by rick olivares
I love sports.
But more and more, I find myself hating the state of
sports.
You might say, ‘Oh, he’s off on another crusade.”
Well, maybe I am. And let the chips fall wherever
they may for here’s another broadside directed to the powers that be.
Last weekend, I watched a powerhouse of a high school
basketball team lose a match. It happens. And that is why the game is played
because you’ll never know when upsets can happen.
For the nth time, I saw a team crash and burn. They
had their open looks; the shots just wouldn’t fall. Some regulars played bad
and it told heavily on their fortunes. As for the players got chewed out during
the game, at the half, and after the game.
Outside the gym, the players lined up like they were
going to confession each awaiting their turn not to receive penance but a severe
tongue-lashing. Luckily, they weren’t in their gym for I learned that some of
the players not only get bawled out but also are physically hurt by the
coaching staff during practices. Apparently, there’s pressure on them to win
especially with a lot of money being funneled for their program. The mania to
win stresses out the players. And we forget that these are kids! Some who
aren’t even old enough to get a driver’s license.
Sometime late last year, I had lunch with some
basketball players from a different team including some who had already left
school. One of them informed me that he skipped out his final year of
eligibility because he couldn’t take the pressure of team management and alumni
telling him day in and out that he had to win and shouldn’t allow this other
team to win.
The players who were left behind bore the brunt of
expectations, pressure, and castigations.
I also saw some people coming in looking for some
players to sign. The funny thing is – they aren’t even coaches but agents! The last
thing the college game needs are sports agents. Let them stick to the pros. Not
while they are in school. Imagine signing all the players of one college team signed
to a management team! It is ridiculous. Why don’t we adopt professional rules
since it is only amateur in theory.
How about this team where the players were offered
pot money to win a championship. For the second year running! What makes it
worse is some of the grades of the players were doctored so they could play.
The last time I was invited to the Senate to shed
light on the controversial eligibility rules that have plagued collegiate
sports, I dropped a bombshell where student-athletes who are dropped from
varsity status have their scholarships taken back by the school. Let me be
clear about this. Their removal from the team doesn’t necessarily mean they
committed some grievous offense. It could be simply, the coaches dropped them
in favor of other players.
So why recruit them in the first place?
One kid was moving to another college after spending
high school in a rival school. Not his college had no intention of recruiting
him but wanted to deny him a chance to go to a rival school that could sure use
a player of his talents.
Most recently, while speaking to some of the players
who made the All-Star Game roster of the NBTC, they were afraid to say where
they really wanted to go for college for fear of reprisals from their high
school.
It left me shaking my head in anger.
Years ago, I wrote a story about some football
players going home having picked up all sorts of vices that when they returned
to their provinces they were changed men – drunkards, drifters, and drug
addicts. At the same time, the schools hold them in bondage with these release
papers and unconstitutional transfer rules.
For every great sports story there are quite a few
more that need to be told. But there’s a dark side to it all that needs to be
exposed.
"Sometime late last year, I had lunch with some basketball players from a different team including some who had already left school. One of them informed me that he skipped out his final year of eligibility because he couldn’t take the pressure of team management and alumni telling him day in and out that he had to win and shouldn’t allow this other team to win."
ReplyDelete"How about this team where the players were offered pot money to win a championship. For the second year running! What makes it worse is some of the grades of the players were doctored so they could play."
I have a good feeling about who these schools are, but I don't want to confirm, because it will make me lose faith in these schools real quickly.
I'm sure you guys in the sports business already know the real reasons why these things have happened. If you really are concerned and would want changes, the "blind item" style of article writing should give way to naming names. Kung hindi, the general audience would tend to be apathetic about the issues or worse, engage in speculations where reputations could be damaged eventually deflecting the real issues you want to be discussed,
ReplyDeleteI am sure you know that there are no systems in place to protect people against the rich and powerful. Were it that easy to name without considering for safety. If you have followed my exposes and fights against the UAAP, PFF etc you should know that I call a spade a spade. But the first order of business is to protect. In due time their names will be known.
DeleteFurthermore you didn't even bother to say who you were and you are asking for names?
Delete