This whole issue is already been solved and i think the outcome is fair.
But as a one time middle/high/and college (club team)athlete ive always wondered two things, that completely transcend race -
-Why the people who cant even run down the field or court are always the ones who are yelling the loudest about how much other people suck?
-Why are student athletes told non stop to be professional on and off the field just to have non stop insults thrown at them by groups of people who 'really should know better'. In this case a 60 year old man; or in other cases college educated, come from a good family, raised in a church people who think its ok to throw turkey legs and beer bottles at other students because they are just so into the game? - Give me a break
Yet collectively we all turn the other way?
Good grief.... if what I'm saying about the pokes bothers you it would help you gain perspective on this when it's far from just OU fans talking the truth about OSU and Smart.
Some are having a little fun with it too.
NSFW or hyper sensitive osu fans.
http://mbd.scout.com/mb.aspx?s=172&f...t=12675275&p=1
People have been yelling at the opposition and doing just as this man did for as long as I can remember in my fifty some-odd years. I've never seen an athlete become violent in reaction (except the famous Artest episode). I'm a little baffled at those who seem to think this is behavior that has any excuses whatsoever. People seem to be saying there aren't any excuses and then make them. He should have been ejected, and thrown out for the rest of the season. If this had happened on a city street, he would have been arrested for battery without question.
Teach these athletes discipline. When Marcus steps out into real life, he can't be pushing and shoving and fighting every person who may say something that angers him. But this mollycoddling three-game suspension is a slap on the wrist at a VERY serious situation. It does Marcus Smart no favors. But, it helps Cowboy basketball get to the tournament, and unfortunately I think that's all they're looking at.
Proverb: "To understand a man, you've got to walk a mile in his shoes, whether they fit or not." This holds true for OSU's Marcus Smart and Texas Tech Super fan Jeff Orr.
We manage to think that our lives are difficult because we give, receive and take so much for granted. We are fortunate in the United States; because we are the best country providing for our people and those of many nations.
Universities, colleges, clubs, teams, organizations & the likes are making a paradigm shift. Has the new emphasis shifted to 'winning at all cost?'
As a nation of people, there is a code of conduct.
As players there are rules in which we need to adhere.
As fans, we need to respect the game and the competitiveness among players; their efforts should be appreciated.
The rules & regulations should be enforced for both players & spectators.
My mama is prettier than your mamma!
My daddy can whip your daddy.
My team is better than your team.
Has ' R-E-S-P-E-C-T ' jumped off the cliff?
The dialogue has been civil and many posters on this forum have weighed in on this controversial thread.
We're never too young or too old to understand or to learn...
Let's hope that we can all learn something from these episodes; things could have been a lot worst had cooler heads not prevailed.
"Oklahoma City looks oh-so pretty... ...as I get my kicks on Route 66." --Nat King Cole.
To zookeeper about being more disciplined-----
-We tell our kids not to bully their peers.
-We tell them to immediately notify the school if they are a victim of bullying.
-We tell them to immediately tell us if bullying is going on and work with the police if our kids become a victim of cyber or school bullying.
-We see weekly the school shootings and suicides that are going as a result of bullying
-We work in workplaces with anti-discrimination laws and recently (at least at my work) have multiple reoccurring training on bullying in the workplace
-We work with HR departments to document and hopefully remove people from the workplace who are intimidating and taunting others because we know it has a profound effect on those who are around it.
Saturday night rolls around all of that goes out the window and we go scream, taunt, and dehumanize unpaid high school and college students who (in a lot of cases) have overcame massive amount of barriers in their own lives to achieve MORE than we ever did at that age---then if they dare raise their voice or fight back we go on and on about how THEY need to be more professional on and off the field.
Give me a break, you want a role model for your kid – YOU BE ONE.
If you want to be part of the game – SUIT UP AND GO OUT THERE.
I mean, how fragile and weak are YOU, most people crumble at any sort of real criticism about the quality of work they perform. They would be in the doctor’s office begging for a prescription to make them feel just a little bit better about themselves and contemplating ending it all because they just can’t go on and on with someone berating them. Most people couldn’t make it up and down the field/court without collapsing, run any real play with any sort of precision under pressure, or manage school or college with a full time sport and all the other aspects of life – but suddenly they are an expert on the sport (that they aren’t playing) and have the right to dehumanize someone else who is doing something they mentally and physically can’t?
I’m happy that the outcome this time wasn’t all about race, it opens it up to the larger conversation about why athletes somehow don’t deserve the same rights that we do.
Addressing the latter portion first ... hogwarsh, poppycock and balderdash. Even scuffles directly in the eyesight of officers are not all arrested, or even given a citation. Way overstated on your part.
Three games is not mollycoddling, and is to me at the upper end for a shove. I fully agree an athlete doesn't take it to the stands, ever, and if he had punched the guy, my original assessment of suspend a game or three would have been different. The three game suspension is proportionate. If the athlete doesn't take the lesson to heart, then it would be time for coaches and the school or the conference to look at taking a harder line. I'll agree to disagree this constitutes a slap on the wrist. I feel it is a much larger hit than that when it comes to his future prospects.
