KCBeltranFan
New member
Jays_Cards said:sports are about competing..You dont want to compete, dont play. All this PC nonsense is exactly what is wrong with our country.
I don't even need to finish the thread. This post sums it up nicely.
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Jays_Cards said:sports are about competing..You dont want to compete, dont play. All this PC nonsense is exactly what is wrong with our country.
MattinglyAlexander said:Merrian-Webster says:
Main Entry: sports·man·ship
Pronunciation: \-?ship\
Function: noun
Date: 1745
: conduct becoming to one participating in a sport (as fairness, respect for one's opponent, and graciousness in winning or losing)
From reading the story I can't see how the winning team was unsportsmanlike.
Did they play fair? No indication to the contrary.
Does it show a lack of respect to continue to play the game as it should be played? No.
Were the players gracious in winning or did they go, "Tee-hee, you guys suck!" It doesn't say that anywhere.
MattinglyAlexander said:Still a problem telling the winning team they did something wrong and making them feel guilty about it.
Therion said:I've been following this thread from the beginning but nobody has mentioned one fact: It was the administration of the school that won the game that insisted on the apology and requested a forfeit. As far as all of the local news has shown, almost nobody outside of a handful of parents complained about this.
If you look at yourself and realize you did something unsportsmanlike, then what's the problem? If this had happened without the score of 100-0 nobody would have noticed.
Therion said:MattinglyAlexander said:Still a problem telling the winning team they did something wrong and making them feel guilty about it.
Therion said:I've been following this thread from the beginning but nobody has mentioned one fact: It was the administration of the school that won the game that insisted on the apology and requested a forfeit. As far as all of the local news has shown, almost nobody outside of a handful of parents complained about this.
If you look at yourself and realize you did something unsportsmanlike, then what's the problem? If this had happened without the score of 100-0 nobody would have noticed.
I honestly don't see your point. It was an internal decision. Nobody from the outside demanded this. Nobody from the losing team called up the winning team and complained. The school itself realized they were quite unsportsmanlike and sought self-corrective measures.
And I still contend that without the 100-0 score none of us hear about this because "Girls Baseketball Team Win 98-74 And Appologizes!!" isn't as attention grabbing. If the school itself decides it was unsportsmanlike, then odds are there is little question of the lack of sportsmanship that occurred in the game.
Pete14Rose said:Adamsince1981 said:Pete,
If you don't understand the simple concept of sportsmanship, then you are pathetic.
Ah, the freedoms of saying things on the computer you wouldn't dare say in person. Must be nice.
dethomas07 said:
dethomas07 said:
David T. said:Sometimes winning isn't everything.
I read this article in the local paper a couple of days ago.........
http://www.desmoinesregister.com/apps/p ... 9901240341
David
BunchOBull said:He was fired for insubordination, not failing to apologize. If he would have kept his mouth shut, he'd more than likely be fine...running to the newspaper isn't smart on his part.
In my business it would be the same...I've signed non-disclosure agreements to that effect.
BunchOBull said:lol alright bud...again, he ran to the newspaper like an idiot...
He had two choices...either apologize and be "PC," or keep his mouth shut...he did neither. He was insubordinate.
BunchOBull said:His employer had gone on record as apologizing for the actions of its school representatives...in this case...it's girl's basketball coaches.
The head girl's basketball coach breaks away from the school's official statement and claims he does not include himself in Covenant's open-ended apology.
As a representative of Covenant, he has the obligation to fulfill the statement and mission of his employer.
He did not. Right, wrong, in between, he did not and the majority of people would lose their job for publically rejecting the official statement of their employer.
MattinglyAlexander said:BunchOBull said:His employer had gone on record as apologizing for the actions of its school representatives...in this case...it's girl's basketball coaches.
The head girl's basketball coach breaks away from the school's official statement and claims he does not include himself in Covenant's open-ended apology.
As a representative of Covenant, he has the obligation to fulfill the statement and mission of his employer.
He did not. Right, wrong, in between, he did not and the majority of people would lose their job for publically rejecting the official statement of their employer.
:| No, he does not have to agree with the OPINION of his employer.
as a matter of fact, isn't that a civil rights violation for firing him because he didn't share the same view? I'm just asking.
MattinglyAlexander said:as a matter of fact, isn't that a civil rights violation for firing him because he didn't share the same view? I'm just asking.