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Back to High School

January 22, 2011 by becca

It was bizarre how it brought out the best and the worst in the crowd.

We went to the high school basketball game last night. I love basketball. I love the never-stop, run-run-run, high scoring action. I love high school basketball because of the community that it envelops. But I have to say, high school basketball has changed since I was a student.

Maybe that’s  not what I mean. Maybe I mean that high school basketball in Utah is a totally different world than in Indiana.

For instance, in Indiana, basketball is not a democracy. I never, ever, in all my years watching Indiana basketball, saw a player talk a referee out of a call. Or even try to. Or saw his coach let him. But last night, the red team consistently chatted up the refs after almost every call that they disagreed with. Then they swore. Loudly. And don’t even get me started on the coach (for the other team – our coach is a gentleman) because holy cow, it reminded me of that scene in HOOSIERS where Gene Hackman is trying to get kicked out of the tournament. Remember that?

I think I saw 4 technical fouls.

And our fans. Oh, it made me sad. There was really rotten sportsmanship, and we (as a group) were stinky with it. It made it hard for me to love the game.

But.

Then.

I have to back up. There’s this community trauma going on right now where I live. There is a senior at the high school who is on the wrestling team. This sport is huge in my town, HUGE. Two weeks ago, this boy got into a hold and was dropped on his head (don’t quote me on that – I wasn’t there). Whatever the cause, the effect was that he snapped his neck and is paralyzed from the neck down (ala Christopher Reeve). In two weeks of constant hospital monitoring, he’s now got some feeling throughout his body (but no movement). It is a miracle that he’s alive, but a tragedy that he’s broken. The kids in town have rallied, making and buying and wearing “Super Dale” T-shirts, which looked so cute on all the cheerleaders last night. It was one of those things that make your heart glad. At the game, T-shirts went flying through the crowd as gifts. It was great. Then, at half time, the cheerleaders passed around Super Dale buckets, asking for “loose change to make a change.” In five minutes, they raised $1500 to help with his hospital bills. And plenty of that change came from the visitors’ bleachers. At the risk of running all cheesy, I have to say it was precious. I got misty. The town (and the rivals in the red bleachers) stepped up, each doing a very little to make a difference.

And I thought, how did both those feelings come out of the same gym? How did I get so discouraged, so disgusted, at the same event that also made me near tears of gratitude?

Maybe it’s the setting.

Hear my prayer: Oh, please. Take me not back to High School.

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(14) Comments for this blog

  1. January 23, 2011

    The basketball thing is sad. I played and cheered it back in the day, and we never talked to the refs at all, except to say thank you at the end. I think kids are being allowed too much leeway now-a-days. As a whole, we’ve let them getaway with backtalking and getting something for free, if you know what I mean. There’s something to be said for just sucking it up whether you agree with the call or not.

    I’m sad to hear that about the kid in your town. I hate sad stories like that, but I’m glad you all have a reason to pull together.

  2. January 23, 2011

    The basketball thing is sad. I played and cheered it back in the day, and we never talked to the refs at all, except to say thank you at the end. I think kids are being allowed too much leeway now-a-days. As a whole, we’ve let them getaway with backtalking and getting something for free, if you know what I mean. There’s something to be said for just sucking it up whether you agree with the call or not.

    I’m sad to hear that about the kid in your town. I hate sad stories like that, but I’m glad you all have a reason to pull together.

  3. January 23, 2011

    I played high school ball, and if we ever tried to talk a ref out of something we would get that whistle blown right in our faces. It really is different now. The sportsmanship thing can make or break the fun of a sporting event.

    And I just saw the story about that wrestler on the news the other day. So so sad.

  4. January 23, 2011

    I played high school ball, and if we ever tried to talk a ref out of something we would get that whistle blown right in our faces. It really is different now. The sportsmanship thing can make or break the fun of a sporting event.

    And I just saw the story about that wrestler on the news the other day. So so sad.

  5. January 24, 2011

    It’s good that the community can over look the terrible calls and pause to help a fellow classmate. What a very sad accident.

  6. January 24, 2011

    It’s good that the community can over look the terrible calls and pause to help a fellow classmate. What a very sad accident.

  7. January 24, 2011

    There’s just something about the whole wrestler story that make me misty. We have a great community… they just forget who they are sometimes. It IS basketball, after all. I’m glad it wasn’t the yellow and black team behaving in such an ill manner. We have a gentleman for a coach. The finest.

  8. January 24, 2011

    There’s just something about the whole wrestler story that make me misty. We have a great community… they just forget who they are sometimes. It IS basketball, after all. I’m glad it wasn’t the yellow and black team behaving in such an ill manner. We have a gentleman for a coach. The finest.

  9. January 24, 2011

    Wow…talk about opposite extremes.

    But that’s what we human beings are, I guess. We have the potential for both. The good news is, we get to choose which.

  10. January 24, 2011

    Wow…talk about opposite extremes.

    But that’s what we human beings are, I guess. We have the potential for both. The good news is, we get to choose which.

  11. Pat Martinez
    January 25, 2011

    So lovely. The writing. Glad I came to visit today. And tasted that artisan bread you mentioned.

  12. Pat Martinez
    January 25, 2011

    So lovely. The writing. Glad I came to visit today. And tasted that artisan bread you mentioned.

  13. February 3, 2011

    The world is such a gray place. It doesn’t surprise me in the least that you’d find such opposite ends of the spectrum (especially in a high school!) but I am glad to see some of them doing the decent good thing that makes us all want to do the decent good thing.

  14. February 3, 2011

    The world is such a gray place. It doesn’t surprise me in the least that you’d find such opposite ends of the spectrum (especially in a high school!) but I am glad to see some of them doing the decent good thing that makes us all want to do the decent good thing.

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