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IN THIS ISSUE:
FRONT ROW
Youth- and School-Based Sports: . Testing May Deter High
School Steroid Use . Sportsmanship Spell-Out
Wins Essay Contest Collegiate
Sports: Being a College Senior
Isn't What It Used to Be
Professional Sports:
Is There
More to Patriotgate? Recently Overheard Answering Machine
Greetings Jocks
Behaving Badly: .
Let's Hear
You Whine About Your Dysfunctional Family Now
. . Then Again, You Could Live in Long
Island . Jocks Behaving
Exceptionally: . LSU
Players Chasten Their Student Section . . Good Sportsmanship Quells
Argument . . An Honest Run for Their
Money . Michael Josephson Commentary:
Leadership
By Example
SIDELINES
Announcements Trivia Test:
What Soccer
Team Advanced to a Cup Final By Deliberately Scoring Against
Itself? Sportsmanship User`s Guide:
How Much Do
You Know About Hazing? You Make the Call: Should Parental
Sportsmanship Classes Be Mandatory? Principle of the Month: Stand Up for
Integrity Say What? Upcoming Seminars Trivia Test
Answer
The
only disability in life is a bad
attitude.
-- Scott Hamilton, figure
skater
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FRONT ROW
YOUTH- AND SCHOOL-BASED
SPORTS
Testing May Deter High School Steroid Use

Last year, New
Jersey became the first state to randomly test high school athletes
for steroids. The results? Out of 500 student-athletes screened in
12 sports after championship games, one student tested
positive.
In announcing
the findings at the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic
Association's executive meeting, assistant director Bob Baly said
the fact that just one athlete was caught doesn`t suggest steroids
isn't still a problem in youth sports. Instead, he said, the
screening program may have done what it was supposed to do: deter
potential abusers.
This year two
additional states - Texas and Florida - will conduct statewide
screenings for the first time. Texas's $3 million initiative will
screen between 20,000 and 25,000 students across all sports.
Florida's $100,000 pilot program will test one percent of students
of both sexes in baseball, football, and weightlifting.
[http://ca.today.reuters.com, 9/3/07; www.nj.com,
9/12/07]
The most
important human endeavor is the striving for morality in
our actions.
-- Albert Einstein, German physicist
(1879-1955)
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YOUTH- AND SCHOOL-BASED
SPORTS
Sportsmanship Spell-Out Wins Essay
Contest
To honor
National Sportsmanship Day (September 17), the Institute for
International Sport conducted an essay contest. Four winners were
selected.
Our favorite
was by elementary school winner, Karoline Kent, of Centreville,
Maryland. She took the word sportsmanship and cleverly made
it into a winning team, with each letter representing a teammate.
See how well they work together:
Safety means you play fairly and clean by not tripping or
pushing. This shows respect for your team and the people you are
playing against.
Participate in the game and practices and give it all you got.
This shows you care about your teammates and fans.
Opinion means keep your opinions to yourself. If a player is
not that good and you have nothing nice to say, don't say anything.
Ready means show up on time, have your sneakers tied, and do
personal stuff before practice/game starts so you are not late and
wasting people's time.
Teamwork means work together and have fun while
playing.
Show respect for your
teammates/coach/fans and don't be rude or brag.
Move yourself and don't be lazy. If your coach needs help
cleaning up equipment, don't just watch.help out!
Ask for help from a coach or teammate if you don't know what
to do.
Nice to others means if somebody messes up, you should not be
mean.
Say nice things to your teammates and the other team such as
when you shake their hands after the game.
Help teammates out if they don't understand something or need
extra practice at something you are good at.
Improve yourself so you can become a better player and help
your team.
Practice, practice, practice to always be the best you
can!
[www.usatoday.com]
He that
wrestles with us strengthens our nerves and sharpens
our skill. Our antagonist is our helper.
-- Edmund Burke, Irish statesman,
author, and philosopher
(1729-1797)
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COLLEGIATE SPORTS
Being a
College Senior Isn't What It Used to Be
The year was
1971. Junior year at Sul Ross State in Texas. Mike Flynt, team
captain and leading tackler of the football team, was a heckuva
player with a bright future and a storied past. He had played on the
first state championship team at Odessa Permian, the high school
featured in Friday Night Lights, and was the son of a
Battle of the Bulge survivor. He just had one problem: He liked
getting into fights. Lots of them.
