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Bad sports, good sports: When are kids too old for mercy rules?

When kids are young and are playing sports, it is natural for adults to want to protect them from being embarrassed. If playing sports is not fun for a kid right from the beginning, there is little chance that he or she will grow up wanting to play. Organized sports for young children have developed ways to protect the participants from the harsh realities that will eventually hit them when they get older, as far as losing and not being good enough. Games are played without keeping score, rules are changed so that everyone gets equal playing time, and everyone gets a medal at the end. I am okay with these things as long as they are restricted to games involving only the youngest children. In recent years, I have seen many examples of situations where leagues are doing this with children that are too old for it, though. Kids need to learn to lose and to lose gracefully. If they never lose, how will they handle situations in life that they will certainly encounter where they are not being protected from disappointment? At some point, talent wins out, and that needs to be allowed to happen. I don’t know exactly where the line should be, but I firmly believe that high school sports should not be affected by thinking that should be reserved for young children. It seems that some schools in Arkansas disagree with me, though.

Last week, Bald Knob High (yes, you read that correctly) was playing Harrisburg High in football. Bald Knob quarterback Cordell Crisp was well on his way to breaking the Arkansas state record for touchdowns in a game (10) with eight touchdown passes in less than three quarters. What stopped him? Did Harrisburg’s defense suddenly stiffen and hold Crisp below the record? No. Some kind of state mercy rule [1] involving a 2nd half lead of 35 points kicked in and Bald Knob pulled all of its starters out of the game. There was no scoring for the remainder of the game, and the game ended with a 70-34 score. Now I am not one that advocates running up the score and embarrassing your opponent, but when records are involved, doesn’t it make the whole thing rather fraudulent if rules like this are going to prevent the breaking of those records? Apparently, the only way Crisp could have set the record would have been if Harrisburg could have managed a few more touchdowns. So Bald Knob’s defense would have had to lay down, basically, to facilitate the quarterback’s run for the record.

High school kids are still kids. I understand that. Those kids aren’t on the team by luck, though. They have tried out and been good enough to make the team. At that point, the game should be played with the real rules. Who benefits from this kind of mercy rule? The kids? I say no. Sometimes you are not good enough. That’s life. The only ones who benefit from it are the parents who feel better about themselves because they protected their children from the world. I would suggest that if they want to protect them this way, don’t let them play high school football.

Bad sports, continued:

2) In the offseason, the New Jersey Devils signed forward Ilya Kovalchuk to a contract so absurd (17 years, $102 million) that the NHL ruled it invalid. Kovalchuk is a talented player, but judging by this penalty shot [2] attempt on Wednesday night against the Buffalo Sabres, the Devils might have over-estimated his abilities. That’s embarrassing.

3) Three football players from Southern Miss were shot at a nightclub [3] early Sunday morning during an altercation. Martez Smith, Tim Green, and Deddrick Jones are all in fair condition and expected to recover.

4) Cleveland Browns linebacker Marcus Benard collapsed in the locker room [4] on Thursday before practice. Amazingly, he ended up playing on Sunday against the New York Jets.

Good sports:

1) Kevin Love of the Minnesota Timberwolves had a pretty amazing game [5] on Friday against the New York Knicks. Love scored 31 points and pulled down 31 rebounds in the game, becoming the first player to have a 30-30 game in the NBA since Moses Malone in 1982.

2) Speaking of amazing basketball feats, the Indiana Pacers did something pretty stupendous on Tuesday night in the third quarter of their game against the Denver Nuggets. They shot 20 for 21 in the quarter, scoring an incredible 55 points [6]. The only shot they missed was the last one they took in the quarter. No team had scored more in a single quarter since the Phoenix Suns scored 57 in a quarter back in 1990.

3) Any chance you saw the end of the Jacksonville Jaguars game against the Houston Texans on Sunday? That last play [7] was something you don’t see very often.

4) About to lose his PGA Tour card, Robert Garrigus came up huge on Sunday. Not only did he do well enough to move back into the top 125 of the rankings, he actually won [8] the Children’s Miracle Network Classic at Disney on Sunday. He started the final round 4 strokes down, but played well enough to be in position to win when leader Roland Thatcher came apart late.

Bad Sports, Good Sports appears every Monday.

Alan Spoll is a software quality assurance director from the suburbs of Philadelphia where he lives with his wonderful wife and children. He has spent his entire life as a passionate fan of the Eagles, Phillies, Sixers, Flyers, and Penn State. Recent Phillies success aside, you will understand his natural negativity. Follow me on Twitter - @DocAlan02