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Reply to Mulcahy and McCormick
By William C. Dowling
Last week a New York Times article
about my just-published book, Confessions
of a Spoilsport, set off a bit of a firestorm at
Rutgers. Athletics Director Robert E. Mulcahy was pleased to
label a remark I'd made in the Times a "blatantly
racist statement." President Richard L. McCormick denounced
its "racist implication." A few New Jersey sportswriters
joined the chorus. Soon the furor was making national news.
Here's what I said: "If you were giving a scholarship to
an intellectually brilliant kid who happens to play a sport,
that's fine. But they give it to a functional illiterate who
can't read a cereal box, and then make him spend 50 hours a week
on physical skills. That's not opportunity. If you want to give
financial help to minorities, go find the ones who are at the
library after school."
Mulcahy
and McCormick got traction for their racism charge by trying
to portray my remark as being about Rutgers athletes. But as dozens of examples
in Confessions of a Spoilsport show,
and as the Times reporter was aware at the time -- I've double-checked
this with him -- I wasn't talking about Rutgers athletes. I was
describing the huge number of academically deficient Div IA athletes
nationally whose only "educational opportunity" amounts
to the chance to get bogus courses, fake credits, forged transcripts,
and the thousand other dodges sports-factory schools use to keep
their winning football and basketball teams eligible.
Like many people, I think the claim
of educational opportunity for minority youths is a cover-up
for a retrograde booster subculture that uses minority kids
for its own brutally cynical ends, and then throws all but a
tiny handful aside. A major theme of my book is that Div IA athletics
is the way through which this booster subculture asserts what
I call symbolic ownership over state universities, marginalizing
the brightest and most intellectually engaged students on campus.
As Confessions of a Spoilsport shows in detail, that same
booster subculture is well known for attacking, often viciously,
any perceived threat to its dominance. In conducting what the
Wall Street Journal called their "campaign of character
assassination" against me, Mulcahy and McCormick were simply
operating as spokesmen for that subculture at Rutgers. . .
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Copyright (2007) by The Home News
Tribune
A
response by a distinguished African-American commentator:
"Right on, Brother Dowling"
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