Home OP-ED The Day the Spotless Wooden Legacy Disappeared from UCLA

The Day the Spotless Wooden Legacy Disappeared from UCLA

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[img]2871|right|John Wooden||no_popup[/img]Over past years, most of us associate UCLA’s athletic program with not only building national championship teams, but in championing individual character-building.

Without equal, John Wooden set the bar highest went it came to winning basketball championships. His record 10 NCAA titles during a 12-year period remain unchallenged because he set the highest standards in developing the best athletic ability and performance from his players on the court.

Equally demanding, he set the bar at the highest rung in developing the individual character of his players to be role model citizens off the court.
 
Mr. Wooden’s legacy as a leader combined the teaching of ability with character.  His mantra to his players was: “Ability may get you to the top, but it takes character to keep you there.” 

History has recorded that Mr. Wooden’s teams and players maintained the very tallest standards in athletic ability and individual character. This  combination consistently produced champions on and off the court.

After Coach Wooden retired in 1975, it was impossible to match his standards at winning basketball championships.

After a 20-year drought of not winning a national basketball championship, Jim Harrick coached UCLA to an NCAA title during the 1994–1995 season. He stretched the school’s national basketball titles to 11.

Shortly before the start of the 1996–97 season, Coach Harrick was fired for violating an NCAA rule that involved a student-athlete recruiting dinner and then falsifying an expense account for that dinner.

Charles Young, then Chancellor of UCLA, uncompromisingly announced that Mr. Harrick was terminated and would not be paid for the duration of his contract.

During a news conference the Chancellor proclaimed: “I felt I had no alternative,'' “We think what we did was right. It is a very serious infraction.''

Rest assured that Coach Wooden’s legacy of character-building and doing what’s right had serious influence on the Chancellor’s decision. 

During his years as a winning coach and role model at UCLA, Mr. Wooden proffered this personal insight to his overall success:  “I’ve never stopped trying to do what’s right. I’m not doing it to earn favor with God. I’m doing it because it’s the right thing to do.”

That was then. 

Fast-forward to June 25, 2013 when UCLA won its first NCAA baseball title.

Two months later on Aug. 30, U.S. District Judge S. James Otero entered a federal judgment against top executives at the Depr. of Veterans Affairs for engaging in nine real estate deals using federal VA property to benefit non-Veteran entities.  These nine agreements were adjudicated in federal court as “unauthorized by law and therefore void.”

One of those nine illegal real estate deals involves UCLA’s state-of-the-art baseball diamond that was named after Jackie Robinson, America’s iconic role model of baseball greatness and upstanding citizenship.

The VA’s violation of federal law is a breach of public trust as UCLA’s illegal baseball diamond is situated on sacred land that was deeded 126 years ago to the United States government with the explicit restriction that it was to be permanently maintained as a National Home for Disabled Soldiers.

Instead of war-injured Veterans being properly housed and cared for on this property, thousands are forced to live homeless and hungry on skid row.

Los Angeles is our nation’s capital for homeless Veterans.

Instead of honoring the federal judgment and directing the illegal occupants to vacate the premises, the VA appealed it at the added expense of the American taxpayer and prolonged misery of Veterans. 

Worse, UCLA refused to accept responsibility that they were illegally occupying land that rightfully belonged to disabled Veterans.

Instead of honorably vacating the premises, UCLA joined the VA in the Appeal.

Some of America’s top legal scholars have declared the appeal of the federal judgment to be “legally and morally indefensible.”

Instead of suing the VA for engaging the university in an illegal real estate deal, UCLA wants to use its power to finagle a privileged deal that would benefit their athletic program.

Nearly 20 years ago, Mr. Harrack was fired after winning the NCAA basketball championship because he falsified an expense report for a student-athlete recruiting dinner.

Today, after winning the NCAA baseball championship, UCLA is fighting a federal judgment. 

Today, UCLA leads all colleges in the nation with 111 NCAA team championships and 132 total national championships.  Clearly, UCLA is at the top of its game in national athletic conquests.

However, gone is the legacy of Mr. Wooden when combined team athleticism and personal character were established as the standard-bearer.

Mr. Wooden offered this important principle for his players: “Be more concerned with your character than your reputation, because your character is what you really are, while your reputation is merely what others think you are.” 

Today, UCLA has a reputation of being the winningest college in national sports, even if it means losing the only thing that really counts – its character.

God Bless America and the Veterans Revolution!

Mr. Rosebrock may be contacted at rrosebrock1@aol.com