Jump to content

High School football brawl


JohnDeere

Recommended Posts

On newspaper site.

link

Not exactly Miami/FIU, but still funny.

If you get tossed in Alabama, it is a $300 dollar fine (per player or coach) and you'll be watching the next game from the sidelines. The second time you tossed, I think it is like a $700 fine.

Link to comment
Share on other sites





On newspaper site.

link

Not exactly Miami/FIU, but still funny.

If you get tossed in Alabama, it is a $300 dollar fine (per player or coach) and you'll be watching the next game from the sidelines. The second time you tossed, I think it is like a $700 fine.

Since when? A teammate of mine got tossed in a HS game my senior year but neither the coach nor the player was not fined. Granted, it was for something stupid and not a fight.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On newspaper site.

link

Not exactly Miami/FIU, but still funny.

If you get tossed in Alabama, it is a $300 dollar fine (per player or coach) and you'll be watching the next game from the sidelines. The second time you tossed, I think it is like a $700 fine.

Since when? A teammate of mine got tossed in a HS game my senior year but neither the coach nor the player was not fined. Granted, it was for something stupid and not a fight.

link

New ejection penalties concern some coaches

By Lew Gilliland

The Times-Journal

Published July 27, 2006

Sylvania High School head football coach Brian Mashburn didn’t pass up the chance to crack a joke recently when discussing the new penalties coaches and players will face for being ejected from a ballgame during the upcoming academic year.

“I can’t get thrown out because we don’t have $300 in our football budget,” he said, laughing. “If I get thrown out twice, that would eat up next year’s budget.”

For the Alabama High School Athletic Association, however, the new penalties are no laughing matter.

Under a rewritten conduct rule approved by the AHSAA’s legislative council last week, a coach or player’s first ejection will result in a $300 fine. The second ejection will result in a minimum one-game suspension and a $500 fine. The penalty for getting tossed a third time will be a minimum suspension for the remainder of the school year and a $750 fine.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This year the AHSAA is trying to crack down on cussing, taunting, and anything that is unsportsman like. If you are caught cussing it is an unsportsman like penalty, if you get two unsportsman like penalties in a game, you get tossed. You also get tossed if you are caught throwing a punch.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Man, Shades Valley/Mtn Brook 97 put that to shame. I'm talking bleeding heads and ambulances. I've seen benches clear before that, never stadiums.

I was going to post that was the lamest brawl ever and the refs did a poor job identifying a problem. I will say junior year we got a butts whipped by Sarasota Riverview but we won the full no brawl. Bench clearing, it was homecoming and there were tons of people on the field they got involved. Coach got hit with helmet and went to hospital. Not a proud moment but they started it...

Police escort all the way to the Sunshine Skyway bridge (about 30-50 miles).

Many people were suspended not just players. I will tell you what don't ever get kicked by a person in dress shoes

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On newspaper site.

link

Not exactly Miami/FIU, but still funny.

If you get tossed in Alabama, it is a $300 dollar fine (per player or coach) and you'll be watching the next game from the sidelines. The second time you tossed, I think it is like a $700 fine.

Since when? A teammate of mine got tossed in a HS game my senior year but neither the coach nor the player was not fined. Granted, it was for something stupid and not a fight.

link

New ejection penalties concern some coaches

By Lew Gilliland

The Times-Journal

Published July 27, 2006

Sylvania High School head football coach Brian Mashburn didn’t pass up the chance to crack a joke recently when discussing the new penalties coaches and players will face for being ejected from a ballgame during the upcoming academic year.

“I can’t get thrown out because we don’t have $300 in our football budget,” he said, laughing. “If I get thrown out twice, that would eat up next year’s budget.”

For the Alabama High School Athletic Association, however, the new penalties are no laughing matter.

Under a rewritten conduct rule approved by the AHSAA’s legislative council last week, a coach or player’s first ejection will result in a $300 fine. The second ejection will result in a minimum one-game suspension and a $500 fine. The penalty for getting tossed a third time will be a minimum suspension for the remainder of the school year and a $750 fine.

Ah that's why. 2006 stuff. My last game was in 2003.

So does the player get fined for being ejected? I have a hard time following that one if the player was ejected for an unsportsmanlike. A fine sounds more like a call for law enforcement agents. Or if anything, fine the school, which is what I think the article means.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Tigrinum Major

The schools get fined. However, some schools are making a policy that if they get ejected for something blatant like fighting or an apparent unsportsman like act, the parents are responsible for the fine. Same with coaches. If the coach is clearly at fault, they might have a little less for Christmas.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Members Online

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...