PERRYGRAPHS
Baylor's
Scandal
Riffing
on Sports Ethics
This
is turning out very different from where I intended it to go. I
envisioned an academic column from my philosophy background
discussing ethics – you know, hedonism, utilitarianism, authority,
manipulative, even motives. Well some of that is in here, but the
piece is much more rambling and personal than I expected. Some
preaching sneaked in too. So here are my thoughts, still very much
under development.
My
fellow alumni and I were recently brought up short by the firing of
our much-praised football coach Art Briles. The President was also
demoted to Chancellor (he later resigned that position) and Professor
because of his involvement in cover-ups of multiple rapes by several
football players and others on campus. I immediately thought of Penn
State's beloved Joe Paterno, who was also caught in a cover-up that
enabled an assistant to continue to molest boys. Then my mind ran
back 10-15 years to an even worse case where a basketball player
murdered another at Baylor. Then I thought of multiple offenses at
LSU in my home state, where it seemed every year, players were
violating curfew, getting drunk in bars, and being arrested for
assault. Something similar happened to two Alabama players in the
off-season in nearby Monroe, LA last month. And rightly or wrongly, I
remembered years past when Florida State footballers were in constant
trouble with the law while Bobby Bowden was making the Christian tour
circuit. Football is a violent sport, and some players won't leave
the violence on the field.
With
my major in philosophy and continued interest in the subject, several
new wrinkles in ethics came to mind. By new wrinkles, I mean current
real life problems that you don't find as such in academic ethics.
Here are the issues I've considered so far.
Cover-up
has risen to be the almost unforgivable sin. Richard Nixon fell
because of his cover-up, not because of his authorization of the
break-in at the Watergate. No one said (publicly at least) that
Paterno or the school could have prevented the earlier molestations
by the coach. But they do feel that when the wrongs first came to
light, immediate and strong action should have been taken so no one
else was hurt. Likewise at Baylor, the problem was the lack of
immediate and decisive response to the young women when they first
reported the rape. Just last night I found a news article about a
very good running back named Chafin who had physically beaten his
girl friend on three occasions. She took pictures and eventually
reported it. The coaches did nothing until the police arrested him.
I'm not sure why they are so slow to respond. After all, the football
program regularly suspends participation by athletes for “violation
of team rules,” so halting participation after an accusation of
rape should be a no-brainer.
Note
from the academic ethics point of view, rape and child molestation
are assumed to be wrong, sins if you're religious, felonies in any
case. Motivation here is the “pleasure” of the perpetrator, a
selfish form of hedonism. From the psychological point of view, most
abusers were themselves abused. Still, these are college students,
trained athletes who cannot succeed without discipline within their
sport. They DO have the ability to follow rules – the team rules,
practice rules, and the on-field rules that result in penalties if
you break them. Shouldn't they be held accountable for rape and
violence as quickly and decisively as a referee throws a flag for
chop-blocking?
Much
more serious is the macho male defense that the victims are not
really victims, but invited the attack by their dress or being
available. After all, what should a coed expect if she's drunk at a
fraternity party after midnight in a mini-skirt and low necked
blouse? (At Baylor a frat president drugged a girl at a party, took
her outside the building to a quiet place, and raped her.) The
correct answer is she should expect to be treated with respect as a
human being. Even in our over-sexed society, adult informed consent
is expected. Indeed, the on-campus discussion has moved on into how
explicit the consent needs to be. A number of people now take the
position that the girl must say explicitly that she wants intercourse
before the couple proceeds. Others assume that positive participation
will suffice. It's a little ridiculous to say one must now pause and
get a notarized document before continuing. On the other hand, how
does a gal prove she said (and kept saying ) NO?
But
there remains, IMHO, some traction in the drunk past midnight
accusation, just not limited to women. The most common violation I
hear about is drunken football players outside bars at
midnight-thirty. During season, this violates curfew, but often gets
them arrested on public drunkenness, fighting, or assault. I've known
coaches with no toleration for this, and they immediately suspend the
player or kick them off the team if the offense is serious enough.
City
councils, county supervisors (Police Jury in LA), with police and
sheriffs should not tolerate this behavior. They need ways to shut
down bars that serve already drunken customers and probably need to
back up the closing time an hour or more. Actually they do have ways,
but seldom use them. I did not over in Monroe a neighborhood bar has
been shut down under protest for a year or so, because they were
always too boisterous for what the residents thought should be a
quiet neighborhood. No one is up to any good carousing after
midnight, or at least 1:00 a.m if they work the late shift.
That
said, there is evidence that too many men in college administration
still have an almost Islamic attitude toward rape. If a woman is
raped, it's her fault. To the contrary, an accusation of rape should
be taken seriously at once. If an athlete is accused, he should be
suspended immediately until an investigation results in a finding of
guilt or innocence. If innocent, of course, he will be re-instated.
If guilty, he should be off the team with the information passed on
to any other team looking for a reference. Law enforcement should be
notified. School and team policy should be clear and automatic.
Players should be made aware at the beginning of every season.
Colleges must also not rush to judgment. Remember the Lacrosse team
falsely accused after a national scandal?
