Virginia Tech Student Punished for Booing at a Soccer Game

The “Shirtless Boys” at a Virginia Tech women’s soccer game. Sean Lohr wears the green bandana. Photo credit: The Roanoke Star.

Republished by arrangement with The Roanoke Star.

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) says that Virginia Tech is out of bounds. On penalty of suspension and a ban on attending athletic events, the university punished student Sean Lohr after an athletic administrator took offense to his booing during a soccer game.

The Foundation is now calling on Virginia Tech to stop violating its legal obligations and clear Lohr’s disciplinary record.

“The Virginia Tech administration was completely out of line,” said Lohr. “It is out of line for everyone’s voices to be suppressed because one person was offended by something.”

Lohr is a member of the “Shirtless Boys,” a student group that cheers on Virginia Tech’s women’s soccer team. The group has been praised by the women’s soccer team coach for its “tremendous influence” on the club by “increasing the atmosphere and the passion within the fan base.”

Reyna Gilbert-Lowry

During and after several games throughout the fall semester, Senior Associate Athletics Director Reyna Gilbert-Lowry asked the group to “tone it down” when cheering in the stands — a strange request to fans cheering their home team in a large, outdoor soccer arena.

In response to a foul call at a match on Sept. 26, many fans booed and shouted at the referee. Lohr joined in by yelling “what?!?” several times at the official. In response, Gilbert-Lowry approached the Shirtless Boys and asked them to quiet down. Lohr asked her what she meant, and she then directed campus security to remove the students from the event. Before security arrived, Lohr called her “a glorified PE teacher,” and encouraged the crowd to steer its derision toward her. The crowd jeered Gilbert-Lowry as security removed the boys from the match.

The next day, one of the other Shirtless Boys emailed Gilbert-Lowry seeking clarification for why she removed them from the game. Gilbert-Lowry replied: “There is no place for Sean Lohr’s behavior and level of disrespect he showed to me last night, and previously.” Lohr then contacted Gilbert-Lowry to set up a time to discuss what happened. Gilbert-Lowry responded by banning Lohr from all women’s soccer home games for the remainder of the year, citing “last Sunday’s actions and your continued level of disrespect to me.”

Gilbert-Lowry then filed a disciplinary complaint against Lohr, prompting Virginia Tech to summon Lohr to an Oct. 22 hearing where he was found responsible for “Disorderly or Disruptive Conduct.” The university directed him to have no contact with Gilbert-Lowry and required him to write a “Letter of Acknowledgement and Community Impact.” If Lohr flouts any of these directives, or violates any other university policies, he will be suspended and banned from attending university athletic events through Lohr’s impending graduation later this month. The university says the “decision is final” and there is “no opportunity for appeal” because Lohr has not suffered a “loss of privilege.”

“Virginia Tech punished Lohr for supporting his home team because one single administrator was offended,” says FIRE Senior Program Officer Zach Greenberg. “If booing a referee is disorderly conduct, there would be no fans left to cheer on Virginia Tech’s student-athletes.”

As a public school, Virginia Tech is required to uphold students’ First Amendment rights. Virginia Tech’s deferred suspension of Lohr contradicts this obligation, as cheering for a sports team is protected expression. While a university can address disorderly conduct, expression can only be punished as “disorderly” when there is a showing of material and substantial disruption. This determination requires more than merely offending an administrator or a referee.

“It’s not only unsportsmanlike to trample students’ rights, it’s illegal,” said Greenberg. “FIRE urges Virginia Tech to clear Lohr’s record and commit to upholding students’ First Amendment rights.”


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19 responses to “Virginia Tech Student Punished for Booing at a Soccer Game”

  1. vicnicholls Avatar
    vicnicholls

    Lawsuit.

    1. Donald Smith Avatar
      Donald Smith

      Agreed. Or, even better, the House of Delegates can investigate. Can the General Assembly subpoena Ms. Gilbert-Lowry, or the university president?

      Although, to put it in perspective, the actual punishment doesn’t seem that grave. He can’t attend women’s soccer games until he graduates…sometime this month.

      1. vicnicholls Avatar
        vicnicholls

        The whole point is to show the school, faculty and staff that simply disagreeing with someone is not something you can retaliate against, stop or in any way do anything about it. It was not profanity or out of hand. Never ever go down this road.

