Yeofoot wrote:What's so amusing to me about all this...how vilified these players are. Most of them did not commit a crime, or even commit a sin, moral or Christian. Yet, they are "bad people" in these articles because they didn't follow NCAA scripture.
I do hope the OSU hostesses were hotter than the Texas hostesses that I had during my Texas visit...they were solid 6s, some were 4s.
For the sake of discussion. There is a difference between student athletes violating rules, which they agreed to follow and institutions and employees of the institutions violating rules the agreed to follow.
We give the students some slack. We suspend them for three games because the took $4.58 cents too much when they let someone buy them lunch at McDonald's....true story or we suspend them for one half because they..well...not sure what they did....youthful indiscretion or bureaucratic insanity....they are treated differently, as well we should, from those in the other category. The is not a judgment that they are good or bad, moral or immoral, just they violated rules they agreed to follow. And yes...I think some are jerks and have a Machiavellian sense of entitlement.
Institutions and their employees are something else again. They are the keepers of the gate, entrusted with young people to guide, direct and mold them for their future. Schools voluntarily belong to the NCAA and agree to abide by their rules. When they violate those rules they should be punished. They knew better, they represented themselves as knowing better and that they could be guardians of our youth. They proclaimed themselves to be "good" people and were hired on that basis. Making bad decisions does not make them bad, but it does destroy trust that has been given them. They should be dismissed from employment just like any employee that violates a company rule should be dismissed if that is the rule. I do not like the NCAA. I think what started out to be a good idea has run amok. I blame the boards of trustees that allow college presidents to abdicated their responsibilities to that organization.
We always need to be careful of knee jerk reaction. I believe Coach Paterno took an unwarranted fall in that scandal, as atrocious as it was. It was right the President and others were fired, they knew and did nothing.
One of the concerns I have with the system is the vast amounts of money, and I mean vast, more than anybody can imagine, unless compared to my friend Mr. Billybud who has more money in his saddlebags...al bearer bonds printed in gold leaf..but I digress.....So here is the rub. A football coach, who comes up through the ranks to coach all the sudden is responsible to regulate Nike's money to the college program plus the boosters and the TV rights and it goes on and on. Why do we think they should be qualified to do that anymore than I should be a caddy for Razorback, just because I love golf.
Good people making bad decisions does not make them good or bad, just bad decision makers. The other is left to Him whose right it is to judge.