Uncle Luke, the man whose booty-shaking madness made the U.S. Supreme
Court stand up for free speech, gets as nasty as he wants to be for Miami New Times. This week, Luke defends a flamboyant former NFL star.
The
mainstream sports media has been dogging NFL Hall of Famer Deion
Sanders ever since he called a white TV reporter named Brett Shipp an
"African-American killer" during a November 14 radio interview. Shipp
has been obsessively covering allegations that the former All-Pro
defensive back illegally recruited kids to play for Prime Prep, his
private charter school in Dallas.
Immediately, Shipp's peers accused Deion of making it about his skin
color. For instance, Yahoo! Sports high school athletics columnist
Cameron Smith wrote, "It might have taken a bit longer than some might
have expected, but Deion Sanders officially lost it. His response was to
play the race card."
No, he hasn't. Sanders is absolutely right.
Before his school even opened its doors, Prime Prep has been receiving
an unfair amount of scrutiny just because of his involvement. The
negative press has destroyed Prime Prep's athletic program before it
even got off the ground.
In August, before the football season
began, a Dallas school district committee disqualified Prime Prep from
all athletics this year. Earlier this month, three basketball players
were declared ineligible because they transferred from Grace Prep, an
Arlington school with one of the top basketball programs in America. The
trio was accused of switching to Prime Prep for "athletic reasons."
Meanwhile,
there are no exposés on the hundreds of private schools in
football-rich states like Texas and Florida that illegally recruit
student athletes. High schools such as St. Thomas Aquinas in Fort
Lauderdale, Belen Jesuit in West Miami-Dade, and Christopher Columbus in
Westchester are always recruiting inner-city kids to field competitive
teams.
Private schools have the luxury of promising parents the
"best education" possible for Little Johnny Football. That's how parents
fall into their trap. A prime example is Michael Irvin, another Hall of
Famer, who was a star at the University of Miami. Irvin was attending
Piper High in Sunrise when St. Thomas recruited him. Despite having 17
brothers and sisters, Irvin was the only one offered an academic
scholarship.
But when a controversial black celebrity athlete
wants to offer children a better education, he can't be trusted. All of
sudden, reporters can't wait to expose him for doing what private
schools fielding nationally competitive athletic programs do every day.
Deion is being lynched before the starting whistle.
Follow Luke on Twitter: @unclelukereal1.
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