NBA fracas, Jose Mourinho's antics prove action needed to prevent rise of violence in sport
LONDON: The NBA has become one of the most popular competitions in the
world in recent years, with the likes of Steph Curry, Kevin Durant and
LeBron James becoming global superstars.
As a product it is slick, glamorous and boasts celebrity fans, from the rap world to Hollywood royalty.
But the glitzy facade was shattered on Saturday when the Lakers-Rockets
game descended into chaos, with both teams getting caught up in an ugly
melee. Someone claimed to be spat on, punches were thrown, and three
players had to be ejected from the game as the unruliness spilled over
into the crowd.
In LeBron James’ home debut for the Lakers, he ended up playing
peacemaker, not play-maker. Afterwards, no one was talking about his
performance or the fact his team lost again. The result seemed almost
irrelevant.
That fracas came hours after tension on the touchline in the Chelsea vs.
Manchester United Premier League clash saw United boss Jose Mourinho
lose his cool and need to be restrained in an ill-tempered scuffle with a
Chelsea coach. And earlier this month, the hotly anticipated MMA
match-up between Khabib Nurmagomedov and Conor McGregor witnessed
disgraceful scenes as both fighters got involved in fights with each
other’s coaching teams in the aftermath of the bout.
Unwarranted violence and aggression are becoming commonplace in sport, and yet it seems to be tolerated more and more.
What will happen in these cases?
Likely a short suspension here, a nominal fine there. Certainly less
than the repercussions would be if similar behavior occurred on the
streets away from sporting arenas.
Sport stars are extremely wealthy individuals and the vast majority of
fines issued by sporting governing bodies are a drop in the ocean.
Likewise, weeks-long suspensions seem scant punishment for actions that
would see most other people fired.
Top-level sportspeople are also role-models to millions of people. What
sort of message does it send to young people striving to reach the top
of their chosen sport when they see those already there appearing to be
given a free rein to behave inappropriately with impunity? Sport has
enormous power in society, and means a lot to many people. It should be
setting an example.
As such, it is about time sporting authorities started handing out
punishments that fit the transgressions: Banning individuals for months
and years rather than weeks, or issuing fines to the tune of a whole
season’s wage. Firms must pull out of multimillion-dollar sponsorship
deals instantly.
Nobody balked at the year-long bans for cricketers Steve Smith and David
Warner for ball-tampering earlier this year. It was welcomed.
It may seem an overreaction, but something has to be done to deter the
sort of behavior seen at the Staples Center, Stamford Bridge or in Las
Vegas for the good of professional sport.
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