who didn’t hold back. He called the WVSSAC “corrupt to the bone” and a “strong arm of dictators,” urging a complete overhaul.
“Mike that whole organization is corrupt to the bone and are nothing but a strong arm of dictators that should be broken up. We the taxpaying citizens in this State are the ones getting ripped of by their malfeasance of responsibility to all of us. There needs to be a house cleaning of that dysfunctional bunch of dictators, the Three Stooges are genius compared to these wanna be failures that’s ripping the tax payers off.”
Via Facebook
He feels taxpayers are being cheated by the commission’s decisions, echoing Stuart’s frustration with how Van’s athletes are treated.
Why This Matters
The Van High cancel isn’t just about football but also it is about fairness and the future of small schools.
With only 13 players, Van’s choice to prioritize safety makes sense football can be dangerous with too few teammates.
Yet the WVSSAC’s strict rules leave these kids with no options, fueling debates about whether the commission cares more about policy than people.
The appeal deadline of August 11, 2025, could be a turning point, but for now, the community is rallying behind Van’s students.
This issue also taps into a bigger conversation. School consolidation merging smaller schools like Van into larger ones has been a hot topic in West Virginia.
Critics like Stuart argue it strips away local identity and opportunity. The WVSSAC’s decision might feel like another step toward that, making the fight for Van’s athletes a symbol of resistance.
Van High’s cancellation shows how safety can trump tradition, but the WVSSAC’s response has turned a practical decision into a battle.
With community voices growing louder and an appeal on the horizon, the story of Van High cancel could reshape how sports rules work in West Virginia.