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Child’s football case passed back to court
OFF TEAM
Brayden
Mathis: He was
removed from his
third-grade
football team.
By ZIVA BRANSTETTER World Projects Editor
Published: 10/19/2007 2:26 AM
Last Modified: 10/24/2007 9:19 AM
Related story:
Football future of boy, 9, sparks lawsuit, settlement
The parents of a third-grade
Jenks football player were back in
court Thursday after the league’s
governing body voted to remove
the boy from his team.
The Indian Nations Football
Conference board voted Wednesday
night to remove Brayden
Mathis, 9, from his third-grade
Jenks football team. The board also
voted to remove his father as an assistant
coach of the team, saying
the family violated an agreement that they would move into the
Jenks district.
Brayden and his parents, Tony
and Dana Mathis, live in the Union
district but have a contract to buy a
house in Jenks.
The parents requested a temporary
restraining order Thursday
that would have blocked the
board’s action. That request was
denied by District Judge Gordon
McAllister after the couple rejected
a settlement offer by the conference.
They say they plan to pursue
their son’s case in court next week,
although Brayden will miss Saturday’s
football game. Two regular
season football games remain in
the league before playoffs begin in
late October.
Their son plays quarterback.
Dana Mathis said she believes
that the board’s action occurred because
its commissioner, Tom Lott,
does not like her husband.
‘‘It’s very unfair to punish a child
for what you consider
bad actions
on the part of his dad,’’ she said.
But Lott said the board’s vote
“has nothing to do with the little
boy.”
“These are the rules made by Indian
Nations. Tony Mathis broke the rules in the first place,”
Lott said. “This child has always
had a place to play.”
The ruling and board vote
are the latest developments in
a legal battle between the family
and the Indian Nations
Football Conference.
In July, Tony Mathis sued
the football conference, the
umbrella league that includes
Union, Jenks and about 30 other
districts or leagues. The
conference requires players to
live in the districts for which
they are playing football.
Mathis’ suit sought to force
the conference to allow Brayden
to enter the third-grade
football draft in Jenks or halt
the draft until questions of
Brayden’s residency could be
resolved. The Mathises say
they decided to switch districts
after conflicts with their
son’s coach at Union, where
the boy played for two years.
In a settlement reached July
23, the conference agreed to
allow Brayden to play in the
Jenks youth football league if
his family moved to the district.
The agreement was not
made in open court, and there
is no court record stating a
date by which the family had
to move.
Tony Mathis said a letter
from the conference states
that the family had to make
“reasonable efforts to move.”
He said they have held several
open houses and reduced the
price of their home in the
Union school district three
times, but it remains unsold.
Tony Mathis said he and his
wife have tried to satisfy the
agreement that they move to
the Jenks district. He said he
stands to lose $12,000 on the
sale of his house.
Brayden has attended
school at Jenks Southeast Elementary
School since August.
“We not only were doing everything
we could do, but we
were going above and beyond,”
Tony Mathis said.
Dana Mathis, who was PTA
president in Union, said she is
aware some people may think
the family should give up the
quest. But she said Brayden is
happy in school and wants to
remain in the Jenks district.
“When this happened, we
asked him yesterday if he
wanted to just give up and go
back to Cedar Ridge, and he
said, ‘Absolutely not.’ ”
Before McAllister’s ruling
Thursday, the two sides spent
several hours trying to hammer
out a settlement agreement
that would allow the boy
to finish the season. Tony
Mathis said he rejected the
deal because it called for him
to close on a new house in the
Jenks district by Oct. 29.
The conference also wanted
to ban Mathis from attending
games or practices, an action
it takes against all suspended
coaches.
“We turned down the offer,
and we’re going to take our
day in court,” he said.
Tommy Askew, an attorney
for the conference, said the
board’s ruling removing Brayden
from his team and banning
his father from coaching
stands.
“Right now the ruling of the
board remains in effect,” he
said. “We always have to look
at this from the big picture
side. It’s not about one child
but the thousands of kids who
participate in the conference.”
Tony Mathis said his son
loves playing with his team
and has been emotionally torn
by the experience.
‘‘The real truth is that when
you talk to all the parents,
coaches and everybody involved
with our team, they will
tell you we’ve absolutely been
a godsend to the team. All the
kids and coaches love Brayden.’’
Ziva Branstetter 581-8378
ziva.branstetter@tulsaworld.com
By ZIVA BRANSTETTER World Projects Editor
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