Louisiana governor criticized over live tiger show at university football game | Louisiana
Louisiana governor criticized over live tiger show at university football game | Louisiana
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Bu içerikte, Lousiana’nın başkenti Baton Rouge’daki Tiger Stadyumu’na bir kafes içinde bir Bengal kaplanın getirilmesi ve eyaletin Cumhuriyetçi valisi Jeff Landry’nin isteğini yerine getirmesi anlatılmaktadır. LSU’nun kampüsündeki diğer kaplan Mike VII ile karıştırılmaması gereken bu kaplanın adı Omar Bradley’dir. Hayvan hakları aktivistlerinin tepkisine yol açan bu olayda, Landry’nin oyun için Florida’dan bir kaplan getirtmesi eleştirilere neden olmuştur. LSU’nun eski maskotu Mike VI’nın ölümünden sonra, okulun gelecekteki maskotları artık sahaya çıkarılmayacağı açıklanmıştır. LSU’nun mevcut canlı maskotu Mike VII ise oyunlar için sahaya çıkarılmamakla birlikte ziyaretçiler, stadyuma bitişik kampüsteki 15,000 metrekarelik alan içinde kaplanı görebilmektedir. Olayın ardından LSU’nun futbol takımı, 14. sırada yer alırken 11. sıradaki Alabama’yı yenerek ulusal şampiyonluk için şanslarını artırmayı ummaktaydı. Ancak, Alabama LSU’yu 42-13 mağlup ederek galip geldi.
A caged Bengal tiger was wheeled onto the field of Tiger Stadium in Louisiana’s capital of Baton Rouge for the first time in nearly a decade before kickoff of Saturday night’s football game between the state’s flagship university and its Alabama counterpart, fulfilling the wishes of the state’s Republican governor Jeff Landry.
The tiger involved in question – whose forced participation outraged animal rights activists – was not the one which lives on the Louisiana State University (LSU) campus, Mike VII.
Its name is Omar Bradley, ostensibly in honor of the famed US military general from the second world war. The animal is reportedly owned by a man with a history of citations from the US agriculture department over a lack of proper care for his animals, according to the Louisiana newspaper the Advocate.
Following the death of the school’s previous tiger, Mike VI, in 2016, LSU announced that future Mike the Tigers, the school’s mascot, would no longer be brought onto the field – ending a longstanding campus tradition.
According to the school’s website, Mike VI, who died from a rare form of cancer, had attended 33 of 58 home games between 2007 and 2015.
While the university’s current live mascot, Mike VII – an eight-year-old, 345-pound tiger donated to the school from a sanctuary in 2017 – is not brought onto the field for games, visitors can still see the tiger in his 15,000 sq ft (1,394 sq metre) enclosure, which is on the campus adjacent to the stadium.
As a workaround, Landry arranged for a tiger to be imported from Florida for the game – much to the chagrin of animal rights activists, who protested outside the stadium.
Many also questioned Landry spending the efforts of his government on the stunt with his state being ranked as the worst overall – and one of the most dangerous – in the US just months earlier.
When the tiger was towed onto the field with a black curtain draped over the cage, massive display boards played a short video detailing the history of LSU’s live mascot.
Stadium lights darkened and a spotlight was pointed at the cage as the curtain was lifted, revealing the tiger inside as many fans cheered.
Initially, the tiger was lying down, and soon after started pacing in a circle.
Minutes later, the cage was wheeled off the field as pregame festivities went on.
LSU’s football team entered Saturday ranked 14th in the US and hoped to boost its chances of competing for a national championship by defeating 11th-ranked Alabama. But, perhaps to the delight of Omar Bradley’s supporters, Alabama routed LSU 42-13.
The Associated Press contributed reporting
Louisiana governor criticized over live tiger show at university football game | Louisiana
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