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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Commentary: Time to act against ugly behavior

Paul Newberry Associated Press

The incident was shocking, even given all the ugly behavior at college basketball arenas this season: a fan brazenly storming onto the court to confront Hawaii coach Gib Arnold during a game.

“I’ve never seen anything like that,” Arnold, still looking a bit stunned, said afterward.

Maybe so, but it’s clear that ill-tempered fans are getting bolder and bolder when it comes to what they’ll say – and even do, judging by the stunner Thursday night at Santa Barbara, Calif.

The NCAA and its schools need to buckle down on courtside security and work to tone down the nasty behavior in the stands before something really bad happens.

With March Madness approaching, college hoops has already been marred by plenty of maddening moments:

• Oklahoma State’s Marcus Smart received a three-game suspension last month for shoving a Texas Tech fan after tumbling out of bounds behind the basket. While Smart clearly crossed the line, the fan wound up apologizing for calling the star player “a piece of crap” and agreed to not attend any more Red Raiders games this season.

• The same night Smart went off, Oregon guard Jason Calliste got into a verbal confrontation with at least one Arizona State student late in the first half of a game in Tempe, and another student was accused of spitting on two staffers of Ducks coach Dana Altman during halftime. That student had his season tickets revoked, according to the school.

• Last week, dozens of fans charged the court during an altercation that erupted right after the game between New Mexico State and Utah Valley. The melee was sparked by a New Mexico State player hurling the ball off an opponent’s leg in apparent frustration from the Aggies’ heated overtime loss to their conference co-leader.

• Now, more ugliness. While Arnold was arguing with the officials, a young man wearing a Class of ’14 T-shirt and believed to be a student at UC Santa Barbara, charged out of the stands to get in the coach’s face. The fan was shoved away by two of Arnold’s players and quickly retreated to the stands. He was escorted out of the building and arrested.

UC Santa Barbara apologized to Arnold on Friday and said it was reviewing the incident and “solidifying event protocol” in hopes of preventing a repeat.

“You would hope security would be a little bit better, to where a guy can’t get down on the floor like that,” Arnold said in a television interview. “But something unexpected like that – the guy was wasted and in a different world. You can’t control crazy. That’s why they’re crazy.”

The incident at Santa Barbara did seem to reveal a lack of adequate security, which could be more of an issue at smaller schools that don’t have a lot of wiggle room in their budgets.

The NCAA had no comment on the latest incident, calling it a conference matter.

That won’t do any longer.

Everyone needs to sit down after the season – assuming we make it through without anything else happening – and come up with some additional measures to deal with unruly fans. It might be setting up more family sections closer to the court, and pushing students farther away from the action. It might be coming up with some sort of financial tool to supplement the security budgets at smaller schools.

Again, it’s time step up before something really bad happens.