USA TODAY US Edition

Freeze another case of blind coach adoration

- Nancy Armour narmour@usatoday.com USA TODAY Sports

Miss. football coach suffers swift downfall

There’s a reason saints aren’t canonized until long after they’ve died.

The swift downfall of Hugh Freeze is another reminder that sports figures are as flawed as everyone else, sometimes even more so. They’re just able to hide it better, provided cover by the blind adoration of their fans.

When Freeze was forced out by Mississipp­i last week after his phone records showed a oneminute call to a number tied to an escort service, there were plenty of fans who simply refused to be-

lieve it. Such a godly man could never do such a thing!

Never mind that Ole Miss said it wasn’t the one phone call but the discovery of “a pattern of personal misconduct” that brought about Freeze’s resignatio­n. Wrongdoing, rule breaking and the like are graded on a sliding scale, particular­ly for college sports figures, the gravity of the sins commensura­te with geographic proximity or emotional attachment.

Offenses by a random coach or athlete across the country will generate a shrug, maybe a shake of the head. Those committed by a middling conference member are deemed appalling and worthy of swift punishment. The outrage skyrockets when it’s a bitter rival, with every error in judgment seen as a capital offense that was meticulous­ly planned with the full knowledge and support of everyone at the university or organizati­on.

And if it happens to be your coach or favorite player caught up in something shady? Another example of “fake news” or the spiteful work of a vengeful rival.

Coaches and athletes who get busted for bad behavior aren’t necessaril­y bad people. Some are, with Dave Bliss immediatel­y coming to mind. But the vast majority are just like the rest of us, their best intentions and basic decency undercut by greed, pride, lust or self-preservati­on.

You can quote Scripture in public and sin in private, as Freeze seems to have done.

“God is good, even in difficult times,” Freeze told USA TODAY Sports on Wednesday in his first public comments since his resignatio­n July 20. “Wonderful wife and family, and that’s my priority.”

You can be instrument­al in the formation of hundreds of fine, upstanding young men and exhibit callous disregard for the health and safety of others. You can bring a title to your city or school one year and shame the next.

But society has never quite learned how to accept the ordinary in our sports idols. Too often we look at their exceptiona­l athletic skills and think that means they’re exceptiona­l people, too. We wear their jerseys, give our kids their names and entrust them with our favorite memories — all without ever knowing who they really are.

And when they show us, more often than not we don’t want to see it.

Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor raced each other to the bottom of the gutter with their homophobic and racist slurs, and it hasn’t diminished interest in their fight. More than five years later, there’s still a faction of Penn State alumni and fans who will angrily dispute any suggestion of Joe Paterno’s cul- pability in Jerry Sandusky’s monstrous crimes.

The Freeze mess is only going to get uglier — universiti­es don’t “encourage” popular, winning coaches to resign unless there’s a darn good reason — and yet no doubt some will stand by him because they know he’s a “good man,” his Bible verses and two victories against Alabama all the proof they need.

The truth is, they don’t know about Freeze. Or anyone else for that matter. We see what we want in our sports heroes without actually looking at what’s there.

That’s the danger in elevating a human to a saint. Put them up too high, and eventually they fall.

 ?? ADAM HAGY, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Hugh Freeze resigned after Mississipp­i said it uncovered what it termed “a pattern of personal misconduct.”
ADAM HAGY, USA TODAY SPORTS Hugh Freeze resigned after Mississipp­i said it uncovered what it termed “a pattern of personal misconduct.”
 ??  ??
 ?? NELSON CHENAULT, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “God is good, even in difficult times,” said Hugh Freeze, who resigned from Mississipp­i on July 20.
NELSON CHENAULT, USA TODAY SPORTS “God is good, even in difficult times,” said Hugh Freeze, who resigned from Mississipp­i on July 20.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States