• Follow us on Twitter @buckeyeplanet and @bp_recruiting, like us on Facebook! Enjoy a post or article, recommend it to others! BP is only as strong as its community, and we only promote by word of mouth, so share away!
  • Consider registering! Fewer and higher quality ads, no emails you don't want, access to all the forums, download game torrents, private messages, polls, Sportsbook, etc. Even if you just want to lurk, there are a lot of good reasons to register!

Oregon 8 at Boise St 19 (Final)

JCOSU86;1529740; said:
Yeah, and the guy whose windshield I broke with a golf club after he cut me off in traffic provoked me as well. The officer just didn't see it that way.

Edit: Sorry again, Nuh-Tee, checks in the mail, bro.

Keep the check. Use the money for the medical bills you'd have. :wink:

Blount overreacted, no question about it, but when you run your mouth and put your hands on someone you're taking a risk. Not sure if that's comparable to cutting someone off in traffic but I'll defer to my favorite Bahaman.
 
Upvote 0
One grown man put his hands on another grown man. The game was over. The BSU player shouldn't have touched the Duck, and now he knows this.

The punch was uncalled for, but some dudes just don't play. I'm sure every man on this board knows a guy like that. To act like people stop being men when they have a uniform on is fucking childish. I'm not saying the Oregon player doesn't deserve to be punished. He does. I'm just saying it's sickening how everyone acts surprised when men act like men.
 
Upvote 0
Blount ran his mouth, and the couldn't back it up, and then got pissed when someone called him on it. Tough shit. Now I don't know what they guy said, and if you put your hand on someone, you are running a major risk, as you are if you say anything racially tinged or directed at somone's family. I see little reason to have sympathy for either person, or for that matter to give either team any "props" after that giraffe abortion of a football game. Oregon looked like the 11th best team in the Pac 10 last night, and Boise barely hung on to beat them. At home. If that's what they are hanging their hats on for a BCS bid, then give one to Notre Dame and all 3 teams from the MW first. If BYU loses by 30 Saturday, it should still count more in their favor than that "win" BSU had last night in terms of BCS eligibilty.
 
Upvote 0
Greg-guh comes down hard - no surprise.

CBS.Doyle

LeGarrette Blount of Oregon, I mean. He's a young Pacman Jones. Is that a good thing?

Of course it's not a good thing.

He didn't just lose his cool Thursday night when he sucker-punched a Boise State player after the game. He became completely unhinged. He forgot where he was, who he was, and where he wants to go. And if he plays again this season, shame on Oregon coach Chip Kelly.

...

A season-long suspension is a stiff, stiff penalty to pay for a college football player, especially a senior. But Blount has to go. A player cannot sucker-punch another player after the game, and then make it worse by trying to go all Ron Artest on the crowd. If it weren't for the police who stopped him, Blount would have been in the crowd making (punches) rain.

This might not be a bad guy, but that was a despicable show. And he has to go.
 
Upvote 0
123178.gif


123176.gif
 
Upvote 0
Fiu doesn't consider it a sucker punch, but believes Blount should be kicked off the team.

CFN

There is no excuse for physical violence as a reaction to anything said. Never. Yeah, anyone who has ever competed at something and has had their heart ripped out in a loss knows exactly how raw nerves are in the immediate aftermath, and everyone has had some moment in their lives when they'd like to revert to the most primal of instincts and inflict bodily harm on some jerkweed who verbally pushes the right buttons or extends a finger after getting honked at for talking on a cell phone while going 45 in the left lane. But we don't, for the most part, and we can't.

Every fan gets it, to a point, and fully understands that ten minutes after their team loses in the bottom of the ninth on a home run, or gets beaten on a last-second prayer from half court, or sees the championship dream die in a blink of an eye, that there is something of an irrational, emotional aspect to sports that's part of the reason why winning is so special and losing hurts so much. And to be fair, Hout appeared to be taunting Blount and was looking to rub it in to the point where Boise State head coach, Chris Petersen, had to take his player by the shoulder pads and yelled at him. And then came the punch.

Had Blount missed, this would've been seen as an ugly incident that deserved a suspension of at least a few games. But Blount connected in a dream shot that buckled Hout's knees and appeared to knock him out for a few seconds. Whatever happens to Blount, he might be busted as much for being accurate as he will be for throwing the punch in the first place, and that's an important distinction. Had he missed, he could've argued that he got caught up in the heat of the moment and at the last possible nano-second chose to sail his shot wide. But there's no mistaking the punch and its connection, and there's no sugar coating what needs to happen next.

