Baylor's Brittney Griner Throws a Punch: Punish the Action, not the Result
It seems like the topic of violence in sports gets brought up three of four times a year. In the last 12 months, two events stood out:
University of Oregon's LeGarrette Blount punching out a Boise State player after a loss. Blount was initially suspended for the entire season, before being reinstated toward the end of the year.
Then, one of the more crazy video montages I had ever seen popped up on YouTube. It happened in a women's soccer game between BYU and New Mexico.
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In a pretty random situation, New Mexico's Elizabeth Lambert took "playing dirty" to a whole new level. Her actions in the game involved elbows, hair-pulling, shoving, and kicking. Media outlets described it as a cat-fight having MMA qualities.
All of this leads up to the latest media circus. Baylor's Brittney Griner decided to take matters into her own hands in response to a rough play from Texas Tech. Griner was entangled with a Tech player under the basket, then roughly thrown to the side. She responded with a right hook that sent shock-waves across women's basketball.
Unlike Lambert from New Mexico, Griner is a star. She has video all around the web of her dunking exploits. At 6'8'', she is a monster down low. She has two triple-doubles, including 24 points, 11 blocks, and 10 rebounds against Iowa State last month. She has a career ahead of her in the NBA.
I wanted to put together a couple thoughts about violence within the context of sports. There aren't a lot of solutions here, I just wanted to bring up some things that have come to mind.
There is a stark difference in the way the media handles fighting from gender to gender.
Why do I bring this up?
A punch is a punch, regardless if you miss.






