- Apr 14, 2017
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I’ve been seeing some recent cheer anon BS directed toward athletes who screwed up in their personal lives and who now must pay with their cheer careers, if anons are to be believed.
Which begs a larger question: how do you handle offsite athlete screwups that are technically out of your jurisdiction, but that still reflect poorly on you?
We used to have a policy that said unless the incident occurred at an official cheer event and/or the girl was in uniform, then it wasn’t our concern. But we had to overhaul that big time with the advent of social media/girls filming themselves fighting.
Which begs a larger question: how do you handle offsite athlete screwups that are technically out of your jurisdiction, but that still reflect poorly on you?
We used to have a policy that said unless the incident occurred at an official cheer event and/or the girl was in uniform, then it wasn’t our concern. But we had to overhaul that big time with the advent of social media/girls filming themselves fighting.