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OT- Baylor Women's Basketball Coach Urges Violence Against Baylor Detractors

Knight Shift

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May 19, 2011
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It's very endearing how the coaches are rallying together to support the cause. Just win baby. Maybe she will be available when Coach Stringer retires?

http://nypost.com/2017/02/25/baylor-coach-urges-violence-against-parents-who-think-baylors-unsafe/

The Baylor women clinched their seventh straight Big 12 regular-season title Saturday with an 86-48 win at home over Texas Tech. The victory also was the 500th of Mulkey’s career.

After the game, though, when Mulkey addressed the Senior Day crowd, the coach had something more important to get off her chest.

“If someone’s around you and they ever say, ‘I will never send my daughter to Baylor,’ you knock them right in the face because these kids are on this campus. I work here. My daughter went to school here, and it’s the damn best school in America.”



Afterwards, the new Baylor President had further words of support.
 
Wonder what she'd say if I told her I wouldn't even send my son to Baylor, let alone one of my daughters.

PS: (shock) E$PN concentrating on the coach's 500th career victory, and not her defense of rape culture/violence. Guaranteed that if this was C. Vivian making these comments when she won her 1,000th victory, it would be all about the rape/violence (and they'd bring up the Rice twins/naked free throws/JH).
 
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I'm trying to find the words to respond.... The woman is, and has always been a psycho. She belongs at Baylor. They are just a perfect combination together.
 
Went on ESPN website. They report her statement but no commentary. Absolutely is true had this been Rutgers then multiple ESPN commentators would come out decrying this. Instead - chirp, chirp. Sounds of crickets chirping.
 
Truly disgusting and shows the type of leadership that allows schools like Baylor put winning above everything else and rationalize their right to do so after they get caught.
 
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Not only is the University an embarrassment to all Universities, it's completely disgusting as a Christian School. Just like Liberty University.
 
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And Baylor is ranked highly in nearly every sport. Especially the revenue generating ones.

So the story continues to go like this ... you can cheat (UNC, Miami, SEC, Louisville, Syracuse, USC, etc) and put winning above all other moral ethics (Baylor, PSU). But only your local media will be the ones to decide if you get any punishment by how hard they decide to push and cover the topics. The NCAA will do nothing and mainstream media is only interested if there's a short 10sec clip they can show over and over again.
 
And Baylor is ranked highly in nearly every sport. Especially the revenue generating ones.

So the story continues to go like this ... you can cheat (UNC, Miami, SEC, Louisville, Syracuse, USC, etc) and put winning above all other moral ethics (Baylor, PSU). But only your local media will be the ones to decide if you get any punishment by how hard they decide to push and cover the topics. The NCAA will do nothing and mainstream media is only interested if there's a short 10sec clip they can show over and over again.

Baylor was an athletics ZERO, even lower than RU, until the "screw it, we'll be a cesspool" mentality kicked in there. It was the ONLY way they were ever going to get better in athletics. Scary how it works.
 
Again the win at all cost culture proves stronger than protecting the community from predators.
Coaches like Mulkey prove that some school's priorities are all about winning and everything else be dammed :chairshot:
 
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Went on ESPN website. They report her statement but no commentary. Absolutely is true had this been Rutgers then multiple ESPN commentators would come out decrying this. Instead - chirp, chirp. Sounds of crickets chirping.

Will you stop with the victimhood? "If this had been Rutgers, blah blah blah." Bullshit. I read about crap that goes on all over the country every single day. Are you asleep?

Had the ESPN radio affiliate on driving to work today, and they spent quite a bit of time on it. And they were not kind to Mulkey.
 
Will you stop with the victimhood? "If this had been Rutgers, blah blah blah." Bullshit. I read about crap that goes on all over the country every single day. Are you asleep?

Had the ESPN radio affiliate on driving to work today, and they spent quite a bit of time on it. And they were not kind to Mulkey.
Well, I'm glad ESPN radio affiliate coming down on this. Sorry, but I kind of think anything bad that occurs at Rutgers gets a lot more press. Maybe because proximity to
New York or because Star Ledger/NJ Com seem to accentuate everything negative. But you disagree.
 
