Dear Coach Mack,
For
some time now in Cincinnati, basketball has reigned as king of the collegiate
landscape, especially due to the absence of an NBA team. The University of
Cincinnati Bearcats and your very own Xavier University Musketeers have brought
a sense of pride, an annual hardwood success that blares through the speakers
of the WLW airways, that dawns billboards along I-275. Xavier is only one of
five schools that have made the Associated Press “Top 25” Poll in each of the
last four seasons, while racking up five straight Atlantic 10 Conference
Championships in the process. Coach Mack, you have led a team that has made it
to the Sweet Sixteen each of the past four seasons. From a statistical
standpoint, the Queen City can look upon the navy and white and be proud. From
a moral view, however, I’m afraid the Muskies are not a Cincy gem.
The
“Xavier way” is the core value of Xavier University, the Jesuit belief in a
good, moral compass driving the student body to higher standards than an
average school. For years, especially under the Bob Huggins regime, UC was
known to recruit great players with bad morals. Graduation rates were
horrendous, but points on the scoreboard were to be had. Arrests were made, but
as long as a double-double was achieved, Huggins and his squad of scoundrels
were allowed to continue in their questionable recruiting and academic
fashions. Xavier, however, with the “Xavier way” as its compass, was always
held at a higher standard. And even with its demand for character alongside athletic
talent, the university was still successful in basketball, producing talents
such as Byron Larkin and David West.
Coach
Mack, this image has been tainted. The Bearcats are no longer the bad boys in
town. No, in an effort to get quick results without concern for character, you
have recruited against the very core values of Xavier University. Talent over
morals may keep you afloat for awhile, but eventually the tide of corruption
will rise. For you and the Xavier Musketeers, 2011-2012 brought that rise.
Let’s
start with Kenny Frease, the 2011 senior center who averaged 10.2 points per
game paired with 6.1 rebound per game. Frease never brought a positive demeanor
to the court, often allowing his lack of effort to result in missed
opportunities in the paint. In October 2011, Frease was suspended indefinitely
by you because he “did not fulfill all the responsibilities of a Xavier
basketball player.” You think?
Frease
would rejoin the team, as it was evident to you that his 7-foot mass of a body
was of more use in the paint than on the bench. Frease would be sure to make
another trip to the suspension list again, however, along with a few other of
his teammates as their true colors were displayed in the December 2011 brawl at
the annual Crosstown Shootout, the rivalry game played between Cincinnati and
Xavier every winter. Tu Holloway, the cocky yet efficient point guard, was
jawing at the Bearcat bench with 9.4 seconds remaining in the game, a
not-so-classy move when up by 23 points. As shown to the nation over and over
on ESPN, this erupted into a brawl. Started by Cincinnati? Nope, the initial
shove came from Dez Wells, Xavier’s freshman guard. Punches were thrown, Frease
knocked to the ground with a messed up face, while four Musketeers ended up
with suspensions for their involvement in the fight.
Remorse
for their actions?
“I
was just saying that it’s my city right here,” Holloway said in the post game press
conference. “I’m cut from a different cloth. None of those guys on that team
are like me.”
Oh
wait, it gets better.
“We’re
grown men over here. We’ve got a whole bunch of gangsters in the locker room,
not thugs but tough guys on the court. We went out there and zipped them up at
the end of the game. That’s our motto. Zip ‘em up. And that’s what we just did
to them.”
And
the kicker: it all started because the Xavier players felt they had been disrespected
by Cincinnati players via Twitter.
Coach Mack, this is your Xavier
Musketeer squad. You have redefined the national image of the school. People in
Cincinnati used to wear t-shirts that read “The Xavier Way.” Now, shirts are
sold that say “Zip ‘Em Up.”
After
the game, in regards to Holloway’s and fellow teammate Mark Lyons’ comments,
you said, “I think at times they probably don’t represent themselves with the
use of words real well, but I’m not necessarily going to sit up here and tell
you that I feel like Tu and Mark are bad kids.”
Of
course you won’t tell us that, Coach; you recruited them.
Finally,
I am sad to point out the latest example of the new Xavier image. Dez Wells was
expelled from school last week for seriously violating the Xavier’s student
code of conduct. On Tuesday, a grand jury rejected criminal charges against
Wells, with allegations of sexual assault brought before them. Even without the
criminal charges, Xavier is sticking by its decision to expel Wells, the
Musketeers’ 2011-2012 fourth leading scorer and best returning offensive threat.
Basically, the school is showing they are tired of the behavior of your
players, as the conduct board consisting of faculty, students, and
administrators made the decision.
Coach
Mack, the Xavier name has been tarnished. You’re recruits have become the
gangsters they believe they are. Mark Lyons has transferred to Arizona, and
Griffin McKinzie to the University of Denver.
In closing, I want to leave you
with a suggestion. Take a page out of former Indianapolis Colts head coach Tony
Dungy’s book. Literally, his book. Uncommon.
It talks of Dungy’s search for a player to draft; in the Colts’ analysis of potential
candidates, they actually had a warning column that could be filled out as “do
not draft because of character.”
Coach
Mack, for the sake of the fans, the city, the school, and all those that
believe in the Musketeers, it’s time to get back to the Xavier way.