- Jun 11, 2015
- 1,175
- 48
Apparently we are living in the new Alternaive Facts era.
What is an 'alternative fact'?
Apparently we are living in the new Alternaive Facts era.
MSESPN? Clay Travis fan perhaps?
How do you know this?
Do you have inside information?
If that's what happened
Apparently we are living in the new Alternative Facts era.
What is an 'alternative fact'?
Though the sequence of events is up for interpretation, here’s how I saw it: Fagan dropped her hand, choosing not to high-five Walton at least a couple players before the two would’ve slapped palms. Walton, who had plenty of time to see what was happening in front of him, chose to high-five Fagan’s shoulder instead. An annoyed Fagan then pushed Walton’s back before the two exchanged words.
What you also need to know is the backstory here.
Back in 2012, Walton dismissed Fagan’s sisters — Kasey and Sami — along with Cheyenne Coyle from the program following a team altercation.
The details as to why never fully emerged.
So it’s safe to say Monday night some of that bad blood between Walton and the Fagan family spilled onto the field.
And it was all very petty, from both sides.
But Walton was in the wrong more than Fagan was, and here’s why.
Nowhere in the NCAA rulebook does it say a player has to high-five every single member of the high-five line (though page one does say sportsmanship is a core value of the NCAA). Heck, she doesn’t even have to say “good game” to anyone if she doesn’t feel like it.
Think of it like standing for the Pledge of Allegiance in school. Sure, everyone else expects you to take part, but by no means is it mandatory.
I’ve played baseball for nearly my entire life, and I’ve congratulated every player of the opposing team I’ve shared the field with.
But if someone didn’t want to fist bump? Fine by me. Be the poor sport you are.
What Walton should have done was put his hand down too, and thought to himself, “Man, I sure am glad that brat isn’t on my team.”
Instead, he brushed Fagan’s shoulder and issued an apology through the team’s Twitter account less than a day later.
“I apologize to Haley. I just wanted to congratulate Auburn on the win – it was a good series,” Walton said. “My intent was to give a high-five to each opposing player as we do after every game. Apparently, her hand wasn’t up as I said ‘good game’ and I touched her shoulder. I should have paid closer attention and did not intend to upset her.”
He went on.
“I regret that this has taken attention away from the effort and sportsmanship both teams displayed all weekend.”
The key word there is “apparently.” I believe Walton knew exactly what he was doing, but I’ll let you be the judge.
Sports are emotional. Players and coaches get heated. That I have no problem accepting.
But this was different.
This wasn’t like the time LSU running back Leonard Fournette shoved Florida defensive backs coach Torrian Gray in a pregame scuffle this past football season.
Players are childish all the time. That much seems pretty obvious.
But coaches — especially at a school like the University of Florida — should hold themselves to higher standards.
Just like recommendations in the tech hitting forum to try it yourself and swing a bat, set up high five lines and see if you end up pushing someone's shoulder when you miss because their hand isn't up. If in doubt, rely on the Hansen principle and compare slow mo video of your and Walton-Fagan experiences to those you consider the best in the business.
Just like recommendations in the tech hitting forum to try it yourself and swing a bat, set up high five lines and see if you end up pushing someone's shoulder when you miss because their hand isn't up. If in doubt, rely on the Hansen principle and compare slow mo video of your and Walton-Fagan experiences to those you consider the best in the business.