An explosion in the popularity of high school robotics teams has suddenly made it chic to be geek.
Robotics team members are getting varsity letters and patches, being paraded before school assemblies like other sports stars and seeing trophies in the same lobby display cases as their football, basketball or baseball counterparts.
"It's the new kid on the block," said Dawn Nichols, head of school at Convent of the Visitation Catholic School in Mendota Heights, which has the only all-girls robotics team in the state.
A telling statistic: For the first time ever, there are more varsity robotics teams than there are boys' varsity hockey teams in the state. There are 156 high school boys' hockey teams and 180 robotics teams, up from 153 last year, according to the Minnesota State High School League.
While boys' and girls' high school basketball teams remain the most common with more than 400 teams each, no other sport or activity has grown as quickly as robotics, which began with just two teams in 2006 and will likely surpass 200 soon.
"Minnesota is becoming a Mecca for robotics," said Joe Passofaro, one of the mentors/coaches for the Prior Lake High School robotics team, which won the state championship last year. "We're getting a group here that is coming onto the world scene."
Minnesota last year became the first state in the country to sanction a state tournament and championship for robotics teams. Teams compete by building robots to perform specific tasks -- shooting basketballs last year, throwing Frisbees this year -- and then seeing whose works the best.
"Robotics is really a different way for kids getting into sports," said Lauren Woolwine, 17, a member of the Edina High School robotics team, the Green Machine. "Now that we have a state tournament it's easier to relate to people. People really relate to state tournaments and championships."