The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Hertzog

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ishment. 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, 71-21, 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 Wu-Tang 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.

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