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PR nightmare for Mizzou as head coach suggests his players can’t own guns, period

The University of Missouri’s reputation as a laughingstock just keeps on growing.

Barry Odom, head coach of the football team, suggested in a Southeastern Conference teleconference that his players were barred from owning handguns, even legally.

The remarks were flagged yesterday by the Auburn beat sports reporter for the Montgomery Advertiser, Matthew Stevens.

https://twitter.com/matthewcstevens/status/771019493908815873

It got quickly picked up by Fox Sports, though the publisher had apparently deleted its story by this afternoon. It’s still showing up in Google search results.

barry-odom-fox-sports-google-screenshot

That may be because Odom’s remarks were almost comically vague and prone to multiple interpretations. Columbia Daily Tribune sports writer Blake Toppmeyer tweeted:

The Advertiser‘s Stevens used Odom’s meandering response to query other SEC coaches on whether they had a handgun policy, and found that the anti-gun rules are broadly shared (Ole Miss is apparently the exception).

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Mizzou Athletics PR was in full panic mode by Thursday morning, pretty much saying what Odom was too incompetent to say clearly – on a call full of reporters – the first time.

So that’s what Odom meant by “not allowing it in the program”!

Stevens’ reporting drew the attention of a pro-gun, pro-concealed carry nonprofit, the Firearms Policy Coalition, which said it’s launching an “investigation” into the Mizzou situation.

MORE: Mizzou softball players blame Title IX for whiny teammates

Here is Mizzou’s policy on guns, by the way:

The possession of and discharge of firearms, weapons and explosives on University property including University farms is prohibited except in regularly approved programs or by University agents or employees in the line of duty.

That policy is the subject of an ongoing lawsuit by a Mizzou law professor. The state’s Democratic attorney general, Chris Koster, backed up the professor’s suit two weeks ago, the Daily Tribune reported then:

In the suit, Andrew Hirth, deputy general counsel for Attorney General Chris Koster, wrote that the campus ban on guns conflicts with state law because it does not allow employees to have a concealed gun secured and locked in a vehicle while it is parked or allow for people to transfer firearms to each other “in a calm and nonthreatening manner.” The ban also violates the Missouri Constitution because, Hirth wrote, it fails to “consider the particularized safety concerns of individual, law-abiding employees with valid concealed-carry permits” and to make case-by-case determinations about whether employees should be allowed to carry concealed firearms on any of the system’s four campuses.

The restriction that prohibits firearms does not meet the “strict scrutiny” requirement of Amendment 5, which voters passed in August 2014 and which strengthened gun rights in Missouri, and therefore violates the state constitution, Hirth wrote. Any restriction on the ownership of guns has to stand up to strict scrutiny and can only be done if the issue is “narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling interest.” Hirth alleges that the ban is not narrowly tailored because it provides no recourse for law-abiding concealed-carry permit holders to request an exemption.

Read Stevens’ tweet stream, Odom’s muddled remarks from the Daily Tribune and the paper’s story on the AG’s lawsuit.

MORE: Mizzou finds $1M for ‘diversity audit’ amid budget crunch

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About the Author
Associate Editor
Greg Piper served as associate editor of The College Fix from 2014 to 2021.