Ever since Sen. Ted Cruz’s embarrassing “basketball ring” gaffe, the 2016 GOP primary race in Indiana has been defined to a certain degree by sports culture. And as the race for the presidential nomination reaches its fourth quarter, front-runner Donald Trump appears to be headed for a slam dunk at the voting booths.
It’s perhaps not surprising that sports would take center stage in the Hoosier state. Basketball, and to a lesser extent football, has come to define much of the state’s national identity, and how a politician navigates that culture can affect whether or not voters perceive you as authentic. So when Cruz got not just the language, but the location, of his basketball reference wrong, it resonated.
Everyone from President Barack Obama to former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin has had fun at Cruz’s expense ever since his attempt to recreate a scene from the classic 1986 basketball drama “Hoosiers” fell flat. And his sports fails this month didn’t end there. He also made a less than artful analogy revolving around NASCAR auto racing. “If and when we win [the primary] it may feature, like the Indy 500, a campaign crashing and burning and catching on fire,” he told supporters last week.
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“Hoosiers can see through Ted Cruz. Hoosiers can smell bulls–t,” former state Democratic Party chair Daniel J. Parker told MSNBC on Tuesday. “In this state, where you have seven or 10 of the biggest high school gymnasiums in the country … you don’t go to a Hoosier gym and do that. That was a turning point … it just showed that he was grasping.”
In Parker’s estimation, the “basketball ring” gaffe was just one of several strategic missteps that most likely put a state that should have been well within his reach in Trump’s column.
According to Parker, Cruz failed to recognize just how many state Republicans — who had warmed to former Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels’ more business-minded approach to governance — are dissatisfied by current Gov. Mike Pence’s more ideological strain, typified by the controversial religious freedom bill he championed last year. Parker said he was also stunned by the lack of opposition research exploiting Trump’s long, checkered history in the state.
While Cruz has attacked Trump for aligning himself with heavyweight boxer Mike Tyson (who was convicted of rape in Indianapolis in 1992), he has not raised that fact that the real estate mogul oversaw a riverboat casino in the state that went bankrupt or mentioned how a beauty pageant held in Gary, Indiana failed to delivered the economic windfall he promised.
“They couldn’t have played this worse,” Parker said.
Meanwhile, despite more than his fair share of sports-related blunders, Trump has cleaned up with some of the most beloved names in local sports. The first, and most prominent, endorsement came from former champion Indiana basketball coach Bobby Knight, who has suffered virtually no backlash for suggesting that like ex-president Harry Truman, the real estate mogul would be unafraid to exercise nuclear power on America’s perceived enemies. Despite a reputation for violent temper tantrums and a history of offensive public statements (”I think that if rape is inevitable, relax and enjoy it,” he once said), Knight remains beloved in Indiana.
Since Knight’s widely publicized performances on the stump, icons like former Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz (a former Clinton supporter), former Notre Dame basketball coach Digger Phelps, former Purdue basketball coach Gene Keady and ex-ballplayers like Fred Williamson, have all lined up behind Trump, cheering on his tough guy rhetoric and attesting to his machismo. Although Trump’s record as a failure as a sports businessman is well-documented, he has enjoyed a lot of vocal support from current and former athletes and coaches, like the Buffalo Bills’ Rex Ryan.
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