Pollard ‘incident’ spotlights a larger problem

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Just like in wrestling. Locally, for example, the coaching staff has a pretty good track record, last time I checked. So do they really need a dad yelling every single move from the stands? Shouldn’t the kid’s ears be trained to hear coach Frain, coach Downing or coach Long?

Weren’t the days of listening to dad at matside left behind at kids tournaments?

One thing I love about the Creston wrestling crowd, besides the consistent strong turnout, is their knowledge base. They know when to cheer, they recognize a special accomplishment because they know who’s good, or who is pulling off an upset.

But knowledge can be abused, too, if it oversteps what successful coaches are trying to do.

Pollard booted

This all brings me to the Jamie Pollard case.

By now you probably know the Iowa State athletic director was ejected from the Colfax-Mingo gym Tuesday night for objecting to an official’s call during the game against Gilbert. His son is a sophomore on the Gilbert team, which lost at Colfax.

School officials said the situation was “overblown” and that Pollard had not been a problem before he was asked to leave by a referee, and that no profanity or yelling was involved. He told the official it was “a horrible call” near the end of the game, and was then asked to leave.

Perhaps it was an overreaction, and maybe Pollard didn’t deserve the embarrassment of ejection.

But he knows better than anyone, and he said so in apologizing, that someone in his position at a state institution can’t put himself in that situation. He’s the role model, the beacon for sportsmanship. It’s like a cop who can’t drive a little tipsy.

So, when a college AD gets ejected, yes, it’s going to get reported and it’s not sensationalism. He’s held to a higher standard.

By the way, have you ever looked around and noticed that those with the best background in the sport often sit quietly, while other “wanna-be’s” do the most chirping? I don’t see much demonstrative behavior from the likes of Steve McCann, Matt Somers, John Thomsen or Todd Nielsen, all with deep backgrounds in the sport.

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