Saturday, September 05, 2009

Oregon Went Too Far

Oregon went too far in suspending LeGarrett Blount for a full year.

Let's state the obvious. What he did was wrong, and on many levels. First, he sucker punched someone from a different team who taunted him. Second, he fought with teammates who attempted to restrain him. Third, he nearly fought with fans who were heckling with him.

Athletes are taunted and heckled all of the time (by people like this author in college). That they most often keep their cool and maintain a certain level of professionalism is amazing (even though college athletes are not even technically "professionals".) But they do it. In this case Blount crossed a line and should be punished.

But a full year? Here's how I see it. He was provoked and reacted with a punch. Despite chatter that happened before the game, he was not looking for trouble after the game. He was provoked. So, he punched the guy. I very well might have done the same thing, or at minimum pushed the guy, ready for a fight. Some could argue that he punched someone who was defenseless, while he wore a helmet and immediately moved a way for a fight. Fine, but that doesn't change that he was clearly provoked and reacted. For that, I'd give him a two game suspension.

Second, he fought with teammates who attempted to restrain him. I think we have to understand, if not forgive this. When you go into battle with another team, in any sort of fight, your teammates have to be there to back you up. Should they back you up when you sucker punch someone else? Maybe not. Maybe they are the perfect teammates - keeping you out of trouble when you've done something terribly wrong. But the way I see it, if I'm being taunted by another team and I go at it with another player, I have to know that my teammates have my back. This isn't hockey where one on one melees are the norm. This is football.

Third, he nearly fought with fans in the stands. This, to me, is not easily excusable. That's a sacred line that cannot be crossed (see Ron Artest). But at the end of the day, nothing happened. For having the intent to fight fans, I would give him three, maybe four games.

When you add it all up, I think the suspension should have probably been capped at five or six games. But there were other circumstances at play here. First, Blount has a history of poor choices with the team, resulting in a prior indefinite suspension in the spring. Second, he trashed talked Boise State before the game. Third, the coach is in his first year and needs to show that he can exercise authority; he needed to set an example. And finally, though Blount was a dark horse Heisman candidate, he did only have eight carries for negative five yards. Expendable??

In one final twist to all of this. Byron Hout, the defensive end who initially taunted Blount... nary a single game suspension.

At the end of the day, Oregon was right to suspend Blount, but went too far. They had their reasoning, but I'm sure it was related to other factors, not merely what he did on the field.

1 comment:

the deej said...

False. You don't punch another player in college sports. Period. If you recall, blount taunted publicly before the game, he lost (and completely failed) and couldn't physically restrain himself after someone chatters at him. He should be banned from playing for Oregon, and given the opportunity to either quit football and get help at Oregon or transfer, lose a year of eligibility, and get mandatory counseling elsewhere. The madness has to stop somewhere and he's the scapegoat.