Good for Ruhle - I hope his talk is explicit because what those players are accused of doing isn't some back seat hanky panky.
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but nobody has a problem with penn state still playing football...the penn state scandal was waaay worse than what happened at baylor...both schools should have their football programs shutdown, imhoNot going to happen, but the drumbeat for Baylor to shut the football program down is growing: http://www.cbssports.com/college-fo...-put-morality-over-money-goodness-over-glory/
or penn state's lawyers....penn state was waaay worse...why are they still playing football???Maybe Baylor could borrow some of Ole Miss's lawyers----------
agreed...but even worse, is penn states mess involved a coach with several coaches covering up the child sex scandalGood for Ruhle - I hope his talk is explicit because what those players are accused of doing isn't some back seat hanky panky.
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The culture surrounding Baylor University and its football program not only affected how coaches and administrators handled allegations of sexual assault against players but also kept the university from randomly drug testing its student-athletes for marijuana and other recreational drugs -- making it one of the few major collegiate programs not to do so, according to an upcoming book about the university's sexual assault scandal.
Baylor regents had no idea that the university wasn't randomly drug testing its student-athletes until the Philadelphia law firm the school hired to examine how it handled allegations of sexual assault by students, including football players, turned up the issue. Already reeling from bad publicity around the mishandling of sexual assault cases, the lack of drug testing was another indicator of just how insular the football program had been under former coach Art Briles.
"That was my first realization that this was likely to not end up well," Baylor regent J. Cary Gray said in "Violated," which was authored by ESPN reporters Paula Lavigne and Mark Schlabach and will be released by Center Street on Aug. 22.
Better watch out. You're gonna trigger KillVols and he's gonna "flame your blankity blank blank" and chastise you for reviving this thread to point out a perfectly legitimate and concerning pattern of behavior.To get out ahead of him just go ahead and imagine the most vile name you can think of and call yourself that. :wink:
Wouldn't that, in and of itself, constitute a major NCAA violation?
You make it sound like marijuana is bad or something. I mean all college kids do it, why punish the athletes? *Wouldn't that, in and of itself, constitute a major NCAA violation?
I thought all member programs were required to implement random drug testing for NCAA athletes?
You make it sound like marijuana is bad or something. I mean all college kids do it, why punish the athletes? *
Not my view personally, I just wanted to be the first to post it here.
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Did you read the article? The NCAA side of things is addressed in it.Wouldn't that, in and of itself, constitute a major NCAA violation?
I thought all member programs were required to implement random drug testing for NCAA athletes?
No, I was in a conference call at the time and want able to take the time to actually read it.Did you read the article? The NCAA side of things is addressed in it.
I did. Part I found most interