It's so easy to look at teenagers in general today and sigh. They're
more than a bit lazy, a bit spoiled, and more than a bit morally
compromised. Two teenagers made national news. One showed common decency
and sportsmanship, two virtues seemingly uncommon in that generation.
Hope is restored.
Fifteen-year-old wrestler Joel Northrup faced a dilemma when he was
scheduled to wrestle Cassy Herkelman, one of only two girls to make it
to the state tournament. Even though he entered with a 35-4 record, Joel
forfeited rather than violate his religious principles.
Cassy's father, Bill Herkelman, praised the Northrup family: "That's
their belief, and I praise them for sticking to it. This is the biggest
stage in wrestling in the state, I would say, and they stuck to their
beliefs when it probably tested it the most," he said. "It was probably a
tough pill for him to swallow."
That's putting it mildly. High-school wrestling is very popular in Iowa
and other Midwestern states, where the state tournament is televised.
Joel
Northrup then made the rounds of national TV talk shows to address the
decision. "There's no specific scripture or verse in the Bible that
condemns wrestling girls," Joel told the "Fox & Friends" show. "It's
more of a Biblical principle of treating the opposite gender with
respect... I don't think wrestling should be a coed sport because of all
the compromising holds and everything."
Joel didn't say anything about discomfort over wrestling a girl because
it was personally embarrassing, or sexual in any way. It wasn't about
the bad publicity that would result if he gave her a broken forearm or a
concussion. It was about elevating the woman: shoving a woman's face
into the mat is undignified. He told CBS it gets "violent at times...I
just don't feel it's right that a boy should engage a girl like this."
Only in our stupid popular culture is such a position considered
controversial. CBS put this question on screen: "Chivalry or
Chauvinism?" But these aren't really opposites. For many years, the
feminists have waged war on the idea that men would "stoop" to chivalry,
like opening doors for women or giving up a seat on a subway train for
them. Being a "gentleman" was another word for being a patronizer - a
chauvinist.
Sadly, you knew some ink-stained wretch would think Joel's decision was sexist and demeaning and religiously obtuse. Enter ESPN.com columnist Rick Reilly,
who slammed anyone and everyone who respected this moral decision,
including Cassy Herkelman and her father: "Does any wrong-headed
decision suddenly become right when defended with religious conviction?
In this age, don't we know better? If my God told me to poke the elderly
with sharp sticks, would that make it morally acceptable to others?"
In Reilly's moral universe, "Body slams and takedowns and gouges in the
eye and elbows in the ribs are exactly how to respect Cassy Herkelman.
This is what she lives for...She relishes the violence." Cassy's dad
boasts: "She's my son...She's always been my son."
Reilly then bizarrely claimed that it wasn't cruel to gouge her in the
eye, it was cruel to send her into a "national media hurricane" -
identified as about 20 sports reporters and columnists - to be asked
not how she wrestled, but how she advanced without wrestling.
The ESPN columnist ended this sneering diatribe by suggesting this
15-year-old boy "wasted" his dream of a championship, and was just
uncomfortable with girls being on Earth. After Joel was eliminated in an
overtime match, Reilly wrote, "He was reportedly on his way back home
to Marion, Iowa, where his mom was about to deliver her eighth child.
For the kid's sake, I hope it's a boy."
Joel Northrup didn't deserve the wave of national abuse he received
from so-called defenders of women. It was additionally unnecessary when
his female opponent wasn't offended. But it won't be the first or the
last time that sports writers from New York City come to Iowa to lecture
the hayseeds.
No one, of course, seems willing to ask the other question: What was
the Herkelman family doing encouraging their teenaged daughter for years
to wrestle competitively with males - with every implication, physical
and sexual.