2 thoughts on “The Digital Colosseum: When a Student-Athlete’s Split-Second Mistake Becomes a Lifelong Sentence

  1. Elbow to chin and two 12-6 elbow strikes to back of head on down opponent is a completely different thing. All this training the article mentions should provide control for actions, not provide an excuse for assault. This strike in professional fighting has been illegal and grounds for suspension, ban from, and even criminal prosecution. Had this young adult been driving 100+ MPH and hit a kid killing them, would we still can that a split second act of poor judgment? And if this is the conditioning they recurve from the establishment I suggest to the OHSAA the look into the school for violations of code of conduct.

    The short of this entire situation is that no one is disputing his actions, the problem is the school is telling him you didn’t do anything and good job. Had he been ejected, then suspended for OHSAA violation of code of conduct, none of this is even an issue.

    1. Thank you for your thoughts! Not here to argue, just wanted to let you know, the student=athlete in question was suspended. I don’t know the extent, but he was on the bench the following night. I spoke to their Athletic Director; I don’t think “the school is telling him you didn’t do anything, good job” is an accurate portrayal.

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