Friday, December 23, 2011

The Airing of the Grievances

This has been an especially difficult sports year and, quite frankly, I have a lot of problems with a lot of people and they're going to hear about it:

1. To Gene Smith: For failing at the entire essence of your job, which is to ensure compliance with NCAA rules and understand basic principles associated with the potential penalties. And don't think I didn't notice that your ass sat as the Chairman of the NCAA tournament committee that stuck our basketball team in a region with North Carolina, Syracuse and Kentucky. Go back to South Bend where you belong.

2. To Scott Arniel: For continuing to suck at your job that you are still so lucky to have in a bad economy. There are crack addicted hookers in line for unemployment that could coach the Blue Jackets to a better record.

3. To Mike Holmgren: Look, we know you wanted to hire someone who would be your puppet and wipe your ass when you get off the shitter. We were all just hoping that person would be better than Pat Shurmur. Speaking of...

4. To Pat Shurmur: It's not your fault you suck as a head coach. Some people are born with the ability to lead and make difficult decisions in the heat of the moment. You're just not wired that way. But please just admit it and go back to coordinating.

5. To the Walmart Wolverines of Ohio: We didn't miss you at all from 2001 -2010. And yet one win at home when your defense sucked against the worst Ohio State offense possibly ever brings you back out of hibernation. Meet Urban Meyer and crawl back into your hole. Now. Right now. And when you're gone, stay gone or you'll be gone. Understand?

6. To James Harrison: I agree suspending you was a mistake. The proper punishment would be to take your helmet away and go back to those leather things they used to wear decades ago. You obviously don't know or seem to care about the long-term effects of concussions on the brain. You'll find out and you may also learn to form tackle in the process. Good luck.

7. To Alex McLeish: For accepting a position you are so clearly unqualified to have. For not being able to figure that Emile Heskey is about 76 1/2 years past his prime. For ignoring Super Marc Albrighton for almost half the season. For playing the most pussificated form of European Football I've ever seen.

8. To Chris Antonneti and Mark Shapiro: For trading your top two pitching prospects, former #1 draft picks, for a strictly fastball starting pitcher that had one good year and two years left on his current contract. No, seriously, that deal made no fucking sense unless you are secret agents for the Colorado Rockies. We Indians fans were satisfied with building slowly the right way. Then the 2 of you got desperate to win now to save your jobs. Congratulations! Now please find new ones.


9. To Lebron James: Please stop apologizing to Cleveland. In fact, never mention Cleveland or the Cavaliers again. Just keep their names out of your mouth and be a Miami Heat. Somes sins are just unforgiveable.

10. To ESPN: For destroying anything that resembled journalistic integrity. For your conflicts of interest. For continuing to employ Craig James, Mark May, Lou Holtz, Chris Berman, Colin Cowherd, Chris Broussard, Bob Ryan, Woody Paige, Skip Bayless, Stephen A. Smith, Desmond Howard and every other mouth-breathing blowhard in sports entertainment.


11. To the Columbus Crew: Nothing. Keep on being the hardest working team in America.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

The Calm After the Storm

I am often a perpetrator of sports fan irrationality.


  • After Game 7 of the 1997 World Series, I took my replica Florida Marlins helmet from my collection to the backyard and smashed it with golf club.


  • When the Zombie Browns (Read: Ravens) beat the New York Giants to win the Super Bowl, I threw a drunken conniption fit.


  • When the Cavs traded Mark Price to the Washington Bullets, I cried a little. (Come on, I was just a kid!)

  • I’m not even going to get into my feelings about Lebron James.

    Earlier today I let out some anger and venom towards the NCAA for their ruling on the Ohio State case. I was upset. I thought OSU’s level of cooperating (as detailed in a prior post) would save them from the dreaded bowl ban. I think the ban ultimately ends up punishing players in the future that had nothing to do with the NCAA violations rather than the players who were responsible. I think the scholarship reductions have a trickle-down effect of ultimately denying an educational opportunity to nine future high school kids that otherwise may not be able to afford college.

    I was upset because I was already anticipating the high-quality entertainment from the national media’s Butthurt Symphony if there had been no bowl ban.