  2. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Just soes I understand… VT’s Disciplinary Board and VMI’s are not entitled to the same level of respect at BR? Maybe he should’ve said, “Eff UVa!”

    1. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      Along the same line, we read here constantly that the biggest threat to education is hooligan behavior and a failure to discipline. Here a school leader seeks to curb hooligan behavior (no mention of alcohol, but wanna bet it plays a role, so drunk in public maybe?) and suddenly we are supposed to be up in arms. Nah. Throw the drunken rowdies out on their asses.

      1. Nancy Naive Avatar
        Nancy Naive

        I’m willing to bet $ to dime there’s a whole lot more to it. When BR, et al, screams 1st Amendment there’s almost always a layer of ignored crazidom.

      2. vicnicholls Avatar
        vicnicholls

        Do you think they were toasted and yet it wasn’t mentioned? I would have thought so. Even if they were 3 sheets to the wind, so were probably the rest of the guys, so all should have been tossed, not just him. Police put up with verbally more abuse than this teacher did. One student out of how many for a game?

      3. There may be more to the story than the Roanoke Star told. I’m open to that possibility. But please explain what evidence you have of “hooligan” behavior.

        1. Soccer refs have thick skins and are used to the abuse unless they hear profanity. The student was clearly disrespectful to the school official. Perhaps he should have viewed the encounter as practice for the potential time when he is pulled over by law enforcement. Be respectful and cooperative or be charged with “resisting”.

        2. Stephen Haner Avatar
          Stephen Haner

          Shouting abuse from the sidelines, harassing the refs, ignoring or back-talking a school administrator and then encouraging the crowd to boo her? We weren’t there, but he/they did something obnoxious enough to be asked to leave. The term “soccer hooligan” is not unknown. It seems to apply here.

          1. DJRippert Avatar

            Ridiculous. So-caller soccer hooligans do a lot more than boo officials. They start big time brawls in the stands and in the pubs after the game. There was no violence by these kids. Nor even an accusation of profanity.

            Sounds to me like Gilbert-Lowrey is part snowflake, part Karen. Can you imagine the men’s football coach asking fans to leave the stadium for booing the refs? But maybe soccer (aka Commie Kickball) is a more genteel sport in the US, like professional golf.

            Too bad that Virginia Tech is slipping into the same woke slime puddle as UVa and W&M.

          2. Stephen Haner Avatar
            Stephen Haner

            If it had been the men’s football coach, might not the students have shut the F up the first time they were directed to? Or accepted their punishment for ignoring the direction? Think a bit before responding, because there is a subtext I see….

          3. DJRippert Avatar

            Neither the men’s football coach nor the woman’s basketball coach would have attempted to stop fans from booing a ref. Why? Because they have no authority over the fans or their behavior. That’s what stadium / arena security is for. And no right-minded coach above the Pee Wee level thinks they can kick fans out of a game for booing.

            This coach sounds like an entitled little Karen who didn’t care for the bare chested men attending her games.

            Much the same as the Karen in Central Park who called the police when a Black man told her she couldn’t walk her dog without a leash.

          4. In soccer and perhaps other sports the home team coach is held responsible for the behavior of their fans. The coach would be warned and then given a yellow card if the behavior continued. Most likely the administrator on duty would have security escort the fans out at that point. This VT student should have learned this lesson in high school where such behavior at a home athletic event would most likely have earned him a suspension from school.

  3. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Let me know if they ever assemble the “Shirtless Girls” cheer squad; I might find soccer interesting.

  4. John Harvie Avatar
    John Harvie

    Back in my day in the ’50s, … uh never mind.

  5. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    In my experience, the vast majority of these “this is outrageous!” stories — left or right — collapse under the full facts. This happened in September yet we read of it now? The story says there was a previous pattern of disputes between those gents and this particular lady, so this incident wasn’t out of the blue. And a final fact not in evidence: Is there a student conduct code?

    1. I’ll agree with you to this extent: In this he-said/she-said story, we’ve only heard the “he said” side. There may be less to the story than meets the eye. On the other hand, Lohr’s complaint may be entirely justified. If so, Virginia Tech looks pretty bad. It’s worth digging deeper on this story.

  6. Ruckweiler Avatar

    Insane. This “woman” obviously is drunk with whatever power she has. Pathetic excuse for anything.

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