Minor Hockey Moments

Showing posts with label OMHA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OMHA. Show all posts

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Georges Laraque weighs in on hockey racism

Former NHL player Georges Laraque has weighed in on racism in hockey in the wake of the stupid one-year suspension given a Peterborough house league coach by the Ontario Minor Hockey Association.
The former Montreal Canadien writes, "It's unacceptable and shameful that the OMHA is choosing to hide behind their rules and regulations to punish Walsh, instead of giving him and his team the respect they deserve for standing up against racism. Every single one of us knows that he did the right thing."
As I said in a blog posting a few days ago, the OMHA has screwed up, totally misreading the tea leaves and misjudging public opinion in dealing with this incident. 
Here's the link to Laraque's Facebook posting.

Greg Walsh gets shafted by OMHA

Steve Simmons is my favourite sports columnist for Sun Media. He's also an experienced volunteer minor hockey coach. Here's what he says about the Ontario Minor Hockey Association and Peterborough house league coach Greg Walsh. Clearly, the suspension is unfair and the public backlash has only just begun to harm the OMHA and the image of minor hockey.
The better solution to this whole situation would have been a media conference apology involving the kids, two coaches and OMHA head.
Suspending Walsh for a year makes the OMHA look like it condones racism and shafts volunteers who are sincere in trying to mold teenagers into fine young men.
Here is what Steve wrote in the online version of his column.


BLINDNESS OF MINOR HOCKEY
For more than 20 seasons, under all kinds of circumstances, I have coached various levels of minor hockey in the province. I have been suspended more than once and argued against my players’ suspensions vociferously and often have been frustrated by rules that benefit the administrators but not the participants. The curious ruling this week by the Ontario Minor Hockey Association was that house league coach Greg Walsh would be suspended for pulling his team from the ice after a racial slur had been uttered by an opposing player. All Walsh asked for — and didn’t get — was an apology. Nothing more. He didn’t want his team to participate in a game being played under so ugly a tenor. The player in question wound up with a three-game suspension. The coach got the season. I would like to say I’m surprised by the ruling, but I’ve been around long enough to know that bull-headed illogic, rather than common sense, prevails too often in minor hockey rulings.