His character
flaw eventually proved to be too much for the university, and he was
kicked out. "I grieved the loss of that senior year for more years
than I can remember," Flynt told ESPN.com. "I felt that was my team,
and I had let them down."
A Baby Boomers
Reunion with his Sul Ross teammates earlier this year confirmed that
fear. One former player confessed that their 1971 season went down
the drain primarily because Flynt wasn't there.
When they saw
him at the reunion, however, he wasn't the same person he had been
in college.
"I saw a
difference in Mike that radiated throughout the room," one former
teammate recalled on the reunion website Sulrossbabyboomers.com.
"This change made me feel very good. Someone planted a seed that
grew."
Flynt, now 59,
a grandfather, and three years short of Social Security eligibility,
decided to help "a bunch of young men to make up for those guys I
let down." He asked the institution if his last year of eligibility
was still good. It was.

"You're an
idiot," his former coach Jerry Larned said when Flynt told him he
was going to try out for the Division III team again. His wife shook
her head. "I'm married to Peter Pan."
Flynt was
neither nuts nor out of shape. Running the 40 in 5.0, he made the
squad. Quite a difference this time around. He's a member of AARP,
is eight years older than the coach, has two kids older than his
teammates, and no longer has a short fuse.
When he took
the field earlier this month in a 45-42 triple overtime victory over
Texas Lutheran, he became the second oldest player to ever strap on
a college football helmet (a 60-year-old reportedly played one down
late in a blowout for Ashland, Ohio, in 1997).
Naturally, Sul
Ross State has been besieged by the media. Especially its football
coach, Steve Wright, whose reasoning for letting Flynt try out is
just as quirky and refreshing as Flynt's.
"Why not?" he
told reporters. "This decision had nothing to do with publicity; it
was thinking outside the box. Our football program is structured
differently than Football 101, so Mike's a good fit. He's also a
mentor and a positive influence to other players."
It took Flynt
37 years to hear someone say that.
Six
Signs That Your Teammate May Be 59 The above story
prompted the witty crew at Littlefivers.com to provide tip-offs that
your senior may be, well, senior:
1. Tries to
pass off liver spots as a new kind of tat. 2. Considers helmets a
fad. 3. When opponents trash-talk with "Who's your daddy?" he
counters with "Who baby-sat your daddy?" 4. When he
breaks his hip, he has the waterboy fetch a spare from his
trunk. 5. Instead of putting in a mouth guard, he takes out his
bridge. 6. To fire him up, teammates tell him the little punk
with the ball is on his lawn.
Every kid who plays soccer wants to be
Pele. I have a great responsibility to show
them not just how to be like a soccer player, but
how to be like a
man.
-- Pele, Brazilian soccer
player
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PROFESSIONAL SPORTS
Is There
More to Patriotgate?
Taking away New
England Patriots' sideline video cameras hasn`t quashed the rumors
of cheating. The Detroit Lions, Cincinnati Bengals, Jacksonville
Jaguars, and Cleveland Browns are now accusing the Patriots of
causing communication malfunctions in their headsets when they
played at New England's Gillette Stadium.

The most recent
team to complain, the Browns, claim they lost communication with
quarterback Derek Anderson eight to 10 times in the game, during
which he threw three interceptions.
New England
isn't the only team accused of headset shenanigans. According to
The Washington Post, Washington Redskins coach Joe Gibbs
recently expressed his anger to a team executive about his headsets
mysteriously going down in Philadelphia and Green Bay. He reported
both clubs to the league. Then again, the Redskins themselves are
rumored to illegally pump crowd noise into FedEx through their
stadium speakers.
Former coach
Bill Parcells told ESPN that the San Francisco 49ers used to deny
opponents use of their headsets in a novel way. Because their coach
Bill Walsh always scripted his team's first offensive series
beforehand, he didn't need headsets during those sequences. Parcells
said that in two different playoff games, the 49ers claimed their
headsets weren't working during their first offensive
series.
According to
league rules, if one team's headsets malfunction, the other team
must stop using its communication devices. After the 49ers used all
their scripted plays, Parcells asserted, Walsh told the referee his
headsets had been fixed.
That's why they
call it home-field advantage.
[http://sports.aol.com/fanhouse, 10/1/07, 10/23/07,
10/24/07]
Sport strips
away personality, letting the white bone of
character shine through.
-- Rita Mae Brown,
author
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Recently Overheard Answering Machine Greetings

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Marion Jones: I'm not here at the
moment. Honest. No, really. You may think I'm here and
screening your call, but I`m not. Look, I'm not lying. [Sob]
Why doesn't anyone believe me?