    As usual, my anger was misplaced. The Marlins just played better. The Ravens were playing for another scorned city who had lost their football team in heartbreaking fashion. The Cavs were just preparing for the future. And the NCAA was just doing its job by imposing penalties that will encourage schools in the future to strictly monitor and enforce their rules. It takes time to see these things. (and no, I’m still not over Lebron James, so don’t ask!)

    The people that really messed up deserve the venom:

  • Jim Tressel for placing winning over doing the right thing.


  • Gene Smith for his amazing miscalculation in assuming there would be no bowl ban and for believing that the Gator Bowl was somehow worth the risk that he could be wrong.


  • Bobby DiGeronimo, for being a jocksniffing piece of shit.


  • Terrelle Pryor, DeVier Posey, Mike Adams, Daniel Herron, Solomon Thomas, Jordan Whiting, Jordan Hall, Travis Howard, Corey “Pittsburgh” Brown. For not recognizing that “rules are rules” and that a couple hundred bucks here or there aren’t worth the damage to your reputation in a community that “takes care of” former Buckeyes.

  • Ohio State fans. For every rant-filled, non-sensical email, phonecall, tweet, text or otherwise that you’ve sent to ESPN, Sports Illustrated and other members of the national sports media that have caused them to have it out for us. And they do have it out for us. Yes, this probably includes me.


I’m over it though (and a lot quicker than I thought I would be). The NCAA did its job. Ohio State deserved what it got. Their cooperation probably saved them from USC-type punishments.


If you’re still angry about the one year bowl ban, remember this: Michigan had a self-imposed two-year bowl ban during the Rich Rodriguez Error. So it could be worse. #perspective

Friday, December 9, 2011

Keep on preachin' on @CavsDan

Listening to Mike and Mike this morning on the way to work, I could have been absolutely convinced that Dan Gilbert single-handidly shut down the Chris Paul-to-Lakers trade.

Except, of course, that I'm not an idiot. I know he doesn't wield that kind of power. And I don't trust any spin from ESPN. I mean, they had Chris Broussard on the radio trying to give an objective opinion about an issue involving a Leon Rose-represented client when anybody that's been paying attention for the past 2 years knows CB loves him some Leon Rose.

So please spare me.

If you're one of the two or three people that actually read this blog, you've already seen the Gilbert email that was sent at 10:00 p.m. last night calling for an owner vote (Note: Not a rescission) on the Paul trade; since, you know, the owners and the NBA kind of own the Hornets and Paul's rights. I'm not sure how it got leaked, but we all know how much of a lightning rod Gilbert can be for controversy. So it seems clear to me that someone in the league office leaked it to put the heat on @cavsdan, as opposed to David Stern, who actually deserves it.

The problem with the "Gilbert is the devil" narrative is that the trade had already been nixed before the email was sent. ESPN failed to pick up on that; or maybe they just thought they didn't have enough corroborating evidence since they are so concerned about running reckless stories - except for, well, stories about free tattoos and autographs.

Plus, can anybody really tell me Gilbert is wrong when he compares a majority of the league to the Washington Generals? I'm not saying there's necessarily anything that can be done about it now with the new CBA failing to address the problem. But players are still going to want to team up and copy off the Miami Superfriends. That isn't going to change. Paul is still going to leave New Orleans (which is why blocking the trade was non-sensical). We will still only have 5-6 teams theroetically capable of winning the Larry O'Brien Trophy. Everyone else will just exist to fill out the 82-game schedule.

Gilbert's letter, although ill-advised, at least gives me some comfort that there is someone out there that sees what is going on AND IS NOT AFRAID TO TALK ABOUT IT. And what is going on is this: the players don't care about the fans. They really don't. How else can you explain a guy like Lebron James leaving loyal fans in Cleveland to go play for bandwagon, late-arriving, hand-sitting, front runners on South Beach? Carmelo pushing his way out of Denver? Howard getting ready to bail on Orlando? Chris Paul pissing on the fans of New Orleans? Come on man! Can't you see what's going on? Dan Gilbert does.

