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View Full Version : Police: Coach paid kid to hurt disabled teammate



guiseppewv
07-16-2005, 09:00 AM
PITTSBURGH (AP) -- A T-ball coach allegedly paid one of his players $25 to hurt an 8-year-old mentally disabled teammate so he wouldn't have to put the boy in the game, police said Friday.

Mark R. Downs Jr., 27, of Dunbar, is accused of offering one of his players the money to hit the boy in the head with a baseball, police said. Witnesses told police Downs didn't want the boy to play in the game because of his disability.

Police said the boy was hit in the head and in the groin with a baseball just before a game, and didn't play, police said.

"The coach was very competitive," state police Trooper Thomas B. Broadwater said. "He wanted to win."

Downs has an unpublished telephone number and couldn't immediately be reached for comment Friday. It was unclear whether he had an attorney.

He was arrested and arraigned Friday on charges including criminal solicitation to commit aggravated assault and corruption of minors. He was released from jail on an unsecured bond.

The alleged assault happened June 27 in North Union Township, about 40 miles southeast of Pittsburgh, authorities said.

The boy's mother asked state police to investigate her son's injuries because she suspected Downs wanted to keep the boy off the field, despite a league rule that required each player to participate in three innings a game, Broadwater said.

Eric Forsythe, the president of the R.W. Clark Youth Baseball League, said Downs had two daughters on the T-ball team.

League organizers investigated accusations against Downs before the T-ball season ended earlier this month but could not prove that he did anything wrong. If Downs is convicted of any crime, he won't be allowed to be a coach next year, Forsythe said. The league is not affiliated with Little League International.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2005/more/07/15/bc.bbo.youngplayerhurt.ap/index.html?cnn=yes

Unfreakenbelievable!!! :2far: :disa: What the eff?

LegendKiller
07-16-2005, 09:03 AM
Considering how competitve some people are it isn't surprising.

Personally, I think they should have R. Johnson or Schilling throw a couple fastballs at his head, nads, and stomache to see how it feels.

navyones
07-16-2005, 09:29 AM
Considering how competitve some people are it isn't surprising.

Personally, I think they should have R. Johnson or Schilling throw a couple fastballs at his head, nads, and stomache to see how it feels.

Legend, that is an excellent idea!!! You have my nomination to be a judge!

speedracer120
07-16-2005, 09:30 AM
:stupid:

What LegendKiller recommends sounds fitting. Reminds me of the deodorant commercial. I'd pay to see that.

ialsohaveadream
07-16-2005, 11:59 AM
Considering how competitve some people are it isn't surprising.
I've coached kids' sports for a few years now, and some of the stuff you see is so disgusting. There was a Little League coach who was having his 10 year old kid throw nothing but curveballs. We told him to stop, because the kid was going to blow out his arm and never be able to pitch again. Of course, Mr. Competitive Jerk didn't, and during All-Stars the kid threw a pitch, then ran off the mound crying because he'd heard a popping sound in his arm.

What's more disturbing is when coaches get mad at you for doing things to protect the kids, like suggesting they get more water breaks in the 90 degree heat. When I have kids, I'm gonna end up having to coach every sport they do.

LegendKiller
07-16-2005, 12:00 PM
I remember seeing that when I was a kid. Parents just forget about the fun factor and want their kid to be the next schilling or a-rod. They end up taking it personal that they lose.

ialsohaveadream
07-16-2005, 12:02 PM
I remember seeing that when I was a kid. Parents just forget about the fun factor and want their kid to be the next schilling or a-rod. They end up taking it personal that they lose.
Oh yeah, that reminds me. The coach actually thought we were telling him to stop making the kids throw curves because we didn't want his team to win. IT WAS A TEAM OF NINE AND TEN YEAR OLDS. Some jerks treat it like it's life or death.

ShawnLee
07-16-2005, 12:04 PM
I've coached kids' sports for a few years now, and some of the stuff you see is so disgusting. There was a Little League coach who was having his 10 year old kid throw nothing but curveballs. We told him to stop, because the kid was going to blow out his arm and never be able to pitch again. Of course, Mr. Competitive Jerk didn't, and during All-Stars the kid threw a pitch, then ran off the mound crying because he'd heard a popping sound in his arm.

What's more disturbing is when coaches get mad at you for doing things to protect the kids, like suggesting they get more water breaks in the 90 degree heat. When I have kids, I'm gonna end up having to coach every sport they do.That's just sick. See, that's my problem with all of this. This wonderful man gets caught immediately because he's trying to further disable a disabled kid. But how many coaches, or parents, are ruining their kids for life?

Sports are great and give lots of lifelong benefits, at least until the adults get involved.

LegendKiller
07-16-2005, 12:51 PM
Oh yeah, that reminds me. The coach actually thought we were telling him to stop making the kids throw curves because we didn't want his team to win. IT WAS A TEAM OF NINE AND TEN YEAR OLDS. Some jerks treat it like it's life or death.


Reminds me of that kid that was the worlds strongest person by lb. Nevermind his bones are probably permenantly damaged and it'll stunt his growth, the parents got their fame.

All the more reason to support eugenics or some sorty of license program for child birth.

PrObLy
07-16-2005, 12:53 PM
This is just horrible.

I was lucky enough to have great coaches while I played organized sports growing up. We weren't always the best team (usually pretty crappy) but we always had fun.

There were always a few teams that had the crazy coaches though. The ones that would force mandatory trips to the batting cages all the time, would get on kids' cases for making an error, have some crazy amount of complex hand signals, etc (mind you these were ~13 year olds in just a regular public league, not traveling or anything). These coaches always had the best teams, but it was more because they were 'insiders' and somehow picked up the biggest and best kids, save a couple, in the "draft" that they have.

MikeD
07-16-2005, 01:08 PM
I help coach my daughter's softball team. League of 8-9 year olds. You guys are right, I was blown away by the coaches who would yell at these kids...

It's definitely a sad article. I say they let the kids dad have a few hours with him in a locked room. That's what I would want...

molecularfire
07-16-2005, 09:01 PM
Am I the only one that finds it funny that the coach's name was Down's? :heh:

Houdini
07-16-2005, 11:33 PM
Am I the only one that finds it funny that the coach's name was Down's? :heh:

:heh: Noticed the irony as well. You beat me to it.

bricheese
07-17-2005, 12:13 AM
I wonder what kind of trouble to couch got in????

Thats so sad!!