Kobe
Bryant: Don't bother leaving a message because
my house staff never passes them to me. In fact, I`m looking
for new people right now, but the really good ones don't want
to work for me. But that`s cool. It is what it is.
Alex Rodriguez:
I'm not in New York at the moment or the
foreseeable future. Call my agent for my
whereabouts.
Barry
Bonds: If you're Mr. Selig, Mr. Mitchell, the
FBI, the San Francisco district attorney's office, or a member
of the media, please press 1. If you're calling about an
endorsement contract, please press 2, 3, 4, or 5. All others,
please press 5. To speak to me personally, dream on.
Bill Belichick:
I know who you are and will call you back. And
for chrissakes, put some clothes on.
Michael
Vick: I'm out walking the dogs, bro.
[Laughter] Naw, seriously, leave your number. As soon as my
phone service is turned on again, I'll call you
back.
Serena
Williams: I've got a calf bruise and a design
fitting and can't make it to the phone right now. Leave your
appreciation and understanding, and I'll consider your
sincerity before I get back to you.
Terrell Owens:
It's about time you called. You forget I was
here? I've been waiting, waving my arms. Hello, over here,
line's wide open. That's disrespect, man. See if I call
you back.
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The lowest
ebb is the turn of the tide.
-- Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, poet
(1807-1882)
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JOCKS BEHAVING BADLY
Let's Hear You Whine About Your Dysfunctional Family Now
.
When two
parents in Licking Valley, Ohio, said only one of their three
teenagers could attend a high school football game last month, the
other two thought that was unfair.
One of them,
their 14-year-old daughter, attempted to leave the house, but her
father blocked the doorway. The other one, her 15-year-old brother,
jumped on him with a steak knife. Mother quickly joined the fray,
and the four wrestled on the floor until the police arrived. Both
kids were arrested for domestic violence, and the son was
additionally charged with attempted felonious assault.
We don't want
to know what happens when they're grounded.
[www.newarkadvocate.com, 10/22/07]
Then
Again, You Could Live in Long Island .
After two
incidents last month involving Long Island parents attacking
youth-league coaches, we wonder if there's something in the
water.
What,
You Didn't Copy Mommie Dearest? A soccer mom in East
Rockaway, angered over not being e-mailed directions to upcoming
games, slammed a folding chair across the face of her daughter's
68-year-old volunteer coach, then allegedly keyed a van she believed
was his.
The coach,
described by others as a selfless gentleman who "stepped up to coach
the team when no one else would," admitted he had removed the woman
from the list because she often e-mailed "nasty letters" about
practices and other matters.
Tony
Soprano's Boy Stays on the Field When Little League
coach James Edge benched one of his 11-year-olds for swearing at him
during batting practice, the boy called his dad. Uh-oh.
His dad is
Frank Basile who, according to the New York Post, allegedly
once owned a mobbed-up Long Island restaurant with his brother,
Roger, and was involved in an infamous tag-team beating of a fan at
a restaurant with former New York Jets star Mark Gastineau in
1991.
Minutes later,
the two brothers rushed to the ball field and, in front of the
terrified kids, beat and kicked the coach so savagely, he was taken
to a hospital with a concussion and other injuries.
"What beating?"
Frank told reporters later. "He's got no bruises. There was no
beating."
The two
brothers were arrested and charged with third-degree
assault.
[www.nydailynews.com, 10/18/07; www.nypost.com, 10/18/07;
www.newsday.com, 10/24/07; www.nypost.com,
10/24/07]
To the victor
belong the responsibilities.
-- Al Bernstein, boxing
analyst
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JOCKS BEHAVING
EXCEPTIONALLY
LSU
Players Chasten Their Student Section .
In what may be
the most unusual and admirable sportsmanship gesture of the year,
two LSU football players published an open letter in their campus
newspaper Daily Reveille urging the student body to cool it
with their vulgar chants toward opposing teams at home
games.
Here is the
letter by running back Jacob Hester and All-American defensive
lineman Glenn Dorsey:
The LSU student section is the heartbeat of Death Valley
and the center of emotion for our great stadium.
But during the last two games, vulgar language directed at
our opponents by the student section has been disappointing and
embarrassing to our school.
Your chants can be heard by the national television
audience that tunes in from all over America. When those chants
include offensive language, it only damages Louisiana State
University. More importantly, these chants can be heard by young
children in the stadium who come to see their Tigers
play.
