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Foster: Green's top 3 finish disqualified for headband with Bible verse deemed logo

POSTED: November 11, 2015 1:03 p.m.
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West Forsyth senior runner John Green finished third in Class AAAAAA at the GHSA Cross Country Championships this past Saturday but was disqualified for a uniform violation.

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On Saturday, West Forsyth’s John Green was the third runner out of 226 to cross the finish line in the Class AAAAAA state championship race at Carrollton High School. Soon after collapsing from his effort and offering, as well as receiving, high fives from opponents as they walked by the cool-down tent, Green found out he placed 226th out of 226.

The Georgia High School Association’s inconsistent enforcement of a vague, incorrigible rule is to blame for stripping Green from his greatest race in his senior season.

Green was disqualified by GHSA officials for sporting a white, plain head band with “Isaiah 40:30-31” written across the front—the same head band the Forsyth County News has photo evidence of him wearing when he was not disqualified in last year’s state meet.

According to West head coach Clayton Tillery and others involved in the West program, two GHSA officials cleared Green’s headband before the race. Then, a third man who was not in an official uniform or credentialed made a comment about the headband at the starting line and walked away.

When I approached GHSA officials on Saturday to discuss the ruling I was told “it was a uniform violation,” but when I asked to see in a GHSA handbook where the rule is I was shooed away.

The GHSA links its cross country handbook, a seven-page document, to its website. There are two pages that discuss uniform protocol. Page 4, titled State Meet Cold Weather Reminders, permits “beanies, toboggans, ear covers” of a single color, as long as they only have “one logo” visible. There is no mention of headbands.

Page 7, titled GHSA Cross Country Jewelry and Uniform Rules, makes it clear that athletes cannot wear jewelry, and that all undergarments are to be the same color, but there’s again no mention of headbands.

Using deductive reasoning, it seems the GHSA deemed Green’s headband illegal because it was not “unadorned,” which is the language defined on Page 4 regarding logo placement on head wear.

Even though the GHSA was too stubborn to explain the violation to the press, it appears writing is interpreted as a logo by the GHSA. There’s a problem: logos and writing are not the same thing. That’s not explicitly clear.

The bigger issue, however, was enforcement. Dozens of runners had headbands on, and, according to Tillery, there were other runners in the race who wore headbands with Bible verses and the like written across them. There was also no manufacturer logo on Green’s headband because last year, Tillery says, he ripped it off. There’s also the glaring issue of the third official not communicating clearly to Green or the coaches.

Even if, let’s say, there was an explicit rule regarding headbands, Green was still cleared by two of three GHSA officials that met with him before the race. That’s a majority rule. Without explicit rules, or consistent enforcement, it’s absurd that the GHSA refused to budge and robbed Green of a podium finish in his final year with the Wolverines.

When I met with Green after the ruling he admitted to being upset but said he’d never forget the race he ran—that they can’t take that away from him. Many runners, from opposing teams in Forsyth County and across the state, agreed and sympathized with Green. In fact, a lot of them were more furious than he was.

Green’s race was a display of strength, laboring through the thick mud to get to the finish. He showed tons of heart after falling to the ground afterward, lifting an arm up while lying, otherwise, face-first in the slushy grass so he could give high fives to other runners as they walked by. He showed tons of sportsmanship, electing to discuss other runners with me after the best finish of his life.

That is what sports and competition is all about. The stunt the GHSA pulled on Saturday is absolutely not. Green may not show up in record books, but he’ll always be a podium-finish state runner for those who witnessed the race.

EDIT: Green was named to the Atlanta Track Club All-Metro team despite his qualification. 

Michael Foster covers sports for the Forsyth County News. He can be reached at mfoster@forsythnews.com, 770-205-8983 or follow him on Twitter at @michaelsfoster.

 

COMMENTS

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15 comments
Sgriff2861: November 10, 2015 3:00 p.m.

Thank you for this article. One small point of clarification. The 3rd official of the day that had interaction with our team approached John and Coach Tillery at the starting line just prior to the starter taking over to begin the race, not at our team tent as suggested in the article.

Lost in all of this conversation about John's disqualification is the impact his removal from the scoring's had on WFHS boy's team final place. With John at 3rd, West earned a 7th place finish in the 6A classification. Best in school history. Without John's score, we were 14th. Cross country is, afterall, 1st and foremost a team sport. The entire focus on the West Cross Country program is that team > me. I'm sure John would be the first to say that more than being given a 3rd place individual medal, he'd most want his performance reinstated to contribute to the correct 7th place finish being recognized that he, Matt, Nick, Nathan, Jeremy, Joseph and Brock earned together last Saturday in the Carrollton mud.

#FREEJOHNGREEN
#FREETHEFRO

Scott Griffith - WFHS XC assistant coach


kcarnahan: November 10, 2015 3:29 p.m.

Also, today the Atlanta Track Club ignored the DQ and included Green on the All-Metro team.


Tpresten: November 11, 2015 7:29 a.m.

