Do you think that the coaches put them up to it?
Do you think that the coaches put them up to it?
Those kids should be thrown out of football. Period. And they should probably get criminal charges. And if coaches were involved, the same for them.
^Just saw this on NBC national news. Hard to believe. And how DUMB to you have to be - uh these games are filmed and many show live on the internet guys!! Wow.
Before watching the video I was expecting it to just be one player and hard to have any evidence of targeting, not that it is impossible there could have been two spectacularly stupid high school kids where one talked the other into doing it.
No way any coach with any desire to maintain a future *as* a coach at *any* level would *dare* try to orchestrate something like this. These two punks deserve criminal assault charges.
I agree*...absolutely disgusting behavior.
Never seen anything like it in US football.
With two other players being ejected prior to this play, you have to wonder about the coaches ability to control his players.
Some in Texas are calling for the entire program to be disbanded.
I think that's a knee-jerk extreme the wrong direction. It punishes kids and coaches who had absolutely nothing to do with this as best we understand the situation right now.
As I said before, I simply refuse to believe any HS football coach who aspires to *stay* a coach (or employed in the public school system at all for that matter) would have *ANYTHING* to do with this kind of premeditated assault. It would be the instantaneous end of their careers in my estimation. Heck, even having been on this staff right now wouldn't exactly be a five-star asset, if you get my drift.
Make an unequivocal example of the two criminals who engaged in the assault. Some suggest that the coaches may have been aware that these two guys were problems, and perhaps deserve some accountability; but barring a direct connection, I have a hard time going along with that. But it's out there.
If there was something "bigger" going on, surely someone else on that team knows about it. If the coaches were, somehow, participants, there's just no way it stays under wraps IMHO.
You are probably correct in that the coaches had nothing to do with it, but you have WAY too much faith in people. Emotions run high in sports and some people do things they regret. I'm sure teachers who sleep with their students have aspirations to continue teaching, but they don't exactly think things though.
I agree that it MIGHT be a knee-jerk reaction, but it is also possible that this is a problem program. I really don't have enough info at this point to have an opinion one way or the other. It is possible that the overall program is rogue, in which case it might be justified. Apparently the entire game had been marred by unsportsmanlike conduct by the John Jay squad, and two OTHER players on that team had just been ejected before this incident happened. If the problem is institutional it might not be a bad thing for them to take a timeout and get things under control there.
Of course, the other side of the coin might be that the officials were terrible, unfair and even racist (as the players apparently accused them of being), but even if so it doesn't warrant that type of targeting. Regardless of what brought it on, those two kids need to be out of football. It's inexcusable.
The two players are suspended from football and school while criminal charged are being considered. They should receive a lifetime ban from football on any level.
While I agree with most of this, that play along with multiple other plays with ejections in one game is a bit of a red flag that deserves the coaches getting they way the are running the program to be evaluated by both the school district and the league.
There is also some reports one of the assistant coaches said "that guy needs to pay for cheating us" shortly before that all happened. As early as it is it may be wrong, the two may not have been anywhere around him if he did and it may not be anyone who had any authority over the two. If the coach did say that he probably will be wishing he didn't already.
Yes, he is already probably wishing nothing happened.
http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/highsc...213740537.html
An investigation by the Northside Independent School District resulted in the suspension of assistant coach Mack Breed for allegedly saying, "That guy needs to pay for cheating us," referring to the referee.
Here's another case... NJ High School Football Player Caught Bashing Opponent in Head With Helmet
NJ High School Football Player Caught Bashing Opponent in Head With Helmet | NBC New York
Should that kid be suspended a number of games? The rest of the season, kicked off the team?
Yeah, a slobbering drunk woman who called a kid names pertaining to his race and questioning his manhood....a woman who was baiting a kid who had turned 18 a few hours before....a kid who was away from home for the first time and had not made friends to have a support group.....and a kid, who by all accounts since then has been a standout student.
The law in OK, per the legislatore who wrote it, allows the person who did the hitting, some leeway when he/she was baited into the act. He wasn't prosecuted and he sat out a year and did all that was asked of him and more.
I like to think of these situations in terms of physical abuse in general, not just men against women.
I used to run a nonprofit that dealt with this issue pretty frequently and it was absolutely shocking how often women abused men. It's a complicated issue that is almost never reported or publicized but it's very real.
The same is true about how parents and others abuse kids; and older people are frequently abused as well.
Using physical violence in any situation -- except in self preservation -- is really reprehensible and I think this whole subject is almost always discussed too narrowly.
Sadly, it looks like I was right with my original question.
SAN ANTONIO -- The two Texas high school football players, suspended for blindsiding an official during a Sept. 4 game, both say they were following a direct order from their assistant coach before delivering the infamous hits.
John Jay high school senior Michael Moreno, 17, and his teammate Victor Rojas, a 15-year-old sophomore at John Jay, spoke publicly for the first time since the video of their blindside tackle of referee Robert Watts went viral.
more at -->Texas HS players say coach told them to hit referee
Well, the skeptic in me hopes that is true and it's not them blaming someone else.
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