Baylor womenâs basketball coach Kim Mulkey publicly told fans Saturday to resort to violence against people who are critical of the way the Big 12 school handled allegations of sexual assault involving student-athletes.

âIf somebody [is] around [you] and they ever say, âI will never send my daughter to Baylor,â you knock them right in the face,â Mulkey said into a microphone following a win over Texas Tech that secured a seventh straight Big 12 title.

Baylor fans cheered her message.

Kim Mulkey sounds off on recent national scrutiny about #Baylor and female student safety on campus after Lady Bears' win. pic.twitter.com/Jy8YUDhtBW — John Elizondo (@JohnElizondo25) February 25, 2017

Mulkey subsequently called Baylor the âbest damn school in Americaâ and insisted âthe problems we have at Baylor are no different than the problems at any other school in America.â Simply put, sheâs wrong on both points because A) Baylor is not the âbest damn school in Americaâ by any way such things are measured, and B) literally no other school in America has problems like Baylorâs problems.

What an embarrassing thing for her to say.

The truth about Baylor is that itâs being sued for running a football program that had players who allegedly committed 52 sexual assaults in a four-year span under former coach Art Briles. And the reason heâs former coach Art Briles is because this scandal cost him his job and also led to the firing or resignation of Baylor president Ken Starr, athletic director Ian McCaw, Title IX coordinator Patty Crawford and multiple others. So unless people with those titles have all been fired or forced to resign at every other school in America in the past year -- spoiler alert: they havenât! -- suggesting Baylorâs problems are just like anybody elseâs is at best a gross minimization of the seriousness of the issue. At worst, itâs a disgusting lie rooted in denial.

Which is the most disappointing thing about Mulkeyâs remarks.

The hope was that the people who were responsible for creating a culture at Baylor where female students were placed in danger and then quieted or ignored were all removed from campus, and that the coaches and administrators who remained learned lessons from their mistakes. But what Mulkey said Saturday, completely unprompted, suggests thatâs not the case at all.

She said sheâs âtired of hearing itâ and that people should âmove on [and] find another story to write.â Thatâs an unbelievable public statement thatâs ignorant to the fact that what the rest of us are tired of is hearing men and women in positions of power at Baylor tell everybody to move on and stop worrying about all of the sexual assaults that allegedly involved Baylor student-athletes.

Because guess what?

Thatâs exactly the kind of dismissive attitude that got Baylor in this position.

I wonder why Kim Mulkey doesnât realize it.