You know, whatever. Maybe I'm just blind to the realities of the business because of my rational hatred for Lebron James. Maybe I'm still feeling a little jilted. That's possible. But you know what? Give me a reason to believe the players give a shit about the fans that keep putting money in their pockets. Then I'll feel sorry for the Chris Pauls of the world. Until then...

Go Cavs! Screw the players, David Stern and the rest of the league. And keep preaching the truth Dan Gilbert. Some of us appreciate it.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

On Self-Reporting: Just STFU!

Jim Tressel was right.

Yeah, I said it. The Vest received an email that his star QB and star WR were receiving free tattoos in exchange for memorabilia. He didn't report it and it cost him his job. But he was 100% correct.
He deserved to be fired for it. But he was right.

I mean, let's face it: the rules are stupid. They are. Half of these issues read like a headline from the Onion:
"Ohio State athletes suspended for trading stuff for stuff"

"Ohio State players receive money in exchange for attending charity event"

How could these issues be considered a "scandal" in any alternative universe other than the one in which the NCAA is allowed to exist? Someone explain to me how in the hell a couple of free tattoos helped Ohio State beat Arkansas in the Sugar Bowl? Were these magic tattoos with free stanozolol in them?

These aren't colleges or universities when it comes to football. They're sports franchises. Most of their fans didn't even go to the school. They could care less about the damn chemistry department or the school newspaper. It's just background. So why do we keep treating these athletes like they're teenagers? And why do we keep pretending like people care about the "university" part of The Ohio State University?

The powers that be at the Ohio State University should have done the exact same thing that Tressel did, which is STFU! Think about it. If they had just grabbed some techie from the computer engineering department, they could have had those emails deleted and the hard drive scrubbed and cleaned. Poof! No email. No problem. Case closed. Jim Tressel is coaching this weekend with Terrelle Pryor under center and all of his weapons at his disposal.

But noooooo! Ohio State had to turn Jim Tressel in to the NCAA. And look where its gotten them: No coach. No QB. NCAA investigators and journalists camped out all across the state searching under every rock for more and more violations. Ohio State, the institution, is searching for more violations and TURNING THEMSELVES IN EVEN MORE!

And let me tell you something. I went to Ohio State for four years. Every athlete on that campus is a walking NCAA violation. If you're looking hard enough, you'll find violations. And they... are... finding... them.

What exactly does Ohio State think all of this self reporting is going to get them? A cookie? An award for massive institutional control freak?

It's going to get you a lengthy bowl ban and mass scholarship reductions. It's going to cost you coaching candidates in your upcoming search. It has already cost you dearly in the court of public opinion. It hasn't gotten you diddly squat.
All for some archaic rules that have nothing to do with why people watch college football.

So what's the point of self reporting?

Seriously, I'd like to know.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Ohio State vs. SEC: Closer Look




Entering the 2011 All-State Sugar Bowl, the Ohio State Buckeyes were 0-9 all-time against the Southeastern Conference in bowl games. Through the help of 5 star-tatted players, they were seemingly able to end that drought with a 31-26 victory over Arkansas.

OSU was 1-9 vs. the SEC... for about 7 months.

Then TatGate blew up even further with the revelation that head coach Jim Tressel knew about the free ink before the start of the 2010 season, causing the university to vacate the entire season and that Sugar Bowl victory.

Back to 0-9.

This is all subject to change again without a game even being played. With reports of Texas A&M and Missouri set to joined the juggernaut of the SEC, Ohio State's all-time record against the conference could be modified once more.

In the 1986 Cotton Bowl, the Buckeyes beat the Aggies 28-12; and beat them again in the 1998 Sugar Bowl 24-14. That would put OSU at 2-9 all-time vs. the SEC in bowl games.

In 1997 and 1998, the Buckeyes bashed the Missouri Tigers twice in a home and home. Those two wins, couple with the bowl wins over Texas A&M would put them at 11-11-2 against the SEC all-time, regular season and bowl games. An even .500 record.