Blount's career as an Oregon football player needs to be over. If football programs are the ultimate public relations tool for a university, which they unfortunately are, then there can't be any incidents like this of such a high profile nature. All week, talk radio shows across the country and all columnists with a voice won't be talking about the Oregon business school or its philosophy department. They'll be talking about how Blount was able to be on the team in the first place after a tumultuous offseason with a suspension and a death in the family, but every program has players who have off-the-field problems of some sort.

Had Blount punched a guy in a bar, this would've been side item news, he would've been suspended for a "violation of team rules," and then he would be back for the USC game. But Blount can't escape this, and now, because the images are so vivid, he'll be thrown in the same bus as Michael Vick, Pacman Jones, and other sports figures who are seen as lawless thugs and will end up feeling the outrage of a bored sports nation that's desperate to jump all over the villain of the moment. That Blount went ballistic, after being taunted by a fan in the stands, and had to be restrained by assistant coach Scott Frost, who made the best tackle any Oregon Duck had come up with all night, only adds gas to the fire. In college football, in this case, it's one strike and you're out, and no one knows this better than Oregon, who famously has been all about image thanks to super-booster and Nike chairman, Phil Knight.

...

Oregon fans, don't try to make excuses just because he's a superstar player and your season might go in the tank without him. Do your university proud and demand that you don't want him representing you or your school on the football field.

Activists, don't make this a black-and-white issue (unless it comes out that Hout said anything racially motivated, in which case there's a whole other story to deal with). At the moment, this is simply one player talking smack to another, and getting bopped for it, at a time when emotions were high.

And let's not make this a world-against-LeGarrette Blount issue. It wasn't a sucker punch, and wrong as it might have been, he was provoked. He's only 22-years-old, and while he obviously has anger management issues, it's not fair to let one very public incident that'll be replayed a bazillion times on YouTube over the next few months ruin his life.

Blount shouldn't be allowed to play football at Oregon anymore. And for his sins, hopefully, others will learn from the price he'll no doubt end up paying.

Cont'd ...
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0
Someone at cbssportsline posted this in huge gondo-assed font :lol:

"Thanks for your Holier than thou post Gatskier. Give him a break, he lost his cool, realized his mistake and apologized. Maybe give him 2 games, but not worth losing his senior season over punching some future potato farmer.
smiley-cry.gif
"
 
Upvote 0
Regarding Blount

1) I acknowledge a debt of gratitude to Blount (shared with DickRod) for one thing this week: their respective shenanigans have forced ESPIN to relinquish two or three minutes of air time per hour from their relentless coverage of Michael Vick's return. I'm so sick of hearing about Vick that every time one of ESPIN's anchors begins to utter his name I want to dig around in the kitchen drawer for that set of chopsticks from my last Chinese carry-out so I can jam them into my eardrums.

2) Few things in media burn me up more than hearing yet another antisocial punk mouthing yet another hollow, disingenuous apology. Seems like, for many people in this culture, as much value is placed on mumbling "my bad" as it is on making rational, productive choices to being with. One commentator went so far as to suggest a 1-game suspension would suffice, since Blount "apologized". Like that changes anything. If you choose to accept his mea culpa, knock yourself out. You can take it to the bank and stash it in your safe deposit box with your other treasures, right between that moldy wad of Confederate money and those I.O.U.'s from Bernie Madoff.

3) A number of people, in media and online, have alluded to Blount being "provoked" as a mitigating factor in this incident. And, yeah, the BSU player did tag him and say something to Blount first. We all know the variations of this excuse because we learned them on the kindergarten playground: "He started it." "He made me do it."

Accepting this excuse would be fine if there were not at the core of it an enormous, destructive lie. The lie is that anyone else, by word or by deed, can actually control what you feel. When Blount went ballistic last night, he did so because of what he felt. His insanely violent outburst was not a function of any other person's conduct. It was his response to the events around him.

It is true of Blount as it is true of every other person on the planet: the buttons other people can push in you are your buttons. The emotional energy you experience when those buttons are pushed is yours. It's not the other guy. It's never the other guy. It's you. You own it. Someone else's misdeed may have originally caused that trigger in you, but however unjust it seems, it's yours now. It is no one else's responsibility to deal with but yours. You can't wish, pray, or deed ownership of it away to others. If you have not chosen to develop control over your response to your triggers being pushed, that is no one's fault but your own. It doesn't matter that your reaction seems instantaneous. It's your reaction. You own that, too. If you don?t choose to cultivate control over your responses then you dang well better be ready to own the consequences.
 
Upvote 0
Back
Top