BUCKYLE;2191794; said:
Iirc, there was even a poster here that went as far as calling for the death penalty if the violations had went much farther than swag for tats.
Can't recall who it was though.
First of all, we're not on probation for "swag for tats." We're on probation because the head coach knew about "swag for tats" and kept it secret to keep his star players eligible for the season and in the process lied about it twice to the ncaa and once to his superiors at the university. This wasn't a tattoo scandal. It was a lying about tattoos scandal.
Well since it keeps you warm at night to continually dredge this up. I didn't call for the death penalty, nor were the circumstances and context that I was referring to only "much farther."
The exact quote was, "If this is true, I wouldn't care if we received the death penalty." It wasn't a call for the death penalty. It wasn't I "hoped" that we would get the death penalty. It wasn't that I thought the death penalty would be the appropriate--although it by ncaa guidelines it would have been applicable given the basketball major violations of 2006.
As for context, it was in direct response to a report that the athletic department was running a systematic program where star athletes were allowed to take gear out of the WHAC and sell them through a fence with whom they were set up by the football program.
I made it very clear that IF those allegations were proven true, I wouldn't care if we received the death penalty. And IF those allegations had been proven true, I stand by my feelings that our football program would have been so utterly crooked thougout that shutting it down for a couple of years might have been a necessary evil to make the university stronger....akin to the painful measure of cutting away a cancerous limb to save the body.
Trust me, in watching the BWI meltdown, the irony has not been lost on me that our own fanbase has a few--but mercifully only a few--dead enders every bit as committed to the resurrection of their football God as does Penn State. In fact, I figure that they're still out there (bobbleheads on the nightstand) waiting for that secret FBI report that says the ghost of J. Edgar Hoover ordered JT to keep quiet about what he knew. I'm sure that they go to sleep with visions of some secret ceremony deep in the bowels of FBI headquarters where Jim Tressel is awarded their highest civilian honor with the words, "Jim, America must never know the sacrifice you made to keep those kids safe."