Spence wrote:What the coach did was worse than what the players did. The players sold their own property for less than market value. The coach knew and didn't turn them in. I agree that the rule on the original offense is silly, but you change the rule you don't break it.
If the players only sold their own personal stuff I don't even see how this is an infraction. If players sold school owned stuff that should be between the school and the players but still not the NCAA.
The NCAA exploits these kids by using their names to make money and then hits them with infractions if they try to do the same? How much more hypocritical can you get?
First of all, to know that Tressel lied involves having proof that he knew at the time of the paper signing that an infraction had occurred. People sell their stuff all the time. It's obvious these people didn't make any extra money for signing it than they could for not signing it so they didn't benefit from their play time. They just sold some of their stuff. I know I wouldn't have thought much on it besides being disappointed that they would sell stuff they worked hard to accomplish. I would have done what Tressel did and contacted a mentor to talk some sense into them.
IMO this is all a load and Tressel is being forced to eat it.