I can appreciate good football, even at the high school level. But I've also been critical of the powers that be at many levels of the sport... okay, mainly at the NFL, and to a degree at the Cartel that allowed the BCS to carry out injustice for so long. But bad decisions can stretch down even to the prep level. And we saw that in action over the weekend.
On Saturday, Fenwick High School, a Catholic high school in Oak Park, played Plainfield North High School in a Class 7A semifinal playoff game. The winner would go to Champaign to play for a Class 7A state title.
Photo by Eric P. Davis (Pioneer Press) |
Photo by Eric P. Davis (Pioneer Press) |
Photo by Eric P. Davis (Pioneer Press) |
According to the National Federation of High Schools' Rule 3-3-4, a game-ending loss of down penalty does not provide an untimed down to the other team. So, just like in Oklahoma, the refs got this wrong. And it impacted the outcome; Fenwick was the rightful winner, but the record books will say Plainfield North was the victor.
If you are a regular reader of Confessions of a Sportscaster, you probably know my view on these things. Officials are human; they make mistakes. Sometimes they make monumental mistakes, but an overwhelming majority of the time, these mistakes don't impact the outcome. But in rare instances, they do impact the outcome. This game was one of them, and it's blatantly obvious that this is one of them.
Now, the IHSA has admitted the officials' mistake. But per IHSA bylaws, all referee decisions are final. Any appeals will not be heard. Normally, this would be the end of the story. The team that got robbed will complain about miscarriages of justice, and their fans will point to this game for years as such, but it becomes a fact of life, and they eventually move on. That is, unless you're Fenwick High School. In that case, you file a lawsuit.
Photo by Eric P. Davis (Pioneer Press) |
Prior courts have been loathe to get involved in a lot of sports disputes. Of course, the NFL spent millions of dollars to defend its witch hunt of Tom Brady in court, and a court ultimately found in their favor, refusing to tread on a sports organization's governing rules, even though, again, it was a witch hunt and Roger Goodell needs to be fired [out of a cannon into the sun]. But I'm getting off topic.
The IHSA's bylaws are the bylaws. It makes perfect legal and common sense to say that all decisions of on-field officials are final and cannot be protested to the IHSA after the fact. Once you review one, you open up Pandora's box, and the IHSA board will spend its entire time hearing protests about a holding call with seven minutes to go in the first quarter or trying to persecute PA announcers who show a little too much emotion on a home team's three pointer or something. It's a bad precedent.
Even though it is clear as day that the on field officials got this one wrong, there's no misapplication of IHSA bylaws here. And even if there was, you can't go back after the fact and start overturning the results of games based on one bad call, even if it was on the last play of the game and awarded the victory to the wrong team. You do that for one game, and suddenly teams will spend more time in the classrooms on legal arguments than they would on the field practicing because every game would end up needing to go to court over some misapplied rule or some other inadvertent whistle. This lawsuit is going to get thrown out tomorrow morning, and it won't take Judge Kennedy long to do so.
Photo from The Herald News (Photographer uncredited) |
At the end of the day though, everyone loses in this situation. I feel for Fenwick's players, who were robbed of a chance to play in a game they'll never forget. I kind of feel for the officials, who will never work another playoff game, if even another game, after this gaffe. I even feel for Plainfield North's players, who will hear about how they don't deserve to be going to Champaign and how a title game appearance and even a title, should they win, would be tainted. I don't feel particularly bad for Plainfield North coach Tim Kane, who wants to dismiss this as "outside forces" and not acknowledge that they got lucky. I also don't feel for the IHSA, who is hiding behind bylaws to protect themselves from justice, even though those same bylaws are in place to hold back the gates of hell from wreaking havoc on sports forever. This whole situation is just a shame. And to think it's all because a group of men didn't watch the Central Michigan-Oklahoma State game, or if they did, missed the memo about rule applications.
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