The
firing of Briles and Paterno raise another question. In American
culture we always seek someone to blame. If something goes wrong, we
want heads to roll. But how much can we expect a head coach or
athletic director to know about the everyday life on campus and in
the town? Apparently, the contemporary answer is “almost
everything.” Briles has held out players for whole games or the
first quarter for “violating team rules.” That includes even star
players. I follow Baylor football very closely and had never heard of
two of those accused. (One of them, however, had been in trouble at
another college that said they communicated the information in the
transfer letter. Baylor athletics denied they knew.) The third was an
all-American even casual followers are likely to know. The new one I
found last night was a frequent player. I await the publication of
the full report to see what Briles knew and when he knew it. [Read
the report recently, but it's not explicit at that point. Some of the
report was done orally and the information may have come there.]
Colleges
in general are reluctant to publicize rapes. I've lived between two
LA Tech campuses for 17 years and read the local paper daily. I
almost never read a story of rape, even date rape. With around 12,000
young adults in that community, what are the odds of even a month
passing without reluctant sex? When you add in several thousand
colleges across the country with 300 – 40,000 students in each, I
wonder how much rape, near rape, date rape goes on we never hear
about. Law enforcement suggests at least two or three times the
reported amount.
The
investigative report indicated that Baylor had not followed
procedures outline in Title Nine regulations. When they first came
out, they made a big splash for requiring equal sports opportunities
for women. As a result colleges have added or strengthened various
sports. What I didn't realize until I read the report is that the
Title also deals with setting up a system to deal with problems like
this, and even prevent them. It's encouraging that Jim Grobe, the new
interim head coach, spent seven years on the NCAA ethics committee,
some years as chairman.
So
far, here are the ethical issues we've looked at:
Rape
Response
to rape reports
Cover-ups
Consent
to have sex
Community
pressure
Conflict
of values: sports, negative publicity, and justice
Can
you imagine the pressure on the head coaches when they first get a
report of a rape (or other felony). The guy is employed to build a
team and win games. Ideally we talk about his role as a teacher, role
model, and developer of character, yet we've all known coaches who
were outstanding in those areas, but got sacked because their teams
were not winning.
No
coach wants scandal. No coach wants to believe his players would
commit a felony. Remember, some of these guys are becoming friends
with a coach after several years. You want to stand up for your
friends. At LSU the starting quarterback was drunk and disorderly,
and as I recall attacking or defending himself with a knife. Do you
want to kick your headliner off the field?
My
guess is that coaches need to expand existing systems to include
felonies. Nearly every coach has a published rule book with penalties
listed. Sneak out after curfew and you don't play the first quarter
this week. Do it twice, a second quarter, etc. Miss practice or be
late, and the penalty awaits. I believe at the beginning of the year
and in the handbook, the head coach and athletic director should
clearly state that an arrest or serious suspicion of a felony will
result in immediate suspension until the issue is resolved. If
guilty, you're off the team. Period. So the coach does not have to
decide as the issues come up. The act has consequences – every
time, every person.
In
fact, after reading the law firm's report of their investigation, I
find they believe the problem was systemic. They blame the leaders
for a sloppy system with untrained people and lackadaisical response.
Although they interviewed victims and dozens of others, at least on
paper they did not commit to describing particular incidents. Their
claim was upper level administrators (read Briles and Starr) were
responsible for the existing system and culture. Their many
recommendations all added up to strengthen the system and take each
reported rape seriously.
They
also report a culture favoring football players. Of course, this is
endemic everywhere and includes most athletes. Who has not thought
athletes get graded less severely, perhaps have failing grades
boosted to passing or better? Here we transition to values.
The
chief stress here is the pull between athletic success and the
primary mission of the school, which must be education. In conflict,
the tension between the two must always result in academics winning.
Still, it must be said that athletics raise the awareness to the
general public and undoubtedly attracts students to the academic
side. I remember at 10 years old in Dallas I idolized Bobby Layne,
then a nearby high school star and seriously wanted to go to the
University of Texas as he did. When I surrendered to the Baptist
ministry, I went to Baylor instead and considered the Longhorns
mortal enemies. We had serious discussions as to how Texas and the
Aggies could play each other and both lose!
On
the other hand Baylor made known in its alumni publications that the
donations to academic chairs, scholarships, and the like equaled that
dedicated in recent years to the new football stadium. Personally I
get upset at the discussions that arise every year over paying
football players at the college level. I now smile at my naivete a
few years ago when I was proposing a scholars athletic conference
similar to the Ivy League because some quality academic colleges were
playing sports at only mediocre levels. I thought Baylor might join
SMU, TCU, Stanford, Tulane, Vanderbilt, and Rice in a more balanced
conference. Then the Bears, Horned Frogs, Cardinal all moved into the
top 10-20 rankings, and the rest showed signs of significant
improvement.
I've
written way too much for a one time blog, but then it's not a
one-timer. I plan to continue looking at this and related material in
future posts. Meantime, if you're a sucker for punishment, here's an
excellent article on rape reports at colleges.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/grade-point/wp/2016/06/07/these-colleges-have-the-most-reports-of-rape/
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