The third official must be an ISIS insurgent. Dictating what people can wear seems like something out of World War 2 in Nazi Germany and last time I checked humans decided that was wrong. Some people must be so miserable that they get enjoyment out of raining on someone else's parade.


slider1: November 11, 2015 8:11 a.m.

Every coach in Georgia takes a rules test at the beginning of the year and it states correct uniform regulations. Every coach knows this is the "Tebow" rule and they inform their players that any religious message is not allowed on headbands, arm bands, eye black, etc..... West Forsyth ignored this rule or they simply felt the rules don't apply to them. The coaches, AD and principal at West Forsyth are to blame for this error. They did not properly inform this student/athlete of what is accepted uniform regulations.


jlhsmiley: November 11, 2015 8:32 a.m.

This is absolutely ridiculous!!!! This young man has worked VERY hard and poured his heart and soul into this sport and is being penalized because he is CHRISTIAN!!! That is ABSURD! We need to take a stand against this and get this DQ reversed. What are we teaching our children?? That it is ok to stand up for anything except being Christian??? I, for one, am infuriated that this happened to this young man!!! And I will do all I can, as a Christian AND as a parent, to help this situation!


Marinerman1: November 11, 2015 11:25 a.m.

At least the Atlanta Track Club has their head on straight. This is the stupidest thing I have ever heard. The GHSA is full of excrement. I will be sending them an email, saying as such.


hollybearking: November 11, 2015 11:58 a.m.

Congratulations on good reporting; you can't always count on media for that these days and it's nice to know it's still out there. Sportsmanship is played down so often these days in lieu of everything being "fair" but, I appreciate the recognition of hard work, perseverance, and heart showed by the team and Green.


deb56742: November 11, 2015 12:19 p.m.

THIS IS SO WRONG!! It is a sad day in this country when a bible verse is considered a logo and a young man is disqualified for his achievement by having a verse of the bible on his headband for a race! When you start putting the bible with sports sponsorship logo's , something is very, very wrong! This young man will obviously prosper due to his beliefs and athletic abilities but this boards decision, hopefully will bring an outcry of support for John Greene!


rhobbs31: November 11, 2015 12:47 p.m.

The GHSA has issued a statement on their twitter page. It claims a much different interaction between the race official and the coach/athlete.


patskani: November 11, 2015 3:50 p.m.

Re.: John Green. I’ve had the pleasure of watching this young man run his entire high school career with his West Forsyth team. He’s always used the white headband and has ran with it in last year’s state race, in region races, in state and out of state races without an issue. GHSA needs to adhere to their own sportsmanship statement and reinstate this young man’s achievement as well as his team’s accomplishment. There were many competitors both male and female in this year’s races competing with headband’s, hair ties, with various logos, bible verses, some not matching their team’s uniform colors etc. why weren’t they DQ’d. GHSA it’s ok to admit you made a mistake, an opportunity exists to right your wrong. Whip out the rulebook now to create a rule in time for next season. Take a look at the officials working those races perhaps it’s time for some retraining/reassessment or even retirement for some.
John, the Green family, Coach T, and the West Forsyth team are high caliber ethical individuals who accomplished great things this year, it’s a shame GHSA has tainted the accomplishments of both John and his team. I know who came in 3rd place on the podium and 7th as a team. Now if I can just get one of those JG headbands maybe I can run as fast as him.


gwags12: November 11, 2015 5:02 p.m.

I'm outraged. John, his coaches, his school, teammates, friends, and his community, need to stand strong and fight this. Slowly but surely, our rights, our liberty, our freedom, is being taken from us. Christianity is under assault all over the globe. Please fight this. It's not about third place. It's about standing up for what is right. I applaud John's effort. I ran X-country successfully many many years ago. Shocked that this would happen to him.


sensei: November 12, 2015 5:49 a.m.

People make choices. That's how we were created-with free will. While it is sad that all the team's hard work was for naught, it once again goes to leadership (coaches) that should have known better.

I wonder if people would be as fired up and upset if he had a verse from the Koran on his headband? Bunch of hypocrites, one and all.


Freon: November 12, 2015 7:08 a.m.

Do you Bible thumpers get the facts before you start crying about Religious persecution?

It had nothing to do with the subject matter on the headband. The author of this article is irresponsible and trying to start controversy to get his 15 minutes

http://www.forsythnews.com/section/112/article/28693/


Leo: November 13, 2015 3:02 p.m.

This article is more along the lines of a rant, something one would expect on the opinion pages or in a letter to the editor. Note that this statement is categorically false, worse "lame" as three-legged horse: "There’s a problem: logos and writing are not the same thing. That’s not explicitly clear." By difinition "logo" is a symbol, not words. Dictionary definition: "A graphic representation or symbol of a company name, trademark, abbreviation, etc., often uniquely designed for ready recognition."


Leo: November 13, 2015 3:08 p.m.

One last observation. The "reporter" of this rant, Michael Foster, is being disingenuous. He writes, "There was also no manufacturer logo on Green’s headband because last year, Tillery says, he ripped it off." Apparently Mr. Foster very well understands the plain meaning of the word "logo" despite his protestations to the contrary.



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