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Guess that means if any sort of sexual assault ever happens to her while on Baylor's campus it won't phase her a bit and afterwards she'll simply..."move on". (But only after punching someone in the face if she hears anybody knocking Baylor over the matter, of course.)
 
Will you stop with the victimhood? "If this had been Rutgers, blah blah blah." Bullshit. I read about crap that goes on all over the country every single day. Are you asleep?

Had the ESPN radio affiliate on driving to work today, and they spent quite a bit of time on it. And they were not kind to Mulkey.
I still have not seen ESPN light Mulkey up on their website, and there is no question about what she said. Julie H. got lit up for allegedly harassing a some volleyball players decades ago. I call that ESPN bias.
 
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I still have not seen ESPN light Mulkey up on their website, and there is no question about what she said. Julie H. got lit up for allegedly harassing a some volleyball players decades ago. I call that ESPN bias.
Google search, third hit:
http://www.espn.com/espnw/voices/ar...ylor-reputation-ahead-sexual-assault-concerns
Kim Mulkey comments put Baylor's reputation ahead of sexual assault concerns
As an example of absurdity, assaulting people concerned about assault works well. As a comment from an authority figure on how to treat those who raise concerns about Baylor, it most certainly doesn't.

And that was the real problem with Mulkey's speech. The alleged victims in this case were overlooked. Unlike other students and faculty who are tired of being the poster child for football worship and institutional protectiveness, they will not be able to simply "move on."

That Mulkey and her daughter have had a great experience at Baylor is wonderful, but it doesn't negate the bad things that were alleged to have happened to other people on campus -- or the criminal acts involving football players.

But here is the biggest problem with what Mulkey said: How can any student feel like they could report an issue to her?
 
I still have not seen ESPN light Mulkey up on their website, and there is no question about what she said. Julie H. got lit up for allegedly harassing a some volleyball players decades ago. I call that ESPN bias.

There was a clip earlier today on their front page from the Sports Reporters ripping her fairly good. Another clip, on the NCAA Women's basketball page wasn't too hard on her.

Now I understand she is "expressing regret" over her statement.

Too late, in my opinion. If she were a man, she would have been fired by now...except maybe at Baylor.
 
Baylor is quite the leader in tolerance and acceptance.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/18/us/griner-baylor-lesbian-college-sports.html

From the day in 1983 when he graduated cum laude from Baylor University, Tim Smith fit the profile of a star alumnus. He went on to earn an M.B.A. at Harvard and to lead an information technology company with 300 employees. The business school at Baylor invited Mr. Smith to speak to classes about “entrepreneurial finance,” and he was named twice to its advisory board.

Then, as the fall semester began in 2005, word reached the business school’s dean that Mr. Smith was gay and living with his partner. Mr. Smith was ousted from the advisory board because his sexual orientation was deemed incompatible with Baylor’s Baptist affiliation and theology.

Plenty of caveats should be attached to this tolerance offensive. Baylor continues to omit sexual orientation from its nondiscrimination policy. The university’s official statement on sexual misconduct lists “homosexual acts” — as well as sexual harassment and adultery, among other behaviors — as “misuses of God’s gifts.”
But Rape?
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Things are just .... different in Texas. So glad my daughter decided against attending college in that state.
 
Ken Starr, Baylor University president and chancellor (yeah -that Ken Starr) - calling shoots at Baylor from 2010 to mid 2016 when he was finally fired - typified the hypocritical Good Ole Boy approach to "behavior oversight" at Baylor - Starr let slide numerous egregious instances of offensive and unacceptable behavior on the part of athletes ...but would eagerly enforce prudish scolding school marm rules of social behavior & personal lifestyle on the general population of the university - even when they presented no potential for averse impact on others.

Kim Mulkey's words were stupid and miles beyond inappropriate - but she is not the root cause of Baylor's disease - No, she & her tone deaf utterances are but a symptom of that greater disease - and that disease has been the utter lack of responsible management and action on the part of the senior management of Baylor - the people with the power and authority to make the rules, administer the rules and to hold people accountable - instead of managing with unwavering integrity - they have arbitrarily / selectively ad-libbed the management on a situational basis and primarily with an eye toward what ever is most convenient at the moment.
 
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