“Very bad about the Brynäs players – but the comment was correct”

But this is very unfortunate for the players

Autumn efforts on the ice do not boast.

But when the season’s first storm blew, Brynäs demonstrated the strength of work and understanding she is most proud of.

Watch and learn from everyone else, because that’s how you take charge.

It’s too shameful for suspended Brainas players Anna Brinkle and Stina Sandberg.

Much can be said about the teens’ decision to follow their opponents heels and wear their club badge, but the conversation should start from the fact that they deserve to be pardoned.

It must be possible to forget. Of course, they should be allowed to continue playing in the club. Of course, they do not deserve Wael’s angry comments and calls to shamefully leave the municipality before midnight and never look back.

Anyone who thinks otherwise cannot be sixteen years old. It’s an age when you have to throw yourself up against every wall, test every rule by itself, where it’s part of the role description to revolt and complain about each other. There’s a reason we don’t trust people getting old with nuclear weapon codes, pilot licenses, or the right to buy snuff.

Are you pointing your finger in the wrong direction? I worry more about the teen who never did that.

So the reactions are unreasonable. Yesterday the duo was basically unknown, today the types of adults who did ten times worse things in their youth are screaming their disgust behind anonymous nicknames on the internet.

Morally, the People’s Court punished the players too much. However, I think the club is right in their comment.

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The enemy mark cannot be bombed

Because the problem is not that two Örebro girls will be staying at the club last year. This happens everywhere. Insert the serum of truth into any elite player and you’ll hear the sympathies most pervasive, the strikers secretly cheering for the local opponent, the goalkeepers whose hearts beat for the opponent. You can still play hockey.

But there is a difference between feeling something and expressing your feelings. To sit on the sofa of the TV and do it on foot.

It doesn’t matter that, as an SDHL teen, you probably haven’t even paid. You still can’t go to your team’s home game and cheer on the opponents. It is not acceptable to encourage the goals of the guests. And when the camera zooms in on the wrong heels, you can’t press down on the chest of the enemy’s badge shirt.

The behavior of the players was disrespectful towards Brenas. He violated the simple rules of conduct that underlie all elite sports: we respect the opponent, but we do everything for our team to win. As a brown nose, you win and lose together, just like Frölundaites and Leksings. swollen? I think it’s beautiful.

not collectively ruled

When Brynäs announced his suspension this morning, I threw myself at his website with boiling blood. With the club’s horrific neglect of a player accused of rape last year on my mind, I feared the worst.

But look there!

In an urgent and sensitive matter, the club is doing everything right.

They speak first to everyone involved, both young people and their parents. They do not rule collectively, but distribute stops of different lengths. They take into account their young age and emphasize that “as an organisation, we want to be a place where people are given room to grow, and where they are accepted to make mistakes and learn.”

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Two weeks without a game for one and four for the other, but they’re still welcome to train. And after you give feedback, you are warmly welcome to wear black, yellow and red again.

Four successful examples

I hesitated to write this script, because I think people are hungry for a saw. It fits the logic of the media with a few lines oozing from a columnist who, of course, would have untied the knot more elegantly.

And yes, it’s part of the sports press’ job to sniff out irregularities and stomp on the piano, and complain about poor corner and boardroom decisions, but sometimes the opposite has to happen too.

Brynäs is a good example, another Elfsborg. This summer, the Boras quickly removed the young captain who arranged to meet in a hotel with what he thought was a young boy. They immediately provided support and conversation to all of their young members.

Modu was equally firm and fair when one of the young recruits was accused of sexual assault. They suspended him from training and matches while awaiting the verdict and when convicted they announced that the contract would be terminated if the verdict became final.

A third example is from the bizarre entanglement reported by Sportbladet last week, in which two associations and the Stockholm Football Association teamed up to put a man in charge of trying to bribe young referees. Unreligiously, they helped remove a leader with pedophilia from the sport.

We sports journalists are really bad at praising clubs for their security work. It can’t be easy, because no open association can protect itself from fools – or from smart people who do foolish things – but everyone can do the right thing when a crisis arises.

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The club must protect its members, both those who are being mistreated and those who make mistakes. In this responsibility, it is often enough to show understanding and tolerance, but sometimes you also need to talk.

Brynäs did both parts exactly.

Brace yourself, because it was so cool to see her.

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