We need to support our team. You are important to our
success. But that doesn't mean you need to insult our opponents.
Let us, the players, take care of our opponents through
competition on the field.
We are taught by our coaches to act like champions, play
like champions, and win like champions. We need you to do the
same.
Good
Sportsmanship Quells Argument .
During a recent
middle school boy's soccer game in Maryland, a player prepared to
take a corner kick with the score tied. He stepped forward and
whipped his foot through the ball.
Seconds later,
his low line-drive screamer was inside the goal mouth. His teammates
jumped for joy. His opponents said no way; the ball clearly went
through the side of the net. The referee shook his head. It was
good. The goal counted.
The opposing
parents and players exploded. Voices and tempers soared. The referee
held firm. Just as the situation was threatening to get out of
control, a lone opposing player raised his hand, and his firm voice
was heard above the clamor: "The ref made the best call he could,"
he calmly reminded everybody. "Let's get back in the
game."
The magic words
stopped the argument cold. The players and parents calmed down. The
game resumed. All because of one player who respected the referee,
the game, and himself.
[Thanks,
Troy Foland, for your eyewitness account of this
incident!]
An
Honest Run for Their Money .
The following
letter was sent by a parent to the staff of Wadsworth Middle School
in Wadsworth, Ohio:
I was working the food tent for the Malone Cross Country
race and observed a couple of runners from Wadsworth. A young man
brought back a dollar bill to our tent that had blown away down
the parking lot.
This might seem trivial, but there were hundreds of people
around and it would have been easy just to say, "Wow, I found a
buck." However, this runner walked all the way back to our tent
and said he believed it belonged to us.
Then a young lady ordered a water, paid $1.00, and stood
there for a minute. We asked if something was wrong, and she said,
"I believe I underpaid you."
She had not, but she felt it was important enough not to
just walk off and say to everyone she got a good deal.
This behavior cannot be isolated to these few; it must be
in the system. I wanted to commend the Wadsworth parents, the
school, the athletic leaders, and especially the
runners.
Keep doing what you're doing. People do
notice.
George
Schweikert Malone College parent
[Thanks to
Wadsworth's assistant principal Pepper Bates for sending this to
us!]
Want
a Free Sportsmanship Patch?
We sent each of
those who contributed an item a free Pursuing Victory With Honor
patch for telling us about honorable deeds on and off the field of
play.

We`ll send you
one, too, if you send us your stories at
CharacterCountssports@jiethics.org. Put "Jocks Behaving
Exceptionally" in the subject box.
You can also
report acts of good sportsmanship to the NCAA`s Committee on
Sportsmanship and Ethical Conduct by clicking here.
To dope the
racer is as criminal, as sacrilegious, as trying to
imitate God. It is stealing from God the privilege
of the spark.
-- Roland Barthes, French literary
critic and philosopher
(1915-1980)
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COMMENTARY
BY MICHAEL JOSEPHSON
Leadership By Example
Mark Gibson, a
former gymnastics coach who worked with many elite athletes, tells a
wonderful story about a 15-year-old girl whose work ethic and
attitude brought out the best in everyone.
Cindy wasn't a
great gymnast, but when she was in the gym everyone complained less,
worked harder, and, not surprisingly, achieved more. Cindy was a
powerful motivator because she was blind.
When it was her
turn to do the vault, her mom would run alongside telling her how
close she was to the apparatus. When her mom said, "Vault!" Cindy
would reach out and jump -- trusting her mother and
herself.
Cindy loved the sport and kept improving because she
and her mom refused to be defeated by her disability.
Mark
called her the most important member of the team, not because of her
athletic ability, but because of her heart and standard of fortitude
and courage that inspired others to get more out of themselves.
Everyone who watched her strive to be the best she could be realized
how much more they could be.
This is leadership -- leadership
by example. We see similar examples, not only in sports but in
families and in the workplace. Often the most important members of a
team are not the smartest, strongest, fastest, or most skilled.
Their power and influence are in their attitude and their ability to
energize and encourage others with their optimism, enthusiasm, and
determination.
People who know how to get the best out of
themselves get the best out of others.
This is
Michael Josephson reminding you that character
counts.
For
an archive of Mr. Josephson`s commentaries with audio files, go to:
www.CharacterCounts.org/knxtoc.htm.
To receive free weekly e-mail, including all five of Mr.
Josephson`s commentaries from that week, please sign up at: http://www.charactercounts.org/newsletters.htmm.
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