Air Force Academy's Highest-Paid Employee: Blacks "run very, very well"
If there's anything more inevitable than death, taxes, and indictments during the second term of a presidential administration, it's sports figures making ignorant statements about race.
This confounds us--athletes and coaches toil in an unusually integrated workplace, yet, when it comes to race, they say such stupid things.
At a news conference yesterday, (watch it here) Air Force Academy head football coach Fisher DeBerry (the academy's all-time winningest coach, and highest-paid employee) attributed Saturday's blowout loss vs. TCU to his own team's racial inferiority. Said DeBerry:
It's very obvious to me the other day that the other team had a lot more Afro-American players than we did, and they ran a lot faster than we did. It just seems to be that way, that Afro-American kids can run very, very well. That doesn't mean that Caucasian kids and other descents can't run, but it's very obvious to me they run extremely well.
DeBerry went on to observe that TCU's defense consisted of "eleven Afro-American kids...and they are a very good defensive football team."
His logical leap--African-American players=football superiority--could be easily disproved if DeBerry simply watched his own games.
Back in September, here in Seattle, Air Force scored 20 points against a Husky defense with eight African-American players.
They held Washington's offense, which started black players at quarterback, running back, fullback, and all three receiver positions, to 17 points.
So despite being dramatically out-melanined, Air Force beat the Huskies.
DeBerry came under fire last year for hanging a sign in the team's locker room reading "I am a Christian first and last. … I am a member of Team Jesus Christ." He was reprimanded after that incident, but, now, he will almost surely be fired.
Ignorance--in sports, sadly, it's a renewable resource.
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