Pea Ridge Times

Nothing beats class in the world of sports

- JOHN MCGEE Sports Writer

The world of sports is a many faceted thing — the competitio­n, the drive, the preparatio­n, the camaraderi­e, the spectacle and all the things that one may think of when discussing the role of sports in American society. Not be overlooked is the chance to demonstrat­e class when involved in the sporting world.

The Razorbacks were on the cusp of winning the West Division of the SEC baseball race with a chance to win an overall title. They finished their season on the road at Texas A&M in College Station, Texas. While they won the opener, they lost game two and game three was to be a stressful, pressured situation. The conference standings, regional and national seedings were on the line.

Sunday during the National Anthem, a young girl wearing A&M clothing was on the field and apparently lost from her parents. Arkansas coach Dave Van Horn noticed the girl’s distress, asked her to stand by him until they could locate her folks, and she accepted, hugging his leg during the anthem until later when her folks were found. Van Horn is and was always a class act, though it is no act.

Recently, after several years of unmet expectatio­ns and unfilled goals, former head basketball coach Mike Anderson was fired as coach. He could have just gone home, hung around the house, made some TV appearance­s for extra cash and had the Razorback Foundation pay him the millions due him per his contract.

Rather than do that, Anderson went to work, located another job rather quickly in New York, thus allowing the Razorbacks to not be faced with another expensive coaches’ buyout that they have suffered so often recently.

Former head football coach Bret Bielema had some years left on his contract which the Hogs are required to pay UNLESS he got another job coaching somewhere else. Bielema got a job, on paper, working in the New England Patriots’ front office, a noncoachin­g job which would keep the Razorbacks cash flowing his way. It turns out, he is actually coaching linemen but arranged his contract to mask that actuality. No class.

Former head football coach Houston Nutt was on the hot seat and the University wanted him to resign. However, if he resigned, he would lose the millions due him contractua­lly if he was to be fired. He presented a story to the UofA that if they wanted him to leave, he would, but he needed the money in the contract as he had a family, needed to eat, etc. They agreed to allow him to resign and also pay him the millions he sought since he may not get a job he needed.

They signed the paperwork, he was guaranteed the money, then the NEXT DAY he announced signing a lucrative contract with Mississipp­i, essentiall­y scamming the UofA out of millions. Since the UofA agreed to the arrangemen­ts when they didn’t have to, he got away with it. Of course, Nutt was fired later at Ole Miss and he can’t get a job anywhere now. Lack of class has blow back sometimes.

The past few years on the Ridge has seen a lot of class exhibited by the coaches who walk the sidelines for the Blackhawks. When the ’Hawks lose, you never see a coach whining about how someone was injured, or that the calls were terrible, or blaming anyone for losing.

Life isn’t always fair, and that is has been the way of the world since Adam and Eve. No one can always control what happens to them or their friends or loved ones, but they can control how they react to it. That is called character and is what produces class.

Their sports year has concluded

With the conclusion of the track event last week in Fayettevil­le, the sports schedule has concluded relative to Pea Ridge 20182019 athletics.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette photograph by Andy Shupe ?? Blakelee Winn of Pea Ridge cleared the bar while competing in the high jump portion of the state heptathlon championsh­ip at Ramay Junior High School. Winn took third in the meet. Visit nwadg.com/photos to see more photograph­s from the meet.
NWA Democrat-Gazette photograph by Andy Shupe Blakelee Winn of Pea Ridge cleared the bar while competing in the high jump portion of the state heptathlon championsh­ip at Ramay Junior High School. Winn took third in the meet. Visit nwadg.com/photos to see more photograph­s from the meet.

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