Coach who's team won 100-0 is fired

Benevolent One

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DALLAS — The coach of a Texas high school basketball team that beat another team 100-0 was fired Sunday, the same day he sent an e-mail to a newspaper saying he will not apologize "for a wide-margin victory when my girls played with honor and integrity."

Kyle Queal, the headmaster for Covenant School, said in The Dallas Morning News online edition that he could not answer if the firing was a direct result of coach Micah Grimes' e-mail disagreeing with administrators who called the blowout "shameful."

Queal did not immediately answer phone messages or e-mail from The Associated Press.

On its Web site last week, Covenant, a private Christian school, posted a statement regretting the outcome of its Jan. 13 shutout win over Dallas Academy. "It is shameful and an embarrassment that this happened. This clearly does not reflect a Christlike and honorable approach to competition," said the statement, signed by Queal and board chair Todd Doshier.

Grimes, who has been criticized for letting the game get so far out of hand, made it clear in the e-mail Sunday to the newspaper that he does not agree with his school's assessment.

"In response to the statement posted on The Covenant School Web site, I do not agree with the apology or the notion that the Covenant School girls basketball team should feel embarrassed or ashamed," Grimes wrote in the e-mail, according to the newspaper. "We played the game as it was meant to be played. My values and my beliefs would not allow me to run up the score on any opponent, and it will not allow me to apologize for a wide-margin victory when my girls played with honor and integrity."

A phone number for Grimes could not be located by The Associated Press. The Dallas Morning News said Grimes did not respond to their repeated e-mail requests for a telephone interview.

There was no answer at a number listed for Doshier.

A parent who attended the game said Covenant continued to make 3-pointers— even in the fourth quarter. She praised the Covenant players but said spectators and an assistant coach were cheering wildly as their team edged closer to 100 points.

Covenant was up 59-0 at halftime.

Dallas Academy has eight girls on its varsity team and about 20 girls in its high school. It is winless over the last four seasons. The academy boasts of its small class sizes and specializes in teaching students struggling with "learning differences," such as short attention spans or dyslexia.

There is no mercy rule in girls basketball that shortens the game or permits the clock to continue running when scores become one-sided. There is, however, "a golden rule" that should have applied in this contest, Edd Burleson, the director of the Texas Association of Private and Parochial Schools, said last week. Both schools are members of this association, which oversees private school athletics in Texas.

The story has received national attention, and the Dallas Academy team has been recognized for refusing to give up during the lopsided contest.
 
It seems to me that there is more going on behind him getting fired than this one game and his reaction to it. A guy who would have his team running a full court pressure defense and still shooting 3 pointers in the fourth period of a 100-0 blowout is bound to have made waves at a private christian school before this incident. The school they beat is a special learning needs school.

This coach had to realize that his job at a private christian school, especially, is to teach these kids how to be better people as well as players. Parents don't usually send their kids to a school like that to become WNBA players. They send them there to have their character and education further developed. If his agenda is different from the school, and his students parents agendas then he needed to move on.
 
In the same vein Jimmie Johnson would like to apologize to the other 42 drivers and Nascar fans everywhere for his 3rd championship in a row and just generally stomping everyone not named Carl Edwards or Kyle Busch into the ground ...
 
It seems to me that there is more going on behind him getting fired than this one game and his reaction to it. A guy who would have his team running a full court pressure defense and still shooting 3 pointers in the fourth period of a 100-0 blowout is bound to have made waves at a private christian school before this incident. The school they beat is a special learning needs school.

This coach had to realize that his job at a private christian school, especially, is to teach these kids how to be better people as well as players. Parents don't usually send their kids to a school like that to become WNBA players. They send them there to have their character and education further developed. If his agenda is different from the school, and his students parents agendas then he needed to move on.
I agree !!!!
 
bp, there is a difference between Jimmie Johnson and a high school girls basketball team. Had she been asked, I would guarentee that the beloved Kay Yow would have said many negative things about this incident... and you know it.

While it could be said that collegiant and pro teams might do something similar, even they have a bit of sympathy for a team losing by so much. I don't know if the coach of this school put in his third stringers, but even if he had, he should have at least told them to play as though this is a practice game and not press. Personally, though this is normally not my type of thought, I'm glad the guy got fired.
 
i wonder what the kids on the winning team were thinking?
 
So they should have kept 2 girls in the corner and played 3 on 5? This is a contest. While it really sucks to be embarrassed by such a lop sided score isn't it the other team's responsibility to play better? The coach that should have been fired is the one who can't coach his team to score a freaking point.
But, yeah let's penalize the guy who succeeds. That's the new American way.
 
So they should have kept 2 girls in the corner and played 3 on 5? This is a contest. While it really sucks to be embarrassed by such a lop sided score isn't it the other team's responsibility to play better? The coach that should have been fired is the one who can't coach his team to score a freaking point.
But, yeah let's penalize the guy who succeeds. That's the new American way.
Naw Bp, I don't believe you really think like that.
 
So they should have kept 2 girls in the corner and played 3 on 5? This is a contest. While it really sucks to be embarrassed by such a lop sided score isn't it the other team's responsibility to play better? The coach that should have been fired is the one who can't coach his team to score a freaking point.
But, yeah let's penalize the guy who succeeds. That's the new American way.

The contest had already been decided very early in the game. To their credit, the other team isn't whining about how badly they were beaten.

In addition, they aren't punishing the guy for succeeding. They are punishing him for failing to do his job, which in this case was to teach his players to win with dignity and class and not embarrass the obviously well overmatched opponent.
 
The contest had already been decided very early in the game. To their credit, the other team isn't whining about how badly they were beaten.

In addition, they aren't punishing the guy for succeeding. They are punishing him for failing to do his job, which in this case was to teach his players to win with dignity and class and not embarrass the obviously well overmatched opponent.

I agree:beerbang:
 
pfft.jpg


Besides everyone enjoys a little

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now and then...
 
In addition, they aren't punishing the guy for succeeding. They are punishing him for failing to do his job, which in this case was to teach his players to win with dignity and class and not embarrass the obviously well overmatched opponent.

By the same token, the team that was losing could've forfeited, saved themselves the obvious embarassment, and learned to lose with dignity and class. :shrug:
 
By the same token, the team that was losing could've forfeited, saved themselves the obvious embarassment, and learned to lose with dignity and class. :shrug:
If you think that the only purpose in Grade School and High School sports is to win or lose.

To name a few reasons for Sports at that level:
To learn; Teamwork. Discipline, Leadership, Learning how to use their resources, etc..........
Not to mention playing because they love the sport.

It is pretty obvious that the losing team was not very talented. Your comment implies that their team shouldn't be playing the Sport.

Some people believe in kicking a person when they are down and others will extend a hand to help them up.
 
If you think that the only purpose in Grade School and High School sports is to win or lose.

To name a few reasons for Sports at that level:
To learn; Teamwork. Discipline, Leadership, Learning how to use their resources, etc..........
Not to mention playing because they love the sport.

It is pretty obvious that the losing team was not very talented. Your comment implies that their team shouldn't be playing the Sport.

Not in the slightest. My comment implies that learning to lose gracefully is just as important...if not more important...than learning to win gracefully. I'm not saying that the winning team should be praised, either, so get that thought out of your head, too.

muggle not said:
Some people believe in kicking a person when they are down and others will extend a hand to help them up.

Nothing wrong with extending the hand to help a person up. It is not, however, required. After all...there is no dishonor in losing to a superior force.
 
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