DDOTT
Senior
What can be done to not only clean Ohio States football program but all of college football?
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I don't necessarily disagree, but I think to put all the blame on a certain culture is underestimating the problem. We treat them like Gods and they act like it. It's natural. I'd like to see more stories like AJ Hawks being told, and people will understand how good these kids really are. A lot of them are being corrupted by their friends, by their stature on campus, and by those who desire to be close to the program.It is the Thug Life mentally, nothing wrong as long as I don't get caught that has increased
These are excellent guidelines. However, there ought to be some sort of mandatory punishment for those that commit even first-time misdeamoners. Maybe a scholarship reduction, or minimum game suspension of 3. Something that will really send a message.1. Remove scholarships from any player that violates NCAA rules. Not necessarily kick them off the team, but if they want to play they have to pay. If they continue to violate rules, then kick them off the team.
2. Impose a admission standard for all schools.
3. Impose a rule where anyone convicted of a violent crime loses their scholarship, anyone conviced of three misdemeanors loses their scholarship, and anyone convicted of a felony loses their scholarship. If they want to pay their own way then let them.
the same thing law enforcement can do to "prevent" crime. not a whole friggin lot. strict consistant punishment and constant vigilance. but nothing will prevent players from doing stupid things. college sports is no more dirty now than it was 10 years ago. if anything they are cleaner. the difference with today and 10 years ago is that there are more players and the media is louder.DDOTT said:What can be done to not only clean Ohio States football program but all of college football?
Please elaborate what this is supposed to mean. I guess you're saying they cannot distinguish between right and wrong. I'd say some kids grow up in neighborhoods that are rough and with parents that don't care enough to set them straight. But they do know right from wrong - they just think they can get away with it, or maybe they feel like they need to do a certain thing.The fundamental problem is a LOT of these kids come from backgrounds where there just isn't ANY morality
Pretty good place to start right here I would think. Maybe paying the players a higher allowance to "afford" minor comforts that might lessen the hunger for bigger and better things. I know this kind of thing has been discussed ad nauseum but they probably do deserve a little more spending money since most of them put forth a great deal of effort in the classroom and on the field. Reward the student athletes that maintain whats expected of them and goes above and beyond such as AJ and Craig Krenzel to name a few. Punish those kids that have violations where it hurts the most, financially. A lot more could be done but I wouldn't be the one to come up with those things.Sdgobucks said:I'm not sure what you mean by cleaning up college football, but I guess you mean eliminated NCAA infractions, and clean up the image of the NCAA being full of a bunch of thugs.
1. Remove scholarships from any player that violates NCAA rules. Not necessarily kick them off the team, but if they want to play they have to pay. If they continue to violate rules, then kick them off the team.
2. Impose a admission standard for all schools.
3. Impose a rule where anyone convicted of a violent crime loses their scholarship, anyone conviced of three misdemeanors loses their scholarship, and anyone convicted of a felony loses their scholarship. If they want to pay their own way then let them.