I think the heckling fan was a typical heckling jerk, but credit where due, his season long stepping out (whether voluntary or strongly urged) is more than I thought was truly necessary on his end.
No way would he have been arrested. The fan barely took a step back off the push. Fists involved yes. A little baby push no.
We shouldn't be too surprised that this type of situation occurs from time to time with 15,000 screaming fans along with boatloads of adrenaline flowing inside 20 year olds.
Kelly Ogle had a good piece about this -
OSU basketball star Marcus Smart lost it Saturday night when he pushed a fan who was badgering him. He deserves the punishment he got, kicked out for the next 3 games, no more than that.
But I want to talk about the fans, like the middle aged Texas Tech crazy who was railing on Smart, a 19-year-old kid in Lubbock.
To him I'd simply say, you gotta get a life buddy. You should be ashamed that Big 12 Coaches have to warn their players about your behavior.
But I go to a lot of sporting events and I see so called "adults" misbehaving all the time.
Grownups it's not okay for you to yell "miss it" when a high school basketball player is trying to make a free throw. Are you that desperate to give your team an advantage?
It's certainly not okay for you to call a college athlete derogatory names.
I don't even like it when I hear fans, usually guys who think they were once high school hot shots, berating the pros as if they can even begin to understand that talent level.
Adults, it's real simple. Cheer for your team, your players, and you can make noise that distracts the other team but don't get personal with the athletes.
Simple rule. Treat them like you'd want other fans to treat your child.
48A, osu fans want you to believe that the OU players were giving the finger and yelling back at them during the entire game. So instead of the team focusing on another OU victory over the pokes, the team was turned around and mouthing off to the players.
So lets take a look back at the last 2 years,
OU has traveled to 8 different places to play, None of the other schools reported this "bad behavior" by the players towards the fans.
OSU fans, last 2 years during home games, UT complained about the fans, even putting up screens so they wouldn't be spit on, and the OU game, well we can all look at the picture.
So who has the problem? For osu fans, they quickly point the finger
At some point OSU fans need to look in the mirror. They blame everyone else for their actions or their players actions. Nothing is their or their schools fault. It is always someone elses. I think it starts uptop with Holder. Putting a bounty on the heads of your most generous donors is no way to run an athletic program.
Without provocation? Smart was facing away from Orr until provoked by the "piece of crap" comment. What Smart did was dumb, but it certainly was not without provocation. I'm confused how you could even make this comment.
It's weird how people twist facts around when trying to make an argument.
What we've learned from this thread is that its impossible for opposing fans to remain objective when discussing this. Probably the same for OSU fans too but arrested..? Suspended for rest of season..? A spoiled rotten kid..? All because of a weak shove?
As I said before, Smart's antics on the court have become annoying and has shown real immaturity a couple times this year but some of the comments here are absurd. One can only know what goes through the mind of a kid who grew up extremely poor and becomes an elite athlete who left millions on the table this year to try to enjoy another year of college. Im guessing 90% of the posters on this thread have never had that much pressure put on them. Let alone as a teenager.
Its funny on this thread you say don't judge Smart because you haven't walked in his shoes, but on the mary fallin thread, you judge on me my beliefs and have no idea who I am or walked a day in my shoes.
Follow your own advice before you start giving advice to others
The biggest problem with the OSU basketball program is not Marcus Smart or Stevie Clark - it's Travis Ford. He is not a leader. He narrowly focuses on wins, not creating a culture of accountability where doing things the right way matters. These problems continually resurface because he doesn't do what's right for the program as a whole day-in-and-day-out. This article nails it: Oklahoma State coach Travis Ford could have helped Marcus Smart - ESPN. Could there be a bigger difference in how the basketball programs in Stillwater and Norman are being run?
Pokes, but especially liberals live in a world of double standards and hypocrisy bending the rules and standards as they see fit regardless of the facts. It's just who they are.
But at least with some maturity the majority of pokes usually grow out of it to some degree.
Now this is a typical poke local yokel media response for the gullible. LOL
Write one or 2 quick sentences on how an OSU interest did something wrong and then spend 90% of the time on how bad something else was... It's a classic Alinsky tactic to deflect the attention away from their own personal interest. Its a disingenuous act.
Kelly Ogle employed the same tactic over the OSU's SI deal and after the poor OSU fan behavior following last years OU- osu football game.
This is not a good piece for Kelly! This shows Kelly Ogle abusing his bully pulpit and how he has has no professional journalist integrity.
Because Kelly won't talk about the false charge of racism made by Smart, Kelly really looks like the classic little brother.
Its never a poke's fault. Its always someone elses. usually its the refs or big brother but now its currently a fan of tech
Holy hyperbole batman.
We are still talking basketball...right?
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks