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NHL Coyotes Sever Ties with Top Draft Pick
#1
The Arizona Coyotes announced Thursday that they have renounced their rights to their 2020 top NHL draft pick Mitchell Miller after a recent report revealed he had bullied a Black classmate with disabilities.
According to the report, published by the Arizona Republic on October 26, Miller had bullied a developmentally disabled Black teen while he was in junior high school in Sylvania, Ohio, in 2016. Miller and another teen were accused of tricking Isaiah Meyers-Crothers into eating candy that had been placed in a urinal and physically assaulting him. Miller and another teen admitted to the bullying in an Ohio juvenile court and were sentenced to community service, according to the Republic. 
The athlete sent a letter to NHL teams detailing the incident and apologizing for his actions, according to Coyotes General Manager Bill Armstrong, who's quoted in the report.
"Prior to selecting Mitchell in the NHL Draft, we were aware that a bullying incident took place in 2016," Coyotes' President & CEO Xavier Gutierrez said. "We have learned more about the entire matter, and more importantly, the impact it has had on Isaiah and the Meyer-Crothers family. What we learned does not align with the core values and vision for our organization and leads to our decision to renounce our draft rights."

Armstrong said he "fully" supports the decision to renounce Miller's draft rights.
"Mitchell is a good hockey player, but we need to do the right thing as an organization and not just as a hockey team," Armstrong said. "I'd like to apologize to Isaiah and the Meyer-Crothers family for everything they have dealt with the past few months. I wish them all the best in the future."
Six days before the Coyotes made the decision to renounce Mitchell, the hockey player, who attends the University of North Dakota, issued a statement through the team, which was sent to the Republic.
It read: "I am extremely sorry about the bullying incident that occurred in 2016 while I was in eighth grade. I was young, immature and feel terrible about my actions."
He continued, "At the time, I did not understand the gravity of my actions and how they can affect other people. I have issued an apology to the family for my behavior, completed cultural diversity and sensitivity training and volunteered within my community with organizations such as Little Miracles. Over the past four years, I have had a lot of time to reflect and grow and I am very grateful to the Arizona Coyotes for taking a chance on me. I promise not to let them down. Moving forward, I want to be a leader for this cause and help end bullying and racism."
Isaiah Meyer-Crothers' mother told the Republic that Miller has never apologized directly to her son, outside of a letter mandated by the juvenile court.

The University of North Dakota released a statement after the Arizona Republic story was released. 
"We are aware of the unfortunate incident that occurred with Mitchell in eighth grade," the school said. "We made a decision that our program could provide him the necessary infrastructure and culture to hone not only his hockey abilities but most importantly assist him in his continuing growth as a human being which will last the remainder of his life."
https://www.cnn.com/2020/10/29/us/coyote...index.html

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#2
I was bullied in class as a kid so please don't read this as pro-bullying.  I would imagine quite a few have been bullied in their lives to some extend. 

At what point/age should you cross the line where actions committed during your youth should follow you?  Obviously there is things like murder or rape that should carry higher consequences.  I'm not sure where that bullying line should be though?  Middle school girls are nasty to each other.  Are they old enough for it to follow them their whole life?
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#3
Tough lesson, he had a ticket and blew it, absolutely no sympathy for the prick.  It's going to be a difficult road back to what he could've had.  Let's see if he has the character to overcome this handicap.  If he does and is a better member of society, good for him, all for redemption, but it's not an entitlement of birth or talent.   
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#4
This was 8th grade...It was a terrible thing to do and you gotta hope he learned from it and is a better human being going forward. 

I think this was too harsh.


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#5
Yeah, pretty harsh penalty for stupid actions as a middle school kid.  Middle school is a pretty stupid time for kids, boys especially. 

