On a family vacation to Juarez (Yikes! Long before the drug-violence of this century: double yikes!), our happy (?) group went to see the bull fights on a Sunday afternoon. In one of the prelims, the torreador y picadors were having a difficult time with an uncooperative bull. The air filled with whistles. One old coot in our group opined aloud that the whole affair was barbaric and shameful. An English-speaking (and patient) spectator in an adjacent seat discussed the parallels between bullfighting in Juarez with the NFL every Sunday in the fall. In Juarez, an animal suffered (doomed for the slaughterhouse otherwise) and in NFL stadiums human beings were maimed and severely injured with regularity. (Head trauma was still over the horizon of awareness.) Now, it's been more than a half-century since Paul "Bear" Bryant staged his "summer camp" for the Texas A&M football squad at the beginning of Bryant's brief time at A&M before "mother" (the Alabama Crimson Tide) called Bryant back home. Bottom line: after the brutality of the "summer camp" in Junction, TX, A&M won only one game (Georgia by 6 points.) and lost nine in Bryant's inaurgural season. Now, we are in the midst of "summer camps" all over the Land O'The Free and the Hone O'The Stupid. If this is (fair & balanced) blood-lust so be it.
[x Salon]
Can Football Practice Be Child Abuse?
By Steve Almond
Tag Cloud of the following article
If you're one of the millions of fans who tunes into sports talk radio, chances are you've heard a lot of trash talk this week about Albert Haynesworth, the Washington Redskin's star nosetackle who has refused to practice for health reasons. The majority view on Haynesworth proffered by fat guys sitting in air conditioned studios, natch is that he's a spoiled brat who should quit moaning and hit the field.
This is invariably the message that gets sent when it comes to professional athletes. The ones who "play through pain" are heralded as paragons of manly virtue. It's a deceptive, dangerous message that hits home with the legions of high school athletes football players, in particular many of whom are now returning from their summer vacations to a world of vicious two-a-days.
A case in point: the two dozen young men who were admitted to a Portland-area hospital last week. All of them were players on the McMinnville High School football team, who had taken part in a weeklong immersion camp conducted by a new head coach. Three of the boys had to have emergency surgery to relieve swelling in their arms.
In fact, the players were suffering from exactly the same condition as Haynesworth, rhabdomyolysis, a breakdown of muscle cells tied to intense exercise in hot environments, that can cause severe kidney damage. Why? Among other factors, the team had spent time training in a room with a temperature of 115 degrees.
Here's how one of them, 17-year-old Brent Cordie, characterized the situation: "I was trying to prove to the coaches I can push myself to the max. I wanted to be one of the eleven on Friday night."
Pundits have been quick to lay blame in McMinnville, saying, in essence, protect those poor chil'runs!
But every year high school football players eagerly subject themselves to injuries ranging from heat exhaustion to torn ligaments to concussions and spinal injuries. They are encouraged in this endeavor not just by overzealous coaches, but an entire culture of athletic worship that sanctions behaviors that would be seen, in almost any other context, as child abuse.
Buzz Bissinger, who wrote the definitive account of high school football, Friday Night Lights, recently wrote a wrenching piece highlighting the tragedy of high school players who suffer paralyzing injuries. "The game's violence will continue because that's exactly why we like it, our gladiatorial lust still intact 16 centuries after the Romans," Bissinger observes.
Does anyone else here smell a double standard?
Given the obsession with protecting children from harm in the form of peanut allergens, sexual predators, and so on wouldn't concerned parents and politicians might want to transfer some of that vigilance to a sport that results in children getting disfigured and killed? That is, in fact, predicated on what Bissinger accurately characterizes as "gladiatorial lust"? (I mean, Michael Vick was made a pariah for conducting dog fights. What does that those of us who get off on watching kids deck each other?)
But this is how our culture operates. We scold violence out of one side of our mouth, and cheer for blood out of the other.
The hit TV series based on Bissinger's own book is the quintessential example. Way back in the pilot episode, the star quarterback suffered a paralyzing spinal injury. The next week, his teammates were back in action, ready to "play through the pain" and prove themselves in battle. And we were there to watch and cheer. Ω
[Steve Almond is a short story writer and essayist who received his undergraduate degree at Wesleyan University. Almond served as adjunct professor in creative writing at Boston College for five years until publishing an open letter of resignation in the The Boston Globe on May 12, 2006, in which he explained that his resignation was intended to protest the selection of Condoleezza Rice as the college's 2006 commencement guest speaker. His most recent book is Rock and Roll Will Save Your Life (2010).]
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Sapper's (Fair & Balanced) Rants & Raves by Neil Sapper is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. Based on a work at sapper.blogspot.com. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available here.
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