Ridiculous ruling fouls standout’s senior season
Maori Davenport had to go to court just to get back on the court.
How ridiculous it’s come to that for the Alabama high school basketball star.
Thankfully, a cruel and unjust ruling by the state’s governing body was put on hold Friday by a local judge, just hours before Davenport’s Charles Henderson High School took the court for a game against Carroll.
It was just a temporary victory, but at least it allowed Davenport to play for the first time since November.
We can only hope the judge sides with Davenport again when he hears the facts of the case, though when that will happen is unclear. More importantly, this ludicrous affair should serve as a lesson to all high school administrators:
Rules are necessary, to be sure, but the people who carry them out should always try to do what’s best for the kids who play the games.
That mantra is nowhere to be found in this case.
“I believe in rules. But I also believe in a fair and reasonable application of the rules,” said ESPN analyst Jay Bilas, who has been lobbying on Davenport’s behalf. “High school teachers and high school coaches and high school administrators are supposed to elevate their young people, not keep them down.”
Davenport’s senior season — which should’ve been a triumphant last lap with her Charles Henderson teammates before she headed off to play for Basketball Hall of Famer Vivian Stringer at Rutgers — was thrown into turmoil over a simple clerical error.
Last summer, Davenport played for her country at a youth tournament in Mexico City, an enormous honor for a player still in high school. As is normally does, USA Basketball sent out a modest stipend check of $857.20 to everyone who participated.
That was not an issue for those players who were already heading to college since the NCAA allows such payments. But USA Basketball failed to check on whether it applied to high school players such as Davenport, who couldn’t accept any money under the amateurism rules of the Alabama High School Athletic Association.
Davenport’s family deposited the check. Then, some three months later, after learning that the payment was against AHSAA rules, they self-reported the violation and repaid the money to USA Basketball.
“USA admitted their mistake,” said Tara Davenport, the player’s mother and a coach at Charles Henderson Middle School. “Her dad and I sent the money back ASAP.”
Case closed, right? Hardly.
The AHSAA said any violation of its amateurism rule carried an automatic one-year suspension, effectively ending Maori Davenport’s high school career. Charles Henderson, the defending Class 5A champion, also was ordered to forfeit its first four games, the ones that Davenport played in before turning herself in.
Davenport appealed the ruling, only to be turned down by two AHSAA panels.
Even more appalling, the association put out a statement this week coldly defending its decision, essentially putting all the blame on Davenport’s family as well as the coaches and administrators at Charles Henderson.
For Bilas, that was the final straw.
“That statement was full of falsehoods and meanspirited,” he said Friday. “It does not speak well of anyone in the state of Alabama, especially those within the state high school athletic association. That was lowbrow stuff.”
The AHSAA statement said Davenport had adults around her who should have known the rules. It said the Aug. 15 payment wasn’t reported for 91 days and only after the start of Charles Henderson’s season, as if implying that Davenport’s family only fessed up when they were nailed.
“If exceptions are made, there would no longer be a need for an amateur rule,” said the statement issued by Johnny Hardin, president of the AHSAA’s Central Board of Control. “The rules are applied equally to ALL athletes.”
The Davenport ruling turned Alabama into a national disgrace, drawing universal condemnation from all corners of the sporting world.
Golden State Warriors star DeMarcus Cousins, a native of the state, demanded that Davenport be allowed to play. Kobe Bryant called it “just about the most ridiculous thing I’ve heard in youth basketball.”
Davenport still seems a bit overwhelmed by the whole affair. And no matter what the judge ultimately rules, her senior year has been forever tarnished.
That’s something she’ll never get back.