Meaningless, I know. But it is interesting to see how the conference realignment and scandal-ridden offseason of college football can impact one of the legitimate on-field stories of the past 5 years without even a down being played... Ohio State vs. the SEC.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

The Curious Case of Michael Floyd

As you may (or, I suppose, may not) have heard, star wide receiver and borderline alcohol dependant Michael Floyd has been reinstated by Notre Dame Head Coach Brian Kelly following an indefinite "suspension." Though the suspension did not result in any missed games, halves, quarters, starts or practices, most of the media is pretending as if the famed Catholic institution deserves to ride this out through its (supposed) moral superiority.

Bullshit.

Floyd is currently on probation following his third alcohol related offense since arriving in South Bend as a highly touted recruit out of Minnesota. In his latest brush with the law, he was arrested for DUI with a blood-alcohol content of 0.19, which is over twice the legal limit. His prior arrests were of the rather mundane underage consumption variety.

Unsurprisingly, Floyd is an All-American candidate and a Biletnikoff candidate. If he were a third-string offensive lineman, I'd imagine he would be facing a more severe sanction from the coach and the university. But they need him against South Florida and Michigan.

Now let us please place all of this in the proper context of Notre Dame, the university, and its alleged claim to ethical supremacy. In just the past year, two students have died (DIED!) as a result of actions by those within the football program.

The first student death involved a 19-year-old freshman girl at a nearby college who committed suicide just nine days after reporting that she had been sexually assualted by a Notre Dame football player. Said player never faced any serious investigation by the university; played out the year without any suspension or punishment; and has yet to have his name released to the public. The parents of the dead girl hired a federal investigator to look in the ND's "investigation" of the incident.

The second student death was arguably negligent homicide on the part of the coaching staff. Declan Sullivan, a 20-year-old junior at ND, was ordered by the staff to be elevated 40 feet in the air on a video tower in winds up to 50 miles per hour to film practice. We talkin bout practice! Prior to being sent to his untimely death, his final words via twitter were:

"Gust of wind up to 60 mph well today will be fun at work... I guess I've lived long enough."

"Holy fuck Holy fuck this is terrifying."

Fortunately for Notre Dame, negligent homicide is not considered an NCAA violation. Neither is sexual assault or driving a vehicle under the influence of alcohol. This despite the fact that these acts (and failures to act) had the real and potential impact on human lives.

The media isn't interested in such dull stories of cover-up and crime. (seriously, actual crimes!!!). No one at ESPN is going to submit a FOIA request for records regarding the "investigations" (Ha!) into the two deaths. Of course, they can't because Notre Dame is a private school not subject to those types of requests. But nonetheless, hard-hitting journalism doesn't breach the borders of the campus of Jesus Christ University.

Sports Illustrated Pulitzer Prize Winning Investigative Journalist (and Notre Dame grad) George Dohrmann isn't headed to South Bend in search of a front-cover expose into the relatively minor trangressions (resulting in two student deaths. DEATHS! ACTUAL DEATHS!) at his alma mater. It just wouldn't sell newspapers.

Instead, the real scandal is at Ohio State where players were able to obtain free tattoos in exchange for jewelry that belonged to them. (GASP!) And the head coach who knew about it - and didn't report it - and didn't suspend his players for their egregious conduct. (Now if they had gang-raped another student or killed a kid driving drunk, no suspensions would have been understandable.) But free tats? Damn, that's some shameful shit right there.

Jim Tressel was known to suspend players for failed drug tests. He suspended his starting quarterback for the final two games of the season (including Michigan) and the first half of a bowl game for a DUI. He didn't sit guys for getting free tattoos. Just maybe (and I guessing here) Jim Tressel had a little more perspective than the media, coaches, universities and the NCAA regarding how to handle young people and their mistakes.

Tressel would have sat Floyd. He didn't sit the Tat 5. It cost him his job, and it should have as I indicated in my prior post from many months ago. But the way he's been treated by the fans and in the media is shameful - especially when one considers what's going on with that school in Northern Indiana and their real scandals.

I suppose its too much to ask that life-threatening acts be taken seriously by the fourth estate, the governing body of college athletics or the school profiting from the offending student's talent on the field. Afterall, the most serious indiscretions involve these young people making money for themselves. Now THAT is wrong.

Dead girl: Moving along. Dead student assistant: Nothing to see here. Drunk driving star receiver: Welcome back... and please Wake Up the Echos!

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Tressel: He isn't who we thought he was

It was January 27, 2001 at the Jerome Schottenstein Center. Ohio State vs. Michigan State basketball. Halftime. Every fan remaining inside the arena. No beverage break. No quick trip to the restroom. The capacity crowd standing and not one basketball player on the court.

I was sitting in the third row of the Nuthouse student section behind the basketball hoop. A man of diminutive stature with salt and pepper hair, a black suit, and a red tie was approaching center court holding a wireless microphone gripped tightly with both hands. Before that day, I had never heard of him. The new head football coach of The Ohio State University then addressed more than 19,000 unsure people in a calm, deliberate and comforting manner:

"I can assure you that you'll be proud of our young people ... in the classroom... in the community... and most especially, in 310 days from now, in Ann Arbor, Michigan... on the football field."

All I can tell you about the reaction from the crowd is that the unranked Buckeyes beat the 3rd-ranked Spartans that day and this speech by Jim Tressel drew the loudest cheer of the evening.

In the over 10 years since, Coach Tressel has won 106 games; 7 Big Ten Championships; 5 BCS bowl games; and one national championship. And, "most especially," he has a 9-1 record against that team up north. That's the resume of a man that normally would have a statue built outside the stadium in his honor.

The other side to that coin is this: at his prior school, Youngtown State, one of his star players was caught in a booster scandal; after his second season at OSU, after he won his national title, his star freshman running back, Maurice Clarett, was also found to have received improper benefits sending him down a spiral that would eventually land him in a prison cell far away from ever seeing the football field at Ohio Stadium agin. Three years later, his newly-minted quarterback and future Heisman winner, Troy Smith, was suspended for receiving a $500 payment from a booster. A man whose programs have that kind of history usually lands on the unemployment line.

Tressel was able to survive December 2005 until December 2010 without another scandal - which is kind of like paying child support and taking your children to little league. You're supposed to take care of your kids. You're supposed to follow the rules. Your players shouldn't be mixed up with boosters.

In that time period, he was able to develop and cultivate a clean-cut image of a religiously devout man committed to the community, his family and his players. His ability to command a press conference with his slow, staccato speech and crinkled eyebrow expressions presented the thoughtful intelligence of a leader firmly in control of the world around him. The media and fans of rival schools remained vocally skeptical, referring to him as Teflon Tressel or the Senator. We thought them jealous of his success. He was, as Yahoo Sports writer Dan Wetzel put it, either a "saint or a snake." But in Buckeye Land, In Tressel We Trust(ed).

Enter Fine Line Ink tattoos and a drug dealer named Edward Rife - a name that will haunt Ohio State for a long time and Jim Tressel forever. If you're reading this, you know the story. You know that 6 OSU players, including quarterback Terrelle Pryor, broke NCAA rules by selling merchandise and memorabilia for cash and tattoos. You know that Ohio State "said" they found out in December 2010 when the U.S. Attorney's Office contacted the university to inform them that these items were found in a raid of the tattoo parlor. You know that the players apologized, played in the Sugar Bowl, promised to return to school, followed through on that promise and will have to sit the first five games of next year for their transgressions. That isn't the issue here.

This issue is this:

On March 7, 2011, I arrived home from work and checked my Twitter account. There it was. "Y! Sports: Tressel knew of Pryor memorabilia sale in April 2010, possible major NCAA violation." My heart sank. For the next three hours, I became obsessed with finding out as much information as I could about the allegation. I rationalized that the Yahoo investigative report was irresponsible journalism. Why not? The reporters only cited one anonymous source claiming that a concerned party warned Tressel 8 months earlier. That's hardly rock-solid evidence of any wrongdoing. And yet I was still uneasy. OSU insiders and local beat writers were caught off guard and were stunningly silent. The university itself had yet to respond. This wasn't ESPN. These weren't some hack journalists looking to make a name for themselves. The reporters, Dan Wetzel and Charles Robinson, were well-established and credible. They wouldn't make this up and they wouldn't report it if they weren't absolutely sure. After all, why would you spend your entire career building up that kind of credibility only to throw it away like that? (disclaimer: I still do not know why Yahoo would withhold information about the below-reference emails, which I believe they had or they would not have ran with the report - but that's neither here nor there)

I began to assume the story to be true. But there were important questions that would determine the appropriate reaction or punishment. 1) What did he know?; and 2) When did he know it?; and 3) Did he lie to NCAA investigators in December 2010 when OSU claimed not to have known?

