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Is it also the players fault for being injured and feeling pressured to come back, or even play through their injury?
The Washington Post story is pretty damning, especially about the playing through injuries part...which was taken from the report
No way she could have stayed.
How can you possibly care how long she's had a job when she's done it while being racist?
If she said racist garbage, she's racist. I don't care what dumb runaround the school says. This isn't complicated.
Wonder who will take over the head coach position and if any of there players will go to other programs? Isn’t shea a NC girl? Wonder if she would consider it and go back home? I sure hope not she is such a important piece to the UCONN program. Who ever becomes the coach there good luck cleaning up that mess ... not just the hatchell thing but all the academics and there scandals.
What some call "racially insensitive" comments are often innocuous things that 95% of people would not view as even remotely racist. One example: An ESPN tennis commentator was fired and had his life ruined because he said Serena Williams was using "guerilla tactics" by surprise attacks on the net. That was somehow viewed as racist - absurd on its face.
What some call "racially insensitive" comments are often innocuous things that 95% of people would not view as even remotely racist.
Actually it was more of the football and men's basketball programs that ran afowl, but some of the women's basketball team was also going and they blamed it on them more then on the men. It was a sham and the NCAA let UNCheat get away with it.Also, I do get the arguments about one person she said/she said situations...this seems to be a lot of players, statements that don't leave a lot of wiggle room for misinterpretation and (for the cynics) a coach who hasn't won in a long time AND oversaw a program that ran afowl of NCAA regulations for decades.
Bye, Sil.
If you believe it is racist to be ignorant of history, ignorant or uncaring of how words can be hurtful to folks of different background, and if you don't recognize the difference in what your life has been like versus many folks disadvantaged by race - then you would identify them as racist. I just call them ignorant.If you think 95% of people think alluding to hanging African Americans by a noose from a tree isn't racist...then...you're definitely also a racist.
Is it also the players fault for being injured and feeling pressured to come back, or even play through their injury?
I just asked the obvious question. I won't comment on the validity of her being asked to resign or the moral aspects of it. There certainly was apparent ly more reasons to fire anyone in the Athletic dept over the academic and associated issue prior to this. If an apology would have fixed it, the issue does not appear to have been earth shaking. You make your own view of this, don't look to me to do it for you. It is an excercize for a Logic class.Broadway, So your point is the report was a lever to get rid of her? Given the information contained she should be gone. But hey, I am all for a good conspiracy theory, this isn’t one however...
If you believe it is racist to be ignorant of history, ignorant or uncaring of how words can be hurtful to folks of different background, and if you don't recognize the difference in what your life has been like versus many folks disadvantaged by race - then you would identify them as racist. I just call them ignorant.
It is still wrong, it is rude, it is a lot of things - but to me racism is doing something with the intent to be hurtful to someone of a different race, or mistreat them (intentionally), or think less of them because they are a different race than you. To me the closest she comes to racism is refusing to acknowledge that those remarks were inappropriate and hurtful to part of her team and her failure to apologize for her insensitivity.
White males have had all, or most of the power, in this country since its founding, so it's hard to take them seriously as victims. The argument about reverse racism or sexism towards that particular class doesn't hold up because the undergirding principle of the "isms" is power, and whites, more specifically white males, have had the exclusive benefit of institutional power for centuries.@KnightBridgeAZSome of us tend to accept negative comment sabout or White Male-ism as being "the the world we live in".
A distraction for football and mob. They probably love it.Washington Post today points out that Hatchell never denied that she said "noose" until her attorney got involved. The Post points out that she refused to apologize to the players for the remark, even after they brought it to her attention and told her how they felt.
So it happened. And UNC also agreed, which says something.
And, of course, there is the medical mistreatment and pressure on badly injured players to play.
The last lines of the Post article are about a player doing a selfie while wearing a green jersey. She transferred to Notre Dame.
When players vote with their feet, a university will take notice. It must have been really bad for UNC to force a resignation for a coach with more than a thousand wins.
