By Andre Perry/The Hechinger Report
Now that the NCAA tournament is over and passions about everyone’s favorite basketball team are not running as high, we need to have a conversation about coaches’ abusive treatment of black athletes.
In late March, when Michigan State and Bradley were in a dead heat during the NCAA basketball semifinals, the actions of coach Tom Izzo on the Spartans’ sideline brought fans to their feet. Freshman sensation Aaron Henry was about to reach the team huddle during a timeout when Izzo, fists clenched, walked out to berate him, pointing his finger a few centimeters from Henry’s nose, and then proceeded to yell at him in front of thousands in the arena in Des Moines. Millions across the country watched the fracas on their television and computer screens. Izzo continued to violate the players’ personal space throughout the timeout; other players had to restrain Izzo, who offered no apologies for the incident.
In interviews, Izzo and members of the team seemed to dismiss the incident as tough love, a lesson that Henry needed to learn, to push him to do better. “What’s wrong with challenging a kid that makes some mistakes?” Izzo said in a press conference after the game. But Izzo’s body language during that outburst gave him away. His tirade did not appear to be about tough love so much as intimidation and bullying – and he’s not the first to use (and defend) it as a teaching tool.
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Posted on April 17, 2019