MISSOURI
MACHINATIONS
NEWS
ITEM — University of Missouri president Tim Wolfe recently resigned in the face
of growing protests by African-American students, the threat of a walkout by
faculty, and a strike by football players who said his
administration failed to combat campus racism.
Ousted!
I was going to write about Tom
Brady, but events in the “Show Me State” compelled otherwise.
The first headlines re: Wolfe’s
resignation raised questions about what egregious conduct had required him to
step down. It turns out that his crime was “inadequate responsiveness” to
campus activists on the issue of combatting racism at the University of
Missouri in Columbia. And the tipping point came when the African-American
gridsters at Mizzou threatened not to play football unless Wolfe quit.
There are fascinating aspects to all
this.
Is there rampant racism at Mizzou? I
don’t know. No doubt there have been incidents of bad behavior. That’s
inevitable at any large university campus. Let light be shined on the whole
situation and let the truths emerge. And a measure of skepticism is often
appropriate when dealing with emotional campus activists, including those in
Columbia.
The football component of the Mizzou
equation underscores the power that scholarship athletes can wield when they
so-choose. Faculty activists had earlier called for Wolfe’s resignation, to no
avail, but when the football Tigers weighed in, Wolfe walked out.
Mizzou Coach Gary Pinkel tweeted his
support for his players, but according to USA TODAY that support did not mean
he wanted Wolfe to resign.
With Missouri in last place in the
Southeastern Conference, Pinkel surely didn’t need the distraction. Time will
tell if getting involved in campus politics unites or divides the Tiger
gridsters.
But the events in Columbia affirm
the potential power that football players can wield, and athletes (and
coaches!) around the country certainly took notice.
Last year the football players at
Northwestern University sought (unsuccessfully) to unionize, and that may have
inspired whoever led the Tiger players to revolt.
The Missouri machinations probably
revived wistful memories for grey-haired activists who came of age during the
sixties, when student strikes were commonplace. As many of these liberal
activists often lamented the extent of university resources invested in a
violent male-only sport like football, it’s ironic that a FOOTBALL team
achieved the campus activist dream—ousting a university president.
Speaking of the power that football
has over presidents, consider that no U.S. President would EVER give a prime
time speech or national address if it conflicted with Monday Night Football.
Such a President would likely end up like President Wolfe.
Ousted!
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