Talk about being thrown a football curveball. Berkeley High’s principal told the squad Wednesday before practice, and five games into the season, that they will no longer get to use their locker room or weight room for the rest of the season. Players are not even allowed to step one foot inside the building as it has been deemed structurally unsound.
A revamp of the building has been in the making for seven years—unfortunately no one ever thought where to put the football team while things were made safer.
In the meantime this football team is homeless with more than half a season remaining. They have no place to change clothes for practice. They have no place to hang their helmets and shoulder pads for storage, and they have no place to lift weights to keep their bodies in shape. From here on out it's day-to-day. A makeshift life.
To compound the problem, family and friends don’t have a place to watch their beloved ones play football. Bleachers are made of wood and look like they were built in the 1940s. Cosmetic attempts have been made to make the stands look pretty, but nearly half of the seats are still sectioned off, deemed unsafe for occupancy.
As an outsider looking in, I can only ask “How in the world does Berkeley let its facilities get so freaking bad?"
I feel bad for the seniors on this team for they will get one game to prove to their fans they have a place called home.

Coach Sims hands players their uniforms as they are no longer allowed to enter the locker room to get dressed.

Shadows reflect off a concrete wall that will one day support a new football facility.