I still have a few questions which have yet to be addressed.
- Did he have a cover and was it proper?
- Was it addressed at weigh in?
Hope the reporter got what he wanted when he tweeted this.
And it's just hair, had to cut mine many times in the military because of rules. I didn't like it, but it was what it was.
I'm not putting the entire
The New York Times article below, just wanted to post something that hasn't been reported yet.
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Civil Rights Investigation Opened After Black Wrestler Had to Cut His Dreadlocks
Ron Roberts, another wrestling referee and a member of the same association chapter, said he had spoken to Mr. Maloney on Friday about what had happened and that Mr. Maloney was ājust upset about the situation,ā which he believed had been taken out of context.
The athletic association, in its statement, said that it was reviewing whether Mr. Johnson violated rules by the National Federation of State High School Associations about wrestlersā hair.
Roy Dragon, who is in charge of interpreting the rules for the state wrestling officials association, declined to comment.
According to the federationās rule book, wrestlersā hair must not fall below the back of an athleteās shirt collar, earlobes or eyebrows.
Wrestlers with long hair are allowed to wear a hair covering that has to be āmade of solid material and nonabrasive.ā
Mr. Roberts, a graduate of Buena High School who has been a wrestling official for more than 20 years, said that he visited the team last week to review the rules.
When he was there, he said he told Mr. Johnson and another student with long hair that they would need proper hair coverings to compete.
āI told them in front of the coach,ā he said. āSo the awareness of the hair was brought up by myself last week.ā
After the meeting, Mr. Johnson competed in the teamās first match of the season without incident. George Maxwell, the Buena wrestling coach, and the schoolās athletic director, David Albertson, did not respond to requests for comment.
Mr. Roberts said that usually, before the competitions begin, there are āpre-meetā discussions between officials, coaches and wrestlers on issues like uniforms, hair, facial hair or fingernails. He did not know whether this had occurred Thursday night with Mr. Johnson.
If those violations have not been addressed by the time the wrestlers have reached the competition mat, Mr. Roberts said, athletes have 90 seconds to correct the problem.
In a situation similar to the one involving Mr. Johnson, wrestlers would have three options, Mr. Roberts said: put on an appropriate hair cover, forfeit or get an approved haircut.
Mr. Roberts said that in his two decades of officiating, hair-related violations were uncommon.