Ottawa Citizen

U.S. Little League champs lose title

Officials cheated to get new players

- DON BABWIN

A Little League team that captured the attention of the nation and the hearts of its hometown was stripped of its national title Wednesday after an investigat­ion revealed that team officials had falsified boundaries so they could add ineligible players to the roster.

Only last summer, the all-black Jackie Robinson West team was the toast of Chicago and was honoured with trips to San Francisco and to the White House.

But the sport’s governing body, Little League Internatio­nal, announced that team officials had changed the boundaries that determine where players must live. And after learning that their scheme had been exposed, they scrambled to convince surroundin­g leagues to go along with what they had done.

“This is so heartbreak­ing,” said Stephen D. Keener, Little League Internatio­nal president and CEO. “It is a sad day for a bunch of kids who we have come to really like ... who did nothing wrong.” But, he said, “we cannot tolerate the actions of some of the adults involved here.”

The organizati­on suspended the manager, Darold Butler, and suspended the team from Little League tournament play until the local league’s president and treasurer have been replaced. A district official who is believed to have helped change the boundaries was also removed.

All of the team’s victories were thrown out, meaning that the wins will be awarded to other teams. Mountain Ridge Little League, the team from Las Vegas that lost to Jackie Robinson West in the national championsh­ip game will be awarded the title.

Parents were angered by the news, saying their children were being unfairly punished.

“The boys had no inside dealings ... about any borders, and I as a mother had no idea there were any (questions about) boundaries,” said Venisa Green, who was driving her son, Brandon, to school Wednesday when they were “blindsided” by the news on the radio.

“We weren’t involved in anything that could have caused us to be stripped of our champions,” said Brandon, appearing at a news conference with his mother.

Venisa Green said the move was especially dishearten­ing because the team was part of efforts to keep children safe and prepare them for college in a community better known for gangs and drugs than any kind of achievemen­t.

“What would you have us do, Little League, for them to be killed on the streets of Chicago?” she asked.

She wondered if the fact that the players were black had any role in the ruling, something that the Rev. Jesse Jackson and others questioned, as well.

“Is this about boundaries or race?” Jackson asked.

Jackson did not discuss whether he blamed any league officials for what had happened, but in Washington, White House spokesman Josh Earnest suggested that it was the adults who let down the boys.

“The fact is, you know, some dirty dealing by some adults doesn’t take anything away from the accomplish­ments of those young men,” he said.

It was a stunning end to a story that began last summer as the team marched through the Little League tournament. Their odyssey ended with a loss to South Korea in the world championsh­ip game in South Williamspo­rt, Pennsylvan­ia.

In an interview, Keener said Jackie Robinson West officials expanded the league boundaries at the expense of three neighbouri­ng ones, so the boundaries included several players on the team who would not otherwise have been eligible.

The investigat­ion found that at least one district official who had helped redraw the map went to the other teams to ask that they go along with what the team had done, Keener said.

The other leagues refused, he said.

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