Thursday, March 12, 2009

Cheating in sports

My good friend Brian O'Rourke brought up a good topic on his blog recently about cheating and telling our youth it is ok to cheat (not that he supports it just about something he read of someone who does). It really got me furious and made me start typing. My blogs might not be the most well written but they will clearly tell you how I feel....


It boggles my mind as a big sports fan and a person who loves competition why people cheat or do not play honestly. A big example of this is the current issue with steriods in sports. The problem I have is yes baseball has cracked down and is trying to rid the game of it which I applaud but why is it ok to use them in football. In football a person like Shawn Merriman of the San Diego Chargers was found to have used performance enhancing drugs. He was suspended for 4 games (which is the NFL rule for first time offenders). The whole time all anyone spoke of the situation was about how him returning from the suspension would help the team win more games. Nothing was mentioned once about how he cheated or how this shows a total disrespect for the game. What kind of example is this setting for the youth of America? Whether they like it or not athletes are role models. Cheating of anysort should be treated much more sternly....

Another example is of Albert Haynesworth now of the Washington Redskins. Several years ago while playing with the Tenessee Titans he stomped on the head of an opposing player while that player was down on the ground and defenseless. Yes, the other player was wearing a helmet but still he was hurt severely. What was the result of this? A less than sufficient suspension and after two years Albert signs a 7 year 100 million dollar contract. Yes he was rewarded with 100 million bucks for stomping on a defenseless person. Yet again showing the youth that it is ok to cheat or bend the rules because if doing so puts you ontop of the sport you will be financially rewarded for it.

Back to baseball for a second. Yes Alex Rodriguez was found to use PED's and he will face the boo's of the crowds for years to come but when he hits a walk off homerun later this year (or anyother awesome play) he will be cheered and cheered. He still is earning in excess of 20 million dollars a year. So as long as he can take the booing it doesn't matter because he still will have more money than he needs for a long time.... I am not against athletes making millions of dollars, because it is what it is, the pro athlete paycheck.

Pete Rose bet on baseball as a manager (I'm sure he did when he played too but wasn't caught) and was caught. He is banned from the game forever. Arguably the best hitter of all time cannot enter the hall of fame because of his mistakes. This is OK in my book because he broke rules, cheated, whatever you want to call it. So now why is he banned and others get away with so much.

So in summation what I am trying to say is that the professional sport athletes are telling the youth today it is ok to cheat. They are role models for our youth and need to represent as such. The penalties are not nearly harsh enough to make someone not cheat because cheating could put someone at the top of a sport and make a crap load of money.. that is what every youth wants (to be the best).

3 comments:

  1. Philly,

    Welcome to the blogosphere, bud. I put in a link over on my blog. Like your profile pic by the way ;)

    I'm going to be real lazy and re-post how I responded to you on my blog:

    I was thinking about this more last night, and it goes beyond cheating if you ask me. Some of it goes back to simple decency.

    In the 2008 Olympic Men's Basketball Finals, the US was playing Spain. During one play, Kobe Bryant and Pau Gasol collided or came into contact with one another. Gasol went down. A whistle blew for something else. Kobe did not offer to help Gasol up after play was dead, didn't even deign to look at him to see if he was alright.

    What makes this particular incident even more egregious is that Kobe and Gasol were teammates on the Lakers at the time. Still are.

    The announcers, Doug Collins and somebody else, were going on and on about how tough a competitor Kobe was for not helping Gasol up.

    All I thought was, "Yeah, that's what the Olympics are about. Not helping a fellow competitor up off the floor."

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  2. It really is ashame the way the pro athletes act... but that is not to say there is not some good in sports ( the best in sports are in the sports that do not have any money in them).. in womens college softball last year a girl hit her first homerun of her college career and blew out her knee rounding first base. The rules state that her teamates are not alloud to help her around the bases so guess what happened... the opposing teams fielders helped her around the bases and let her score... this was the winning run and the helping team lost but did the sportsman thing and helped a hurt player out... it was really a touching story.

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  3. Phil,

    I hadn't heard about that. What a great story.

    This all relates back to why I mainly just watch golf. The overwhelming majority of the pro golfers have class and respect one another. The numbers, at least from my perspective, of athletes like that in other sports appear to be much lower.

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