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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
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Soccer
match results in fine A racially charged
incident at a high school soccer game last fall has resulted in a $750 fine
against Sisters High School. The fine was imposed by the executive board
of the Oregon State Activities Association, which concluded that Sisters
soccer coach Mark Keel "withdrew the team prior to the completion of the
competition" in violation of OSAA rules.
There was no question that
Keel and his team left the field while a few minutes remained on the clock
in a game at Molalla High School last September 16. But when the fine
was first announced, Sisters officials filed an appeal on the basis of
mitigating circumstances -- that the team left because one or more Molalla
supporters repeatedly shouted racial slurs at a black player on the Sisters
squad.
Keel said he heard shouts
such as "Lynch the nigger" and "Boy, I'd make you my slave."
Having experienced similar
problems at a Molalla game the year before, the coach said, "I felt like
it was a dangerous situation and our players felt threatened, so we packed
up and left. Perhaps I should have handled it differently, but I made
multiple pleas with their coach to do something about it and he basically
said it wasn't his problem."
During the appeal, a lot of
paperwork was exchanged and Keel and Sisters High Athletic Director Mary
Flande appeared in person at a December OSAA board meeting.
The final decision rejecting
the appeal came in a brief letter to Flande on February 4.
The news was passed along
to the Sisters School Board by Superintendent Steve Swisher at the board's
April 7 meeting.
At the time of the incident,
Swisher said, "After reviewing the situation, I 100 percent support what
the coach did. As a young coach 25 years ago, I only wish I had the courage
to do what Mark Keel did."
Swisher told the school board
this month that regardless of local feelings about the fine, it had to
be paid or Sisters would be cut out of interscholastic athletic competition.
Athletic Director Flande said
last week that she was "disappointed" by the rejection of the school's
appeal.
"I thought there would be
a little more leniency. But there was due process and it was the same
process that would have taken place with any other school or violation.
They didn't just dismiss our arguments."
Flande explained: "Basically,
the findings were that we did leave the field before the completion of
the contest, which is a violation of the rules.
"The fine was incurred because
the (soccer game) officials in their report said they had the (offending)
people leave and came back to us and said, 'We got those people off the
field so let's try to continue,' and that was our choice at that point.
"So we did leave the field
and indeed that was a violation. They (the OSAA board) understand the
extenuating circumstances and there could have been a greater fine."
Since the incident, Flande
said, discussions have been held at coaches' meetings about how to deal
with this type of situation if it occurs again.
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