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BYU basketball player suspended: sports world shocked – and impressed

The BYU basketball player suspended for the season Tuesday broke the BYU honor code by having sex with his girlfriend. Sports writers are shocked but respect the school for sticking to its values – even though the decision could spoil a potentially historic season.

The BYU basketball player suspended Tuesday, Brandon Davies, is shown after a game in January. He has been suspended for the rest of the season for having premarital sex with his girlfriend, a violation of the BYU honor code.

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By Brad Knickerbocker, Staff writer / March 3, 2011

The sports world is reacting with shock to news of the BYU basketball player suspended for the rest of the season.

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On Tuesday, Brigham Young University suspended double-digit scorer and leading rebounder Brandon Davies for violating the BYU honor code – in this case having sex with his girlfriend. Playing the next night without Davies, BYU – which was 27-2 season and had a good chance to be one of the four, regional No. 1 seeds in the NCAA tournament – lost to New Mexico 82-64.

The punishment stands out not only because of its severity – college athletes in top programs are routinely slapped on the wrist for much worse offenses – but also because it essentially torpedoes what was shaping up to be a historic season for BYU, which is hardly a basketball powerhouse.

Because of that, the school has, a bit surprisingly perhaps, won no small amount of respect from the sports world.

BYU is a private university owned by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, commonly known as the Mormon church. Nearly all of its 34,000 students are church members, most of whom will serve two years as missionaries.

The school has what to the rest of the academic world is a strict and perhaps old-fashioned honor code. Among its tenets: Be honest, live a chaste and virtuous life, use clean language, participate regularly in church services, observe dress and grooming standards (no beards or ear rings for men, no “form-fitting” clothing or more than one ear piercing for women), and abstain from alcoholic beverages, tobacco, tea, coffee, and substance abuse.

In order to remain “chaste and virtuous,” one must not engage in premarital sex. Students have to sign the honor code every year.

While most sports commentators say they can’t imagine themselves (or most people, especially athletes) operating under such rules of behavior, BYU’s swift action in the face of an admitted violation has caused many to reexamine general sports behavior by comparison.

ESPN.com senior writer Pat Forde put it this way:

What makes this such a powerful testament is the fact that so many schools have cravenly abandoned their standards at such a time as this, embracing athletic expediency over institutional principle. It happens so often that we don't even raise an eyebrow at it anymore.

Player arrests or other antisocial behaviors are minimized as youthful mistakes, with strenuous institutional effort put into counterspinning any negative publicity. Academic underachievement is dismissed as merely the price of being competitive in big-time athletics. "Indefinite" suspensions often last only as long as they're convenient – timed to coincide with exhibition games or low-stress games against overmatched opponents.

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