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Tag: Cheerleading

  • Ravens Cheerleader Leaves Hospital After Hard Fall

    A Baltimore Ravens cheerleader was injured during a game Sunday, and was carted off the sideline in a stretcher after being stabilized by team medics. She was then transported to an area hospital.

    The unidentified woman hit the turf hard after a botched aerial stunt, as the Ravens faced the Tennessee Titans. She was treated for head, neck and back injuries, and a spokesman for Baltimore said she was able to walk out of the hospital unassisted.

    Cheerleading is a risky sport – Of the 2.9 million female high school athletes in the U.S., only three percent are cheerleaders, though account for 65% of all sports injuries.

    The Baltimore Ravens Cheerleaders team was founded in 1998, and has a co-ed squad, which is a bit unconventional. The 31 females on the team handle the dancing, and the males handle the stunts.

    Notable former members of the Ravens team include WWE Diva and once George Clooney love interest Stacy Keibler, and Molly Shattuck, who was recently charged with raping a 15-year-old boy.

    Shattuck, 47, who was once the oldest cheerleader in the NFL at age 38, posted an $84,000 bail Wednesday after being arrested on two counts of third-degree rape, four counts of unlawful sexual contact and three counts of providing alcohol to minors. The abuse began when Shattuck posted a compliment on the victim’s Instagram account.

    People Magazine has obtained court documents revealing that Shattuck’s son, or someone posing as him, mailed the victim Shattucks’s phone number on Instagram, and wrote, “You should text my mom, she is obsessed with you.”

    Police say the initial exchanges between Shattuck and the victim were very tame, though the tone changed after the sex incident at a Labor Day beach house party. Shattuck faces up to 25 years in prison.

    Shattuck’s attorney Michelle Lipkowitz commented, “This is a difficult situation for everyone involved. That’s all we have today.”

  • Towson Hazing No Tolerance; Cheerleaders Suspended

    Thursday, officials from Towson University announced a one-year suspension for the Towson Tigers cheerleading squad as punishment for allegedly disobeying Towson’s hazing policies. An anonymous tip sparked an investigation earlier this month. Towson was founded in 1866 and is located eight miles north of Baltimore, Maryland.

    “Hazing in any form will not be tolerated at Towson University,” vice president for student affairs, Deb Moriarty vowed. Moriarty explained that more information was being withheld to protect students’ privacy and rights, “that includes their right to appeal the suspension.” The head cheerleading coach, Edy Pratt, was instructed not to comment.

    The cheerleading team took first place in April at the National Cheerleaders Association’s collegiate championship. That win gave them an automatic place in this year’s competition however, performances at competitions and athletic events, as well as practices, are forbidden with the suspension. The team can appeal through next week. Moriarty says the university will look to its fan development program to carry the spirit at events.

    Suspension of an entire team may be the exception, not the rule, according to Jim Lord, executive director of the American Association of Cheerleading Coaches and Administrators. “I have never heard of a whole team getting suspended.”

    Universities have long struggled with hazing on teams and at sororities and fraternities. In 2011, a Florida A&M drum major, Robert Champion, died due to a hazing incident. The band will make its comeback on Sunday after two years of reorganization following Champion’s death. The University initiated several standards designed to prevent future hazing tragedies including a new code of conduct, anti-hazing research and refreshed reporting and investigating protocols.

    HazingPrevention.Org, a 5-year-old group whose mission is to empower people to prevent college and university hazing, is currently sponsoring the fourth running of #40 Answers 2013 a Twitter-based campaign that precedes National Hazing Prevention Week, September 23-27. The Week is also sponsored by HPO, which was originated when the Association of Fraternity Advisors decided a national symposium on the issue was warranted.

    [Image via Towson University website.]