The answers to those questions seem abundantly clear now if you've read the self report submitted by Ohio State and the emails Tressel received in April 2010. He knew everything. He knew it before the 2010 season started. And he knew when the U.S. Attorney's office came knocking in December. Those were the answers that I feared the most, because it meant he violated NCAA rules by failing to report a knowing violation by his players; violated NCAA rules by falsely stating in his pre-season compliance statement he had no knowledge of any NCAA violations; allowed illegible players to take the field; and, at the very least, failed to correct a clear mistatement in the December self-report when OSU claimed ignorance of the violations.

The appropriate punishment seems obvious, at least to me: Fire the Coach.

The day after the Yahoo report, Ohio State held its press conference with the university president, athletic director and head coach all on hand. These are the three most recognizable public employees in the State of Ohio - which is kind of a depressing fact. And out came the excuses.

First, Tressel claimed that the source requested confidentiality. I've read the emails. In the first email, the attorney doesn't say anything of the sort. He doesn't even imply that any of the information disclosed is privileged. The confidentiality request didn't come until two weeks later, by which time Tressel could and should have reported the information to somebody.

Second, Tressel claimed that he was concerned about interfering in a federal investigation. Fair enough. I could accept that rationale, except when you look at his responses, they don't reflect that type of concern:
"Thanks.... I will get on it ASAP."
"I hear you!! It is unbelievable!! Thanks for your help... keep me posted on what I need
to do, if anything. I will keep pounding these kids, hoping they grow up."

If he were so concerned, he would have asked the source attorney or a university attorney what, if any, action he could take. Tressel is not a lawyer. He does not know what is or is not interfering in a federal investigation. Any reasonably intelligent person (of which he ostensibly is) would ask an attorney. And who better to ask than the one sending you the emails????

Third, he was concerned for the safety and well-being of his players. Again, this so-called fear is not reflected in his response. In the last email, he references using the new championship rings as "collateral" against the players - whatever that means. At any rate, Tressel forfeited the right to control the perception of his motives.

There is simply no viable excuse for failing to disclose what he knew when Ohio State found out in December what was going on at that tattoo parlor. At this point, there are no confidentiality concerns. The possibility of interfering in an investigation is eliminated. And the players? Just fine, except for that pesky suspension and Tressel's ultimatum given to them to either promise to return to the university or give up their right to play in the Sugar Bowl.

In fact, Tressel didn't come clean until the university itself found the emails and confronted him. He intended to keep that secret... in perpetuity. In light of that, his excuses for failing to report back in April ring hollow and dishonest.

Then there is the matter of the university itself, who self-imposed a two-game suspension and $250,000.00 fine against embattled, but very successful coach. Ohio State cowered away from the appropriate action. President E. Gordon Gee (he of the "little sisters of the poor" fame) said in response to whether Tressel's termination was even considered, "Are you kidding?" That's the kind of job security a 9-1 record against Michigan will get you.

So why wasn't Tressel fired? Sure, you have the championships, the rivalry wins, the strong community identification. But surely its possible to eliminate all of that good will with a sufficiently serious error. Woody Hayes knows that. Yet Tressel, who misled the university for more than 8 months about ineligible players and NCAA violations, keeps his job.

My theory is that the Coach's time is nearing an end. His contract expires in 2014. There have been rumors, both bogus and credible, that he has been seriously considering retirement before the expiration of that contract. Like him or not (now), he has done a lot for the university and the administration probably felt he deserved a better exit. If he were younger, had more to prove and an indefinite future in Columbus, I believe he would have been canned. As it is, I believe he will either retire at the end of next season or the season after that. For better or worse, Ohio State probably believes he should be given the opportunity to go out on his own terms. If that's the reason, I would understand that. I disagree, but it would at least make a modicum of sense in an otherwise tumultuous and trying week.

With a few 24 hours to reflect on all of this information, I feel some perspective is also necessary. While I differ with the university's chosen punishment, Ohio State did do the right thing once it uncovered the violation. As laid out in the self report, they contacted the NCAA on February 8 to inform the enforcement division of Tressel's transgressions. Like the sport of golf, in collegiate athletics, the member institutions are required to tell on themselves. I've always admired that rule and respected those who fearlessly comply. I also say that with the caveat that no one other than Tressel was aware of those emails before January. (Gene Smith's interruption of Tressel's response to the question of whether he forwarded the email causes me a certain level of discomfort on this issue)

There's also a sense of defiance against all of the delighted masses rejoicing in the Tressel's folly. As a (generally) proud OSU alumnus, I am a part of this university. My wife, my father, my brother and many of my closest friends are part of the university. We did nothing wrong. Most of the players on that team did nothing wrong. As far as I know, the adminstration and the compliance department did nothing wrong here. We don't deserve this. Even the players that did sell "their" merchandise committed what I would consider to be a de minimus violation - akin, in my opinion, to smoking pot or drinking underage. (yeah, its against the rules and they deserve to be punished, but I can easily forgive someone breaking a stupid rule).

The only one at fault is Tressel. He's a 58-year-old CEO of a multi-million dollar program. He's not some immature college kid whose daily goals are getting enough money for beer and pizza. He knew better. But even then, I understand the difference between the moral culpability of breaking an NCAA rule as compared to, say, stealing money or physically assaulting another human being. Let's have some perspective here. Save the harsh words (of which I've heard many) for some of the real scum of the earth that deserve it. As a good friend of mine keeps telling me: Its just sports.

This whole situation epitomizes the duality of man. Tressel is still the same person that donates $125k to Youngstown State for a student rec facility; $100k to the Thompson Library renovation; over $60,000.00 to the James Cancer Hosptial; and founded a charity for multiple sclerosis; in addition to numerous other causes. He's still the same person that has reached out to Maurice Clarett while he was in prison when he had every reason to turn his back with resentment and helped him get a second chance in the UFL. He is, in my opinion, a good man.

But he's also a flawed man with questionable ethics. His actions make it difficult to believe that he didn't have prior knowledge of the past violations of Ray Isaac, Maurice Clarett or Troy Smith. His lack of candor raises questions of possible incidents or violations we never heard about because they may have been ignored or covered up. His contrived explanations make it seem as though he lacks remorse or the desire to avoid the same mistakes in the future.

I do realize its always easy to judge from the outside. People love to tear down people they don't know for errors in judgment that they themselves may have made under the same set of circumstances. Those same people will vigorously defend and support the people they know and care about the most for similar or even more serious character lapses. There's nothing wrong with that. If you have that kind of love for someone, such as family, you want to help them and its easy to forgive them for their mistakes. But the further away you are from that connection, the harder it is to overlook and the easier it is to be objective.

And that's part of the dichotomy with Jim Tressel and Ohio State. I guarantee you his family is supporting him right now. His players, both current and former, that have shed blood and sweat for him are supporting him right now. Those are the people that know him and while that may give them more insider perspective, it also clouds their opinions.

The Ohio State University is a family, but its fans, by and large, do not do not know Coach Tressel. You will probably find among those people some staunch supporters who may rationalize his conduct or pass it off as a minor speed bump on a road paved with good intentions. I wish I could for ignorance is truly bliss, but I cannot. We have to demand better from a leader of young men.

Today, when I look back on that Tressel speech, I view it differently. I see a man nervously squeezing that microphone with both hands, taking his time with his words to calm himself down - hoping that the thousands of people in the crowd won't be able to discern just how anxious he really is. He did a great job convincing us that day he was someone he was not. I suppose that's what we wanted. Otherwise, if he were to portend the future, the speech would have gone a little something like this:

"I can assure you that you'll be embarrassed... by our young people... in the newspapers... on the internet... and, most especially, more than 10 years from now... by your coach."