Apologies are easy tho, so not sure how sincere with the mothers claim he never apologized to her son.  Yet which one of us could stand a light being shown on our pre-teen and teenage years.
He admitted it, and supposedly did service and has disavowed his actions.  I think owning it and knowing you have to grow up is acceptable when we are talking middle school behavior.  My brother is disabled and was treated like shit.  I have never sought out the people that teased him as kids.  Bullying is just a fact of life, it happens and we hopefully grow up at some point.  Some don't.  I was bullied as well.  I don't dwell on it 30-40 years later.
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#6
I knew this would happen as soon as I read the story the other day. Bullying is horrible, but how long should you pay for a mistake? Especially one done when you are 13 or 14 years old? We can't make any kind of mistake in our lives now because of social media? We can't grow and be better because you don't get another chance? Does anyone expect a Mom of a bullied kid to ever forgive? Of course not. I don't know: maybe this kid is still a prick, but now he's a pariah. I think its too harsh. Cancel Culture rules again.
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#7
Quote: @StickyBun said:
I knew this would happen as soon as I read the story the other day. Bullying is horrible, but how long should you pay for a mistake? Especially one done when you are 13 or 14 years old? We can't make any kind of mistake in our lives now because of social media? We can't grow and be better because you don't get another chance? Does anyone expect a Mom of a bullied kid to ever forgive? Of course not. I don't know: maybe this kid is still a prick, but now he's a pariah. I think its too harsh. Cancel Culture rules again.
this whole society we live in now is fucked,  I heard yesterday that the Girls Scouts sent out a tweet congratulating Coney Barrett (along with a picture of all 5 female SCJ) on becoming the 5th woman in the courts 200+ year history,  they were ripped by those opposed to her appointment so they crumbled to that pressure and removed the tweet,  sure enough they were then crucified by those that supported her appointment.   There is no win any more unless you just sit silently and let the world rage on around you... and that is a damn sad way to live in a "free" country.   Imagine the horrors when the next generation gets to be in their 30s and 40s and are exposed to the scrutiny of the political machine,  most now have only had social media tracking their every action, thought, and moment for a quarter of their lives,   hows it going to be in 20 years when everything in a persons life has been posted to some sort of data base to be used to come back and haunt them for ever.
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#8
They are a private owned company, and this is an investment for them, and a personality flag .  I just can't see him as a victim, this did go to court, let him tell his story and he may give another kid pause before they act.  It's gonna be a rougher road to redemption, let see what he does on his own without some program mandating actions on his part.
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#9
Quote: @BigAl99 said:
They are a private owned company, and this is an investment for them, and a personality flag.  I just can't see him as a victim, let him tell his story and he may give another kid pause before they act.
A cautionary tale at 13 years old? Hang his hide on the wall? Nope. The better thing is if the Coyotes did their due diligence on him (like they said they did) then they should stand behind him as how a person can change and be better. Unless he's still a dumbshit and then they shouldn't have drafted him at all. Again, they claim they researched him. Not every kid can take pause for anything at 13 years old, some don't have a solid foundation enough or the wherewithall, but does that mean they are beyond redemption or empathy? Are you giving up on your son at 13? 

But fuck it, nobody cares anyway. Its easier to throw the rocks and dog pile. I have sympathy for the bullied. And I'm not saying this kid that was drafted has remorse, he might not. But nobody will ever know. 
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#10
Quote: @StickyBun said:
@BigAl99 said:
They are a private owned company, and this is an investment for them, and a personality flag.  I just can't see him as a victim, let him tell his story and he may give another kid pause before they act.
A cautionary tale at 13 years old? Hang his hide on the wall? Nope. The better thing is if the Coyotes did their due diligence on him (like they said they did) then they should stand behind him as how a person can change and be better. Unless he's still a dumbshit and then they shouldn't have drafted him at all. Again, they claim they researched him. Not every kid can take pause for anything at 13 years old, some don't have a solid foundation enough or the wherewithall, but does that mean they are beyond redemption or empathy? Are you giving up on your son at 13? 

But fuck it, nobody cares anyway. Its easier to throw the rocks and dog pile. I have sympathy for the bullied. And I'm not saying this kid that was drafted has remorse, he might not. But nobody will ever know. 

It's tough love, I edited and added to the above quoted comment.  I've been on both sides of bullying and don't remember any apologies but sure wish I would have made better amends for my transgressions.
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