In my estimation no one will say Hatchell's life was destroyed. True, we don't know only that which was printed. What if found disconcerting--and wondered why--Hatchell refused to apologize--it was an easy out. Did she think she was being backed into a corner and took the tough road? If an apology defuses a situation that seems too easy.It's a whole new generation of players and parents.
Half of the BYers will speak good of the Coach, half will congratulate the players (for destroying another long time coach's life).
Need we say more???
How can you possibly care how long she's had a job when she's done it while being racist?
If she said racist garbage, she's racist. I don't care what dumb runaround the school says. This isn't complicated.
What does it matter? If only one person thinks that it is racist, then isn't it racist?Do you know what she said that was supposedly racist?
This is one part of the story I find a bit perplexing. Every D-1 program has a medical staff, and most have a team doctor. These are the people who decide when an athlete is cleared to play. The article insinuates that the coach tried to pressure and influence this decision making process. No coach should ever ask an injured athlete to play, not only from an ethical standpoint, but that coach is exposing themselves, and the school, to a myriad of liability issues.
There is a difference between being injured and being hurt. Most basketball players have bumped knees, or have taken a knee to the thigh and are hurt. If the medical staff tells the coach they are hurting, but sound physically it then comes down to a mutual decision between player and coach, but if the player says they are a no go, you don’t try to influence their view. If you recall, KLS was playing hurt on an ankle at the end of the 17-18 season, but rest assured she was cleared to play. Some coaches become frustrated with the medical staff, but they have their professional reputation and liability issues on the line, and will almost always err on the side of caution.
In this case there is the player’s version, and the coach’s version, with the correct version, most likely, somewhere in between. JMO
How on earth has Hatchell coached for 30+ years and this is the FIRST time anyone has ever heard about this? I'm no Tar Heel fan, but this is complete and utter nonsense. This woman has dedicated her life and career to WBB and that University.
She just must be lost, embarrassed, and totally devastated.
It’s a Carolina thing... Duke had it too.Well, The Post points out that the situation with injured kids being forced to play, or being told to play because the extent of their serious injuries was withheld from them, goes back several years. So, according to the press, which appears to have gotten a lot of information from the UNC study, this is not a one-off thing.
Duke destroyed Britney Hunter's knee, giving her multiple shots when she should have been held out of games. A lot about her and her treatment at Duke in the press at the time.
The poor kid couldn't practice most of the time, and couldn't play basketball in a game more than a few minutes per game. She was excellent when she was in, but her permanent injury kept her from playing more than tiny amounts.
That was on Duke.
Actually, there are two versions that are important: the team physician's report to the athlete, and that athlete's opinion garnered from a second physician's opinion. As the Washington Post article points out, the athletes and their parents were outraged when, time after time, they learned the truth about serious injuries only after consulting a second non-team physician.
So the scandal here is that the team doctor was colluding with the coaching staff to hide the true extent of their injuries from the athletes in order to get them to play while badly injured, and subjecting themselves to further serious injury.
That sounds to me potentially criminal, or at least open to major civil lawsuits. Universities are not supposed to withhold the truth about their injuries from student-athletes. Yet that, as documented by The Post, is exactly what UNC did.
And as to "hurt versus injured," that is a false distinction. If you are hurting, you've been injured. Pain is your body telling you that it's suffered an injury. One might be sore, but it sounds as though this distinction without a difference is meant to keep badly injured kids playing, no matter the risk to them.
Racially insensitive Does NOT equal racist. The insensitive part in this case is perhaps more important & the take away is: those words should not be used because they offend. This ESPN commentator could have learned from Howard Cousell in 1983 when Cousell referred to Joe Washington as a "little monkey" -a phrase Cousell had been using on air since 1972.What some call "racially insensitive" comments are often innocuous things that 95% of people would not view as even remotely racist. One example: An ESPN tennis commentator was fired and had his life ruined because he said Serena Williams was using "guerilla tactics" by surprise attacks on the net. That was somehow viewed as racist - absurd on its face.