Randy Hollis: Others were more deserving of Ashe Courage Award than Caitlyn Jenner
Mount St. Joseph's Lauren Hill gives a thumbs-up as she holds the game ball during her first NCAA college basketball game, against Hiram University, at Xavier University in Cincinnati. The 19-year-old freshman basketball player died at a hospital in Cincinnati Friday, April 10, 2015, the co-founder of her foundation The Cure Starts Now said.
Tom Uhlman, Associated Press
Each year since 1993, the ESPN cable television network has presented its annual ESPY Awards in a broadcast that has, at different times, brought very poignant and memorable moments to viewers.
It started with Jim Valvano's impassioned speech at the first ESPY Awards broadcast, less than two months before his death at the cruel hands of cancer in 1993, and has since evolved as a great way to honor the outstanding contributions made by male and female athletes in each major sport, as well as the best coach/manager team, game, play, performance, upset, comeback, moment and sports movie of the past year.
Yes, there's a category for just about everybody.
And one of the night's special honors is the Arthur Ashe Courage Award, which is not limited to sports-related people and is presented to an individual whose contribution transcends sports.
Past winners of the Arthur Ashe Award include iconic figures such as Muhammad Ali, Dean Smith, Billie Jean King, Pat Summitt and Nelson Mandela, true heroes like Pat Tillman, who left behind an NFL career to join the U.S. Army and was killed in Afghanistan; Dave Sanders, a teacher and coach whose valiant efforts helped save lives at the Columbine High School shootings before he was fatally shot himself; and four brave men who, as passengers aboard United Airlines Flight 93, courageously tried to reclaim the aircraft from terrorist hijackers on Sept. 11, 2001.
Yes, these award-winners and others on the list have defined human courage in many different yet equally amazing ways.
And the winner of this year's Arthur Ashe Courage Award, to be presented on July 15, will be Caitlyn Jenner?
OK, I've always had tremendous admiration for the former Bruce Jenner, who was declared "the world's greatest athlete" when he won the Olympic decathlon in 1976, long before he had to endure a life spent "Keeping Up with the Kardashians" and a houseful of women who have become a bunch of wealthy, big-time celebrities for absolutely no apparent reason.
And while I admit I've struggled a bit with Jenner's recent announcement that she is now a transgender woman who has taken several steps toward transitioning into being a woman for the remainder of his life, that is certainly his/her right and she is entitled to do so whether old-fashioned, insensitive neanderthals like myself understand it or not.
What I don't understand, however, is why Jenner would be honored with this coveted award at the ESPYs when it seems that others were much more deserving.
What about Lauren Hill, the young woman who fulfilled her dream to play college basketball despite terminal brain cancer that took her life at age 19 earlier this year?
What about victims of the Boston Marathon bombing who lost limbs and loved ones, and whose lives where changed forever by the events of that tragic day?
I believe those people showed the type of courage that the late Arthur Ashe, an African-American who overcame racial prejudice to become a tennis champion, would have truly admired.
Sadly, Ashe's life ended much too soon in 1993 when he contracted HIV from a blood transfusion he received during heart bypass surgery. He died from AIDS-related pneumonia at the age of 49.
Jenner's decision to announce his transgender decision to the world certainly took some courage, too. In making the ESPY announcement, a press release stated she was given the award because "she has shown the courage to embrace a truth that had been hidden for years, and to embark on a journey that may not only give comfort to those facing similar circumstances, but can also help to educate people on the challenges that the transgender community faces."
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"Jenner will be the third consecutive openly LGBT person to receive the Ashe
Award..."
Ding, Ding, Ding! There is your answer. The award is about promoting a social
agenda; not honoring courage in sports.
Randy & The Deseret News:
We shouldn't start saying "She". When writers do this, it feels
like an acceptance of the gender someone claims to be, rather than the gender
their DNA and physical anatomy actually is. I can say that a More..
After all is said. Bruce can do what he wants to his body. He can add breasts,
remove male organs, act like a women, but he is still a man. He was born a man
and will die a man. He can not change his dna. He can never have XX
chromosomes. He More..