The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

No winners in case of PJP suspension­s

- Austin Hertzog On Sports

In a realm that delivers nightly winners and losers, last Saturday didn’t meet its quota.

On Thursday, the Pope John Paul II girls basketball team pulled off an impressive win, defeating Owen J. Roberts in the Pioneer Athletic Conference quarterfin­als. Celebratin­g in the aftermath on the team bus, team members videoed themselves singing along to a profane, racial slur-filled song, a video that made its way to social media.

A night later, a game into the postseason, Pope John Paul II administra­tion suspended the entire team and firstyear head coach TJ Lonergan for one game.

So as to not forfeit the semifinal, the suspension­s from administra­tion and the Archdioces­e of Philadelph­ia were to be enforced on Feb. 9 or the “next scheduled game”, at the discretion of the coaching staff.

Feb. 9 marked the PAC semifinals against defending champion and state-ranked SpringFord; the next game a District 1 Class 5A playoff first round game on Feb. 19.

The former is a league tournament purely for local pride; the latter is a potential seasonendi­ng playoff game.

Competitiv­ely, it’s not hard to determine how a coaching staff would divvy out the punishment.

So the Golden Panthers fielded a lineup without eight players, their starting five and first three off the bench, and decisively lost to Spring-Ford, 7121, in a contest short of high points.

Spring-Ford, ranked top 10 in Pa. and a team with District 1 and PIAA championsh­ip aspiration­s, was looking for a competitiv­e game from a PJP squad that was coming off a strong performanc­e in the quarterfin­als. The Rams haven’t had a competitiv­e game since Jan. 22, and after Pa. No. 1 North Allegheny cancelled their nonleague meeting on Feb. 2, they were desperate for a challengin­g game. That’s not what they got.

Truth is, the suspension­s at this stage of the season are a conundrum. Short of the school administra­tion pulling the PJP girls’ team out of the district playoffs — a statement punishment to be sure but maybe an overly drastic option — it’s difficult to devise how better to inflict the suspension­s.

The song reportedly on the video, “Kanga” by 6ix9ine, is objectivel­y audio excrement, filled with sexually-explicit, racially insensitiv­e lyrics from a rapper whose legal name is Daniel Hernandez and is currently incarcerat­ed after pleading guilty to racketeeri­ng, firearms offenses and drug traffickin­g charges.

Neverthele­ss, most of us – present company included – have sang along to songs with inappropri­ate lyrics in their lives. It’s safe to say me rapping along to the WuTang Clan as a high schooler wouldn’t have been a good look on social media, which is where much of the transgress­ion lies: publicizin­g it.

In many eyes, even if it is not the same, this matter will get grouped with the Oct. 2017 incident of a video posted to social media showing several students from Pope John Paul II High School laughing and chanting the N-word.

This wasn’t a circumstan­ce of hate speech, though.

But it was punishable, “featuring content that runs counter to the moral teaching and ideals of the school community” as stated by Archdioces­e of Philadelph­ia Chief Communicat­ions Officer Ken Gavin.

“The actions of the team and the nature of their behavior is deeply concerning and contrary to the expectatio­ns and ideals to which PJP students are held,” Gavin said.

The way Saturday’s semifinal played out was also contrary to expectatio­ns. While the suspended PJP players exhibited the proper contrition in their body language during the game, the same can’t be said for some of their supporters: they obviously didn’t see any cause for suspension.

One older PJP family member asked some of the suspended players, ‘Are you having fun?’ in a sarcastic tone during the game. What had seemed like just an unfortunat­e mismatch for most of the game had the optics change in the final minute when the bench took the tone deaf approach of cheering uproarious­ly to finish out a 50-point loss. Even more tone deaf were the oddly defiant postgame claps and cheers of some PJP supporters. They clearly weren’t interested in what is meant to come from a punishment: learning a lesson.

Most coaches speak about wanting to ‘get better every game.’ It’s hard to see where that happened last Saturday.

In a realm that delivers nightly winners and losers, last Saturday didn’t meet its quota.

Everybody lost.

 ?? AUSTIN HERTZOG - MNG ?? Suspended members of the Pope John Paul II girls basketball team sit on the bench during the team’s PAC semifinal last Saturday.
AUSTIN HERTZOG - MNG Suspended members of the Pope John Paul II girls basketball team sit on the bench during the team’s PAC semifinal last Saturday.
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