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Perhaps the last time we use our favorite JT photo? |
I may not have written much on this topic in the past couple months, but don't assume I didn't care about this. I cared all along that this guy was a cheater and that he and his joke of a University held that reprehensible press conference where Gordon Gee joked that he hopes Jim Tressel didn't fire him. It was clear how seriously Ohio State took this entire situation. Hey, it's the price of doing business. And that's exactly what sports -- especially football -- are at Ohio State. A business. More than that, though, football is an absolute, win-at-all-costs business. And it breeds really ignorant, clueless fans, coaches, students, etc.
I remember being in traffic court one time for a speeding ticket. One of the cases ahead of me was a guy who was 50-something and was there for his third -- third -- drunk driving conviction. The third conviction carries some teeth in my home state of NJ (i.e., significant jail time) and I remember thinking it was more than deserved, because if this guy had been caught and convicted three times, then he had probably driven drunk 50 or 100 times. Maybe more. Because we all know law enforcement cannot be everywhere at all times, so many times you get lucky.
I bring this up because it is one of the things I think about whenever someone acts like Kelvin Sampson "just made a few phone calls" or, in this case, Jim Tressel was "just trying to protect the students" (as Barry Switzer said yesterday). Whatever. He's been caught red-handed. And it took the NCAA lining OSU up in its scope -- and even more damning allegations from SI -- for them to finally come to terms with the fact that JT simply had to go. I saw someone Monday morning -- I think it was McIntyre at The Big Lead, but he might have just been quoting someone -- tweet that OSU saved face by calling it a resignation.
No, saving face would have been standing up at that first press conference with the overwhelming evidence of his brazen infractions in hand and saying, "This has no place at Ohio State and Jim Tressel has been relieved of his duties immediately." But there was no one to stand up and do that at Ohio State. Because bending the rules is okay there.
I also don't like those OSU sycophants who give you the, "Yeah, he had to go and it was wrong...but with all this fuss I expected he had done something more." As though we're all, you know, making a big deal out of the fact that he "only" covered up something and knowingly played ineligible players in order to win. I guess I need to ask... what did he have to do for OSU fans to agree he fully deserved to be fired? Actually kill someone? What would it take for sites to stop calling him, as I saw one OSU blog do two weeks ago, "the great Jim Tressel"? He is not a great man. He is definitely a very good or perhaps great coach -- hard to debate that. But his integrity is lacking and not in the little way our integrity lacks when we break the speed limit or keep the $20 bill we find on the sidewalk. It's lacking in a way that allows him to actually participate in a cover-up that demonstrates to his players -- guys who have had their asses kissed for years because of their football abilities and probably need moral guidance more than the average person -- that they are indeed above the law and rules don't apply to them. And if that isn't enough, the SI expose that's now being buzzed about includes juicy nuggets such as this:
While Tressel was an assistant under head coach Earle Bruce, one of his duties was to organize and run the Buckeyes’ summer camp. Most of the young players who attended it would never play college football, but a few were top prospects whom Ohio State was recruiting. At the end of camp attendees bought tickets to a raffle with prizes such as a pair of cleats and a jersey. According to a fellow assistant, Tressel rigged the raffle so that the elite prospects won. Says the former colleague, “In the morning he would read the Bible with another coach. Then, in the afternoon, he would go out and cheat kids who had probably saved up money from mowing lawns to buy those raffle tickets. That’s Jim Tressel.”
That's the guy you're hitching your wagon to, people! He's a dirtball. Three of his most prominent players during his tenure at OSU -- Maurice Clarett, Troy Smith and Terrelle Pryor -- have all now been investigated by the NCAA and found guilty of violations, accepting money, etc. And now we learn a couple dozen more players have done NCAA infraction-worthy things. Tressel is dirty, no matter whether his white shirt and necktie make dumb people think he looks like a senator.
OSU players have also been tweeting a bit today about how this is just giving them "motivation" and "nobody will want to play us next year." Ooooooooooooh!! So scared! This motivates you? Seriously? And stop acting like everyone talking about a cheating coach and sketchy players is somehow some kind of slight to you or your team. These are facts at this point. OSU bends the rules -- at the very least. And it pisses a lot of us off. So if it motivates players on OSU, fine, so be it. I bet, though, it won't be nearly as motivating as, say, a free Chevy Tahoe would be, am I right?
I've also actually -- predictably -- seen OSU tweeters come after us and other Purdue writers for simply relaying the news and -- yes -- taking some measure of enjoyment in seeing a cheater come crashing back to Earth. I think I spoke for quite a few of us when I said, "Hope it was worth it, OSU." It's kind of amazing that even in the face of this ridiculous embarrassment, many of their fans are still obnoxious and combative. Much like disconnected IU fans who saw our dislike of IU as our "jealousy" of their non-NCAA, non-NIT, non-CIT tourney team, these OSU bozos accuse us of being "jealous" as well.
Now, I'm not sure when jealousy became the go-to accusation to throw at someone when your program is the joke, but I need to let you all in on the fact that....it doesn't make any sense.
Why would anyone be jealous of OSU? What is there to be jealous of? That they won the Big Ten last year with ineligible players? That they were almost in contention for a national title again but, yet again, found a way to screw it up and give ammo to Big Ten haters?
See, here's how it works. People are jealous of Drew Brees because he's a winner, he has a hot wife, he is a great ambassador for his college and his pro cities, he's won a Super Bowl and he and his son had one of the best photographic moments in recent memory.
On the slightly more shallow end of the pool, people are jealous of Tom Brady and Derek Jeter because they win a lot, sleep with hot women and are rich.
But nobody -- nobody -- is jealous of a University now associated with a gross lack of institutional control -- which, again, that infamous press conference conclusively demonstrated -- or a fan base who acts obnoxious in the face of such cheating. It makes you look like either you don't understand it or you simply don't care and only want to win, at all costs. Either way, it makes you look bad if you are barking that the rest of us are "just jealous." None of us are, I promise.
I even had a guy who, when I pointed out that Purdue (of the "little 8," as he called us) whipped up on OSU the last time they played in our "high school stadium" (as he called it), asked me what the score was last year when the two met in Columbus. Ah, yes, last year... the 49-0 ass whipping that OSU put on Purdue. With at least five ineligible players on the field.
(The SI story now reveals that at least 28 players have been involved in the tats-for-memorabilia, cash and weed racket going back to 2002. Which means Purdue beat OSU teams in '04 and '09 -- and almost beat the 2002 national champion OSU team that lucked out on a fourth down TD to beat the Boilers 10-6 -- that had ineligible players.)
See, our football program may not be very good right now, but it has had its moments over the years and they are moments we can -- and are -- proud of. Sure, a guy like Drew Brees doesn't come along often, but that's what makes him special. Guys like Terrelle Pryor, who gladly have their hand out for free "loaner" cars, tattoos for memorabilia, and other benefits are a dime a dozen. And you can keep them. Our time will come again. And when it does, it'll be even more special because we'll know it was done cleanly and there's no smoking gun to surface in the future.
Like I said, I hope it was worth it, OSU. You've disgraced yourselves and the Big Ten conference.
11 comments:
Agree on all points. This is obviously a cultural problem with the entire OSU athletic department and cannot possibly just be limited to the football program. Can't wait for some bball players names to surface!
Quotes from aOSU fans at the Eleven Warriors blog...
The "Everybody's Doing It" Defense:
"There is nothing there. Everyone knows the players somehow get nice cars, all the schools have that "problem". So the boys hung out, drank, smoked, sold the stuff for tats. Nothing new."
Tressel IS Jesus:
"May God bless Jim Tressel. I have to say, if ever I need anyone on my side, I would choose Jesus Christ and Jim Tressel. Two men that have made tremendous sacrifice for human-kind in our day. We may worship you in different mindsets, but your duty and service for others can never be forgotten. The media likes to kick both of you without any regard, but we will never forget your contributions. Thank you for your service and your commitment to us. We will never forget you."
These responses typify the average aOSU fan.
Considering there is no such thing as an honest politician, the nickname The Senator is pretty fitting.
Great overview of the whole situation. I remember yesterday how Brent Musburger basically called Tressel the Nixon of Ohio State, committing a petty crime but ended up covering it up which was a much bigger issue.
When aO$U comes to town and they start their 2nd grade spelling chant, "O-H-I-O", should we start a "L-I-A-R" chant?
You know, the thing is that he's been doing this his entire career. (Obviously, his "resources" were a little more limited at Youngstown State.) The entire time questions have come up, OSU fans have been eager to point out that it's really nothing, if there were something to those accusations there would be evidence, and besides, we're just jealous. Even when this first came up, they denied that there could possibly be anything wrong at a school where the coach hires the president. (I don't think Gee was joking, even if he thought he was.)
Eat it. Eat all of it. You wanted it. You wanted to believe that you were better than all of us, all 11 other schools, and you missed no opportunity to tell us that. You have stonewalled the NCAA at every opportunity, you're fighting the FOIA requests ... you somehow believe that you can sweep this under the rug. There isn't a rug big enough for this mess.
I hope they fight every single accusation, just to make it last longer (and to piss off the NCAA: cheating's one thing, but they don't tolerate lying), and I hope the NCAA brings the banhammer down where it's most deserved, even though I suspect it won't happen.
With Tressel out, former players might no longer be shy about testifying (like when a Mafia don is taken down) ... and I bet there's enough evidence to vacate every win they got under Cheatervest. (Won't happen, though. The Tattoo Gang, those wins will disappear.) There's definitely a lack of institutional control here, too, just like at USC ... and just like at USC (cheating in both major sports), there won't be a death penalty, which is too bad.
I'd love to see Ohio Stadium empty for a couple of years. Maybe that would get them to change their priorities.
You hit the nail on the head there J. Forget for a moment that this smears Ohio State and the Big 10 (which will inevitably be lumped in with the SEC as serial cheaters-- nice work Sweatervest) with a pretty broad brush; as a college football fan, this is a black eye for the sport.
Regarding the Buckeye trolls lighting up the message boards... well, let me frame it this way: My wife is a proud University of Oregon graduate. When the football team's troubles with the law came to the fore last year, she made it plain and clear that she was ashamed of her school, and dearly wished that the players responsible for besmirching her beloved Ducks would be tossed out on their ass ASAP-- no second chance, no nothing, and even sent a letter to the A.D. asking for this. THAT'S what people who are true to their school act like. These young men are given a free education (financed on the backs of paying students and taxpayers) and chance to earn millions of dollars as pros. All they need to do is go to class and keep their noses clean for a couple of years-- why shouldn't they be held to a higher standard and a zero tolerance policy?
Unfortunately, it's the mouth breathing superfans (most of whom never so much as monitored a non-credit class at OSU) who are the ones braying "jealous" and "everybody is doing it" on the boards right now. Who can forget the "Prison Style Fight" guy? OSU fans (even the rational ones, whom I know are in the silent majority), like it or not, THAT GUY is your poster child right now. Walk proud indeed.
Jealous? Hardly. When my teams (be they college or my favorite pro teams) win the playoffs/big bowls/Elite 8 etc. after years of so-so records, I certainly appreciate it more, and it makes those wins so much sweeter.
In a year of bad news for the NCAA, I hope that they will finally get serious and actually enforce their rulebook and guidelines uniformly-- throw the book at the big programs, and watch everybody else snap into line. I can hope, but I doubt that this will come to pass-- the NCAA seems to be of the belief that what's good for the "Major Schools" is good for the NCAA as a whole, so death-penalty worthy teams like USC get off with a comparative slap on the wrist.
Great post, I like the fact that many Ohio St. fans point out how conservative Tressel was and now that he is gone the "The Big Ten will be sorry and will get crushed by the new coach"
Really...really...that's all you can say? Pathetic
As fans of a large D1 school we should be careful about criticizing the tattoo part of this story. I say this because I think it is more likely than not that every D1 football program has probably had and has athletes doing some variation of this (use their celebrity status/trade some memorabilia for a service or gift.) If you think every Purdue football player follows all of the rules you are delusional. When I was at Purdue I went to a "football party" where the cops were running security detail. This is different than the tattoo thing but I never saw any cops helping out at other house parties I went to. The simple fact is that athletes have always and will always get special benefits. Furthermore every school has bad apples and every school plays dumb until something serious is brought directly to their attention. Well, as it happens something serious was brought to OSUs attention and they chose to do nothing. And this is the problem that we should all have with Ohio State.
It is likely that OSU officials did not know about the tattoo stuff (the car stuff maybe not so likely). The compliance office is not the FBI and is not following players around in their spare time. But the problem I have with this situation is that when Tressel was made aware of the violations he covered it up to salvage his season. He then lied about the cover up to his bosses. Then when the truth went public, the university arrogantly stood behind Tressel as if he did nothing wrong. They also arrogantly assured the NCAA that this was an isolated issue which appears to be a lie. If they instead would have immediately suspended the players (not letting them play in the Sugar Bowl), and fired Tressel, I would have less of a problem with the tattoo scandal. Sometimes being reactive is all that can be done. I truly believe that if the NCAA really wanted to find something at Purdue they would be able to. That being said I think that if something did come up, Purdue and most universities would be very harsh in its punishment of the offenders. This is the big difference between Ohio State and a lot of other programs and is why so many college football fans and the NCAA want to see OSU go down hard.
L2F,
The cops working party detail is fairly common (mainly at bars, but my fraternity used to have them), its overtime work for them and not too costly.
Then again, that still raises the question of who paid for it, because it surely isn't a scholarship athlete who isn't allowed to have a job in-season.
O$U's arguments remind me of TV cops who bitch about The Rat Squad, and now "We need to protect our own."
Bullshit. Any DECENT person wants the scum and dross filtered out of his club/school/business/profession.
Personally, I wouldn't mind Michigan and O$U being kicked out of the Big Ten for their infractions, even if only for a year or two. THAT might get everybody's attention.
If you don't enforce the rules, and punish the schools that break them; you punish the schools that follow the rules.
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