http://www.thechartottepost.com c tIPfie Cliarlotte $os(t THURSDAY OCTOBER 20, 2006 SPORTS Business 8C Section -i-t Class warfare over pro status • Before the young homies in the suburbs accuse me of hatin’, let me make things abundantly clear: I don’t have a problem with golfer Michelle Wie getting paid South Carolina lottery type money before she had her 16th birthday paity Really I don’t. The way I see it, if you pos sess a talent for which people are willii^ to pay you mil lions of dollars, then you should be able to receive a W- 2 and do i]^ for howev^ long as you wish - almost irrespec tive of age. All that matters to me is that it’s a legal occupa tion. Here’s what bothers me about the \\Te situation, though: Our nation’s ever- passionate, always-critical sports fans C. Jemal Horton essentially shrugged their shoulders recently'as Wie became one of the richest llth-graders in the whole wide world. Why does that annoy me? Well, because many of those same Ameiican sp)orts fans were ready to march in protest a few years ago, when Maurice Clarett wanted to go the NFL as a 20-year-old who hadn’t been in college three years. It was mere coincidence that Wie announced she had become a multi-endorsement- beaiing professional sports star around the same time NBA camps opened with the last collection of players allowed to enter the league before turning 19, thanks to a new and unfair collective bar gaining agi'eement. Still, the contrasts in public reaction make things look bad. People felt leagues such as the NBA were in dire need of an age I’equirement since all those Ul-prepared high school Idds were risking and miss ing so much in the profession al ranks, but a golf prodigy just a few weeks removed fix)m Sponge Bob Square Pants movies is somehow more equipped. Please. And, no. I’m not hinting at racial bias. After all, as a Hawaiian with Korean-bom parents, Wie isn’t white or black This is all about socioeco nomics - and how being poor still usually defers your sports dreams, no matter how industrious and talented you might be. It’s malarkey Kids who grow up partici pating in sports traditionally played by the wealthy and Rease see CLASS/3C Something to build on JCSU shows signs of ojfensive life in loss PHOTO/CALVIN FERGUSON Johnson C. Smith receiver Marquis Belton (North Mecklenburg High) hit his stride last week against Fayetteville State. By Herbert L. White herb.whited thecharlotleposteoni Johnson C. Smith’s Golden Bulls lost anoth er football game, but found some offense. Smith dropped its ei^th game of the sea son and 21st in a row 34-23 to Fayetteville State Saturday, but had its best day moving the ball. The Bulls piled up 352 ya^ds total offense and held the ball loi^r than FSU, a first this season. Smith led 23-20 going into the fourth quarter before Fayetteville rallied to salvage homecoming. ‘T thought the guys played really hard,” JCSU head coach Darjd McNeill said. “This was the best offensive produc tion we have had all season. They are going to continue to play hard for the rest of the sea- Smith scored multiple offen sive touchdowns in a game for the first time this season and topped its previous best for McNeill points in a game. Freshman quarterback Carlton Richardson had his See JCSU/2C CIAA homecoming Lady Bulls young, but excited By Cheris F. Hodges cherishodges^thecharloaeposteom Taylor FILE PHOTO/WADE NASH CIAA rookie of the year Maurice Hooper returns at point guard for Johnson C. Smith, which was picked to fin ish first in the Western Division by league coaches. Charlotte tournament offers convenience, exposure By Herbert L. White herb.white^ thecharlotlepostrom The CIAA preseason basketball luncheon was homecoming for Dave Robbins and James Stinson, while Steve Joyner got to stay home. Last week’s gathering of coaches and - media at the Charlotte Convention Center offered a pre view of the season and the postsea son tournament that Charlotte will host for the first time. Joyner, Johnson C. Smith’s head coach. already likes the convenience. ‘Tt only took me 30 minutes to an hour to get up, get dressed and get to uptown Charlotte where in the past, I wasted maybe a day and a half getting to this particular meet- ii^,” he said. ‘It’s a times aver for me, personally” For Robbins, who won his third Joyner Division II national title with \Trginia Union last season, Charlotte is literally minutes away fix)m his native Gaston Coimty “Personally it’s always good to come home or near home,” he said. “I grew up in Gastonia and we can throw a rock from Gastonia to Charlotte, so it’s not that far away Tve always loved North Carolina, I enjoyed the tournament being in Raleigh and Winston-Salem and Tm Johnson .C. Smith’s women’s bas ketball is young and ready to play The Golden Bulla lost seniors Lauren Goss and Tfeni Eidwards, who provided leada:ship and scor ing last year, but head coach Vanessa Tajior said this year’s team, which has been picked to finish fourth in the CIAA Western Division, will do a lot of work by committee. “We will be led offensively by Tlana Pope and Brittany Sumpter,” she said. “We’re excited to have Brittany back into the lineup.” Sumpter went out late in the sea son with a knee injury and the Bulls only won two games in February and lost in the second round of the CIAA tournament to Elizabeth City State. “Brittany is the kind of person who has stage presence, everybody will feed off her eneigy” Tajdor said. “She makes you play at anoth er level. She brings a certain level of confidence to the floor as she plays.” Ta>dor said when Sumpter joined the team, they won 10 straight games. “She was the separation fixan other teams (when she was on the floor),” she said. ‘"We became depen dent on her energy” This year. Smith is young, with only one senior on the team, Judene Wrigjat, who started all 27 games last year and ranked fourth in the conference in assist/tumover ratio. ‘It’s kind of like a recipe,” Tajdor said. “We have to shake it up and see in terms of developing confi dence, we want them to be confi dent in what they’re doing. Having a new team is like havii^ a new car, you get in there and feel it out, you don’t really know a lot of bad things about it but it looks good See CIAA/2C See LADY2C Panthers front four stiU fantastic By David Dawson VIE CHARIjOTTE post PHOTO/ASSCX:iATED PRESS Carolina defensive end Al Wallace drags down Detroit quar terback Joey Harrington in the Panthers’ 21-20 win Sunday in Detroit Carolina registered six sacks. The Carolina Panthers’ defensive line is still pretty good. The fi*ont four of Julius Peppers, Brentson Bi^kner, Jordan Carstens and Mike Rucker are again a force to be reckoned with. In a season of inconsistency despite a 4-2 record, the fix)nt four has shown improve ment desjate losing AU-Pro defensive tackle Kiis Jenkins. Ranked second in the NFL against the run, the Panthers have allowed an avCTage of 3.1 yards per cany and 77.7 rushing yards per game. NFC South rival Tampa Bay is first in run Please see PANTHERS/2C TRAILBLAZING OFFICIAL Richard Maple became one of the first two African Americans to referee high school football games last weekend in the Charlotte area. Maple led the officiat ing crew at a game at Northside Baptist, while Joe Suggs led a crew at First Assembly in Concord. Both men were assigned by the Metrolina Officials Association, which had never appointed black refer ees, according to WSOC-TV, The Posfs television part ner. PHOTO/CALVIN FERGUSON 01