Thursday, April 21, 2011

Time for Ohio State's Football Coach to Pay Up

Sometimes it’s best just to come clean. It’s a lesson Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel would have done well to follow. As dribs and drabs of his lying, misleads and misdeeds over knowing about and failing to report possible NCAA infractions have come into the public spotlight, he is quickly becoming a public relations nightmare.

Tressel is being investigated by the NCAA for not reporting possible infractions, then lying about knowing about them and now saying he told nobody about them after they were reported to him. Now I don’t want to pile on this guy, but having made five players promise to stay for another year after they were suspended by the NCAA for selling clothes and equipment for a few tattoos, it would seem to me the hammer has got to come down on him.

Let’s remember that it is an NCAA rule to report to them and the school any possible infractions (he didn’t when he found out about his players selling their stuff for some tats). Additionally, his contract with the school mandates he report possible misdeeds (he didn’t). Then he signed a letter reiterating this last point in September saying he knew of no violations (he knew of the possibility in April and didn’t bother to mention is to anyone until December, when federal investigators contacted him. Tressel told them it was the first time he’d heard of it). Oh wait . . . that’s what he has said, but now it turns out he emailed back and forth with an attorney who first brought up the issue. Oops. Three (or four or five) strikes and you’re out.

The notoriously whiney and inconsistent NCAA is investigating. This is a huge money program, and there’s a lot of talk Tressel and his players have pretty much gotten a pass so far.

Tressel, great guy that he is, suspended himself for two games . . . then upped it to five when he saw nobody was biting at his “self punishment.” He has been fined $250,000 by Ohio State as well. It’s a move to stay ahead of the possible NCAA punishment.

I’m thinking at least eight games. Ohio State may have the last half of its 2010 season, as well as a victory in the Sugar Bowl, yanked by the NCAA as well.

Tressel is supposed to be a leader, teacher, coach and mentor. The big money corrupts and has corrupted. Of course the players don’t get any of it, but Tressel does . . . tons of it. Forgetting all the endorsement (logos on uniforms, shoes, etc. ) and speeches, Tressel pulls in a cool $4.7 million a year. He’s the highest paid coach in the college football game. He is the captain of this ship.

Time to make him pay.

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