We are used to seeing angry posts on sports Web sites. This, above all, seems to be the modus operandi of sports and sports coverage now.
It must be in-your-face, provoke-an-argument posturing, particularly when you post on the opposition’s sites. There are countless fans who, instead of having a life, go to Web sites where a group of people root for a team and simply make posts to try and anger them.
I guess we all need a hobby.
So this post after the U of L football game Saturday should come as no surprise.
It concerns a play many of you probably saw, where a UConn player falsely signaled for a fair catch on a punt and, when the players on both teams stopped playing, ran it back for the tying touchdown.
Here is what the post said:
“Despicable is the only word for both player and coach. I am embarrassed for the Huskies ...”
Must be a U of L fan who is angry at the loss, right? Well here is the rest of the post:
“...and ashamed to call them my alma mater. I apologize.”
It is such a blatant attempt at cheating that even the fans of the team involved are embarrassed.
So I should be celebrating this as an example of how sportsmanship is not completely dead, right?
I mean here is a fan who still gets it, sensing that this crossed the line of gamesmanship into an act that even he, as a supporter of the team, finds embarrassing.
Why then is this the latest example of my seemingly-endless string of nauseating acts by people who should know better simply turning a blind eye to decency and sportsmanship?
Because after the game, UConn coach Randy Edsall gave the kid who ran the punt back a game ball.
Anyone who has played or followed football knows that a game ball is a big honor. It is a reward for outstanding performance. And this embarrassing act (it was called as much by the Big East commissioner Mike Tranghese) is being rewarded by the man who is supposed to be setting the tone for his team’s conduct.
I think we make the end result of one game into too much too often.
As Dean Smith said, “Winning and losing a basketball game is not life and death. If it were, we would all be dead a lot.”
But this goes beyond even that. This says not only is blatantly cheating not bad, it is rewardable. Something to be honored.
Is it any wonder that hardly a weekend goes by where I don’t see examples of this behavior at the youngest levels?
This past weekend, I watched a 12-year-old hockey player hold the entire game up while he threw a temper tantrum on the ice, threw his stick, rolled around on the ice in disgust, then (and here is the kicker) berated the kid playing the same position as he from the bench during the championship game.
Right in front of the coach.
Why does he allow it?
The young temper king’s parents have refused to allow the coach to talk to their son. And this is considered a normal development for our youth.
Here’s another example of the same thing, different team.
Too many penalties result in the head coach being banned from the ensuing championship game.
No problem. Simply pretend that the scorekeeper is the head coach for the last game and let him sit it out.
Don’t feel too sorry for the team they played, however. That squad had a bye to the finals, scheduled at 5 p.m. After seeing the team I described above win a semifinal game that ended at 2:30 p.m., they informed the tournament director that they had to get the starting time moved up to make a 6 p.m. flight.
They moved the final up to 3:15, giving their opponents barely 45 minutes rest. Not having played at all yet that day, they wore their beleaguered opponent down to win the title.
As they were leaving the ice, their players were boasting that there really was no flight that they had to catch. Just a ruse to make the opponent have to play earlier.
If it weren’t young people’s lives that we were talking about shaping, maybe it would be funny.
But it is sad..
And I contend that even if it were not young people, it would still be tragic.
I think that’s why fans are so upset about steroids in baseball, or were outraged at the cheating referee in the NBA. Because sports used to be the one place in this crazy world — one that gets more complicated every day — that people felt they could find release in.
Level playing field. Play by the rules. No matter your race, color or creed. Let the best man or woman win.
Do your best. Shake hands.
Enjoy the win, learn from the loss. Grow. Repeat.
Does that sound anything like the episodes described above?
Sad.
Bob Valvano lives in Sellersburg and can be reached via e-mail at bobvshow@yahoo.com. He is a former college basketball coach and current radio show host on ESPN Radio.
Bobby Valvano Columns
October 24, 2007
VALVANO: Tales of sports gone bad
- Bobby Valvano Columns
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VALVANO: Apologies are not that hard
Apologies — what is so hard about them?
Either you get it and you’re sorry, or you don’t. But they don’t come with clauses and conditions.
I had a friend at ESPN who had a sign in her office that said, “Don’t ruin a good apology with an explanation.”
That pretty much sums it up. Either you’re sorry or you aren’t. -
VALVANO: Ohio girl reminds us of the good in sports
The producer for my radio show at ESPN calls 2007 “The Year of the Scandal.”
It is hard to argue with him.
We had Michael Vick and dogfighting, an NBA referee betting on games he officiated, former Tour De France winners voluntarily giving back their trophies for doping, and Marion Jones not so voluntarily giving her titles back for doping.
Also, we had more and more evidence stacking up to lead to an indictment against Barry Bonds for steroid use, the Patriots being levied the largest fine in the history of the league for “Spygate,” and top tennis players accused of throwing matches. -
VALVANO: IU football is a team we can all get behind
By beating Ball State last Saturday, they are bowl eligible. But I fear there will be a lot of six-win teams left home. The tiebreaker could be how well the teams travel (bowl games, after all, are first and foremost about making money), and IU is not known as a great “travel” team when it comes to football.
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VALVANO: Tales of sports gone bad
We are used to seeing angry posts on sports Web sites. This, above all, seems to be the modus operandi of sports and sports coverage now.
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VALVANO: Dampier is a new Bocce hero
My brother Jim used to like to tell this story.
When he was about nine years old, he and our older brother Nick, who was about 12 at the time, went to Yankee Stadium for one of the first times by themselves (I can't imagine the same woman, who raised me under such scrutiny in the relative hinterlands that was Long Island at that time, allowed my two brothers to take the subway from our home in Queens to the Bronx — by themselves — to see a baseball game, but she did.) -
VALVANO: Dye the man behind the courses
There are many reasons I like living here in Southern Indiana and I just got one more on Monday, and a memorable experience along the way.
Many golf fans know the name Pete Dye. He is one of the premier golf course designers in history, and at 81 years of age, is still a single digit handicapper. -
VALVANO: College football is a fraud
There are plenty of situations in life that seem to call for posing. You can’t go to an art gallery and simply blurt out, “I don’t get it.” You can’t listen to the obscure references of a Sheryl Crow or the late Jim Morrison of a generation ago, and openly point out that the lyrics make no sense.
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VALVANO:New course has bite, but is still a gem
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VALVANO: CWS lives up to its hype
OMAHA, Neb. — I used to wonder why there seemed to be such a cynicism from people who cover sports for a living. I mean most of them would tell you they got into it because they loved sports, perhaps played them growing up, and yet seem so jaded once they got “inside.”
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VALVANO: Happy to be with my new teammates
Last week, I told you about the many lessons I learned during the experience of kicking in an actual Arena League Game for the Louisville Fire.
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