Categories
Hazing News

Flashback to 1999: what did Sports Illustrated say about hazing back then?

Here is my 1999 commentary in NCAA News:

Letter to the Editor — Magazine’s hazing treatment raises concern

The following is in response to an article in the September 13 issue of Sports Illustrated regarding hazing in athletics.

As a national advisor on Alfred University’s “Initiation Rites and Athletics: A National Survey of NCAA Sports Teams,” I believe that Richard Hoffer’s “Praising Hazing” essay in Sports Illustrated was deceptive, dishonest and potentially destructive.

It was deceptive because Hoffer labeled as hazing certain team-building activities (such as rookies carrying balls) that the Alfred survey had ruled out of the definition of hazing. He mocked and dismissed what the survey had dismissed — all for cheap laughs.

It also was deceptive because Hoffer gave as a bad example of hazing the taping of Cleveland Browns rookies to the goalpost. His column implied that pro players have the common sense to know when not to let things get out of hand.

Yet, sports fans know better. Witness the New Orleans Saints’ braining of rookies in a 1998 gantlet or the New York Mets’ loss of a player’s services in a 1999 initiation squabble.

Hoffer warns that high-school and college hazing activities ought to be forbidden, but he ignores the fact that younger, amateur athletes emulate the hazing they witness in pro sports. Plus, being immature, they take things to a dangerous extreme.

It would have been journalistically ethical for SI to run a rebuttal column mentioning the reports of high-school hazing-related sodomies/sexual attacks in Massachusetts, Texas, California, Washington, Pennsylvania and Canada as a counterpoint to Hoffer’s smirky column.

I also cry foul that Hoffer ignored the scary over-ingestion of alcohol during hazings at the University of Michigan (hockey), State University College at Potsdam (women’s lacrosse), and, yes, tiny Division III Alfred University, which (the writer failed to mention) did the survey in the first place because the school’s football team experienced initiation-related alcohol problems during the 1998 season (and suffered the 1978 death of a fraternity pledge who was hazed, in part, by varsity lacrosse players).

Finally, Hoffer’s column trivializes the deaths of Nick Haben (Western Illinois University lacrosse club) and John Davies (a University of Nevada football player who died in an alcohol-related hazing by a sub-rosa club of jocks).

The Sports Illustrated article trivializes the problems with alcohol specifically covered in the survey.

I find that destructive.

Hank Nuwer

Categories
Hazing News

Sports Illustrated wags a finger: Hazing in the NFL is a lawsuit waiting to happen

Oh sure it’s innocent hazing. They wouldn’t make a player drop his drawers, grab a weiner with his buttocks, and eat if it it slips, would they? Would they?
John P. Lopez says so.

Categories
Hazing News

Why Dez was one small step for hazing eradication in pro sport

Story link to the Dallas Morning News

Categories
Hazing News

A Missouri school tries to resume football after mass arrests

Story link

July 29, 2010

Correction to earlier story. Thanks to G for headsup.11:36 a.m.

If you’ll permit me to make one very minor programming note for your blog –
your headline on today’s story says “A Kansas School…” The Seneca High
School team is actually from Missouri. They traveled about 45 minutes
northwest to Pittsburg, Kan., for the football camp. That’s where the
incident occurred, and that’s why the boys face charges in Kansas.

Seneca coaches have first meeting with players

By Greg Grisolano Globe Staff Writer

Excerpt

SENECA, Mo. — The Seneca High School football coach said he hopes the team and the community can start healing, amid the fallout from a hazing incident last month that left as many as 17 players injured.

Eleven other players are facing criminal charges in Kansas.

“Our entire community has been affected in some way, especially the football team and their families who we deeply care about,” head coach Robert Townsend said in a phone interview Thursday afternoon. “My thoughts and prayers are steadfast for the Seneca School District and the whole community that a process of healing can begin.”

Townsend made his first public comments in the wake of a hazing incident in which the 17 players among those attending a football camp at Pittsburg (Kan.) State University were injured. Upperclassmen on the team are accused of injuring some of the underclassmen players on June 10 in a dorm at PSU. According to a police report, upperclassmen used plastic window blind rods to strike 17 underclassmen. Some team members also allegedly placed their genitals on the faces of younger players.

Categories
Hazing News

The NFL Blog Needs to Rethink Such Commentary

Do I have an issue with the way this NFL blog story talks about hazing being a “principle”? You bet your cleats I do. Resisting hazing is standing up for a principle. Giving in and going along is unprincipled. There, I said it.