slur - Bad Sporters https://www.badsporters.com News Blogging About Athletes Being Caught Up Sat, 06 Jun 2020 19:27:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 Kyle Whittingham’s efforts to shepherd Utah football through current social unrest put to test by Morgan Scalley’s racial slur https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/06/kyle-whittinghams-efforts-to-shepherd-utah-football-through-current-social-unrest-put-to-test-by-morgan-scalleys-racial-slur/ https://www.badsporters.com/2020/06/06/kyle-whittinghams-efforts-to-shepherd-utah-football-through-current-social-unrest-put-to-test-by-morgan-scalleys-racial-slur/#respond Sat, 06 Jun 2020 19:27:24 +0000 https://badsporters.com/?p=7003 In the days since former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was caught on camera pressing his knee against George Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes until he died, Utah football head coach Kyle Whittingham and his staff have addressed the incident in team meetings. There has been discussion and support, both as a team and […]

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In the days since former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was caught on camera pressing his knee against George Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes until he died, Utah football head coach Kyle Whittingham and his staff have addressed the incident in team meetings.

There has been discussion and support, both as a team and individual units, as the fallout from Floyd’s death plays out across the nation in the form of rallies and protests of police brutality. In an interview with The Salt Lake Tribune on Tuesday, Whittingham reaffirmed his love for the togetherness and diversity inside his locker room, which is generally split three ways between African-American, white/LDS and Polynesian student-athletes.

Friday afternoon’s scathing revelation involving Morgan Scalley, in the middle of what is shaping up to be a pivotal moment of civil unrest in the United States, may put all of that to the test.

In a school-issued statement, Utah athletic director Mark Harlan said he has spoken to Scalley, who was contrite, while acknowledging he sent the text message with a derogatory term. In the same statement, Scalley apologized, called the word he used “insensitive,” and accepted the suspension, which is with pay and indefinite while the school investigates.

“We’ve certainly addressed it, with the staff first and then we had a team meeting a few nights ago via Zoom where we talked to the team about it,” Whittingham told The Tribune about the Floyd video, one day before criminal charges against Chauvin were upgraded to second-degree murder, while the other three officers involved were charged with aiding and abetting second-degree murder. “This week, the offense and the defense as individual units are having Zoom calls as well with their groups and further discussing.

“Bottom line is, we want to make sure we’re there to support our guys and that they know we’re there for them. We have a great mental health team here at the University of Utah and just making sure the players use all the resources available to them and know the support is there if they want to reach out. That’s been our main focus since the event.”

Added Utah receivers coach Guy Holliday: “What I see is really a problem allowed to fester and exist for whatever reasons, but it seems to be a fear of African-American men, plus a willingness to intimidate, be aggressive and punish. What we have to recognize is there are good and bad people within all races, it’s not exclusive to men or minorities. We have to have more tolerance and really better treatment of human beings.”

In the wake of Floyd’s death, Whittingham, Holliday and the rest of the coaching staff were already in the middle of a unique and teachable moment. While African Americans make up nearly 50% of all FBS rosters according to multiple analysis done over the last decade by a variety of sources, Whittingham is the head coach of one of, if not the most-diverse rosters in the country.

“It’s one of the things I love most about our program and our team, the diversity,” Whittingham said. “We believe we’re the most-diverse team in the country and not just from an ethnic background, but we also have 18-year-old freshman and 25-year-old returned missionaries. We have various religious backgrounds, so you’d be hard-pressed to find a team in the country in any sport that has the level of diversity that we have. To me, it’s been a blessing. It’s a way for these guys to interact with each other, get along with each other and it’s been a strength of ours. It’s been great to be a part of that for so many years.

“I think it helps prepare them for life in a lot of different ways. To learn how to get along and be part of a team and have so many guys pulling in the same direction that genuinely care about each other and love each other, it’s just great to be a part of.”

In the aftermath, a handful of former players and recruits have come out in support of Scalley on Twitter, which is to be expected. Scalley, 40, is generally considered player-friendly, a strong defensive mind, an effective recruiter and a future head coach. He is viewed by some as the potential successor to Whittingham whenever he decides to retire.

How things play out in the shorter term will also offer fascination because as rallies and protests persist, Utah players, and young men of color in general, have proven more than willing to use social media to help get their point of racial injustice across.

One Ute in particular, redshirt junior running back TJ Green, has been active on social media in the days since protests ramped up nationwide. Tuesday and Wednesday nights brought protests to the downtown area of Green’s hometown of Chandler, Ariz.

On Tuesday, Green tweeted out a photo of himself with a group of fellow young African-American males. They are holding up a sign that reads “AM I NEXT?” That sentence is sandwiched in between two black power fists. The next day, Green fired off a photo of himself holding the sign at a protest next to a photo of himself in game action at Utah. The accompanying tweet read, “If you do not support me in this field, Then do NOT support me on the field.”

“There’s a right way and a wrong way to do it, but we talk in this program all the time about letting their personalities show through,” Whittingham said. “You get a team of 100-plus players, approaching 120 players, you have a bunch of personalities and you want them to manifest. That also goes for the coaching staff. If you’re on a coaching staff, in a meeting with 12 guys with the same personality and who all think the same way, you don’t need that. We encourage people to be themselves and stand up for what they believe in, but do it the right way. There are ways to do things constructively instead of destructively.”

Holliday added. “I think it’s very important for young people to have a voice. For so long, adults tended to brush over and really don’t acknowledge the opinions and voices of our youth. If you see the protests, they are cross-racial and there is a lot of pain and frustration if you listen to what these young people are saying. We need to listen to what they’re saying, we have to stop dismissing them as not being important.”

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North Canberra-Gungahlin player cops six-match ban for racial slur https://www.badsporters.com/2018/02/23/north-canberra-gungahlin-player-cops-six-match-ban-for-racial-slur/ https://www.badsporters.com/2018/02/23/north-canberra-gungahlin-player-cops-six-match-ban-for-racial-slur/#respond Fri, 23 Feb 2018 06:46:04 +0000 http://www.badsporters.com/?p=2450 North Canberra-Gungahlin president Phil Coe says the club has had “significant internal conversations” following a player’s six-match ban for a racial slur. A Norths player was charged for making two alleged racist remarks in his side’s first innings win against Weston Creek Molonglo at Harrison Oval on February 3. Weston Creek Molonglo’s clash with North Canberra-Gungahlin […]

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North Canberra-Gungahlin president Phil Coe says the club has had “significant internal conversations” following a player’s six-match ban for a racial slur.

A Norths player was charged for making two alleged racist remarks in his side’s first innings win against Weston Creek Molonglo at Harrison Oval on February 3.

He was facing four changes but had two dropped when he faced the Cricket ACT disciplinary tribunal.

The player has since been ineligible to play in any grade and has been rubbed out of contention to play in the last round of the Douglas Cup against Eastlake at Kingston Oval on Saturday.

Coe hopes Cricket ACT remain consistent in their approach to similar behaviour across the competition, believing “there are improvements to be made for next season”.

Senior Norths players and officials have spoken with the charged player to make him aware that his actions were not acceptable.

His teammates were shocked at the time and he has made clear he regrets making the comments.

Weston Creek Molonglo’s charge alleged the player had made four separate comments but two of those were thrown out by the tribunal.

“Anyone who is reported should be held accountable for what actually happened. In the case there was a breach of code where [the player] deserved to meet those consequences,” Coe said.

“We’re certainly not defending him in regard to any racial slur and saying that it’s okay, but in the case that actually happened a couple of weeks ago there was disagreement about what actually happened.

“He has been given a six-match sentence and we are not appealing that decision. He was found guilty of making an inappropriate comment and we accept that, we’re not fighting it from that side of things.”

A Weston Creek Molonglo spokesman says the club has opted to respect the process and wait before making any comment.

Cricket ACT chief executive Cameron French declined to comment, but the governing body confirmed an investigation into the incident is ongoing.

The suspension will carry over into the 2018-19 season, given there is just four weekends of cricket remaining this season and Norths aren’t a certainty to make the finals.

Norths are locked in a tight battle to hold on to fourth spot on the ladder with first-placed Eastlake standing in their way with an eye on a minor premiership.

Queanbeyan and Weston Creek Molonglo’s clash could be a rehearsal for next week’s semi-finals, which will be played as a three-day match beginning on Friday.

Tuggeranong and Ginninderra will look to force their way into finals contention when they face each other at Chisholm Oval, where a first innings win for either side could be enough to guarantee a top four berth.

Western District-UC remain a mathematical chance but their clash with ANU shapes as little more than a consolation battle at Jamison Oval.

Both sides are preparing to bring down the curtain on underwhelming two-day campaigns following their limited overs heroics that delivered a Twenty20 title to Wests and a one-day grand final appearance to the Owls.

CRICKET ACT DOUGLAS CUP

Saturday: Round 14 – Western District-UC v ANU at Jamison Oval, Eastlake v North Canberra-Gungahlin at Kingston Oval, Queanbeyan v Weston Creek Molonglo at Freebody Oval, Tuggeranong v Ginninderra at Chisholm Oval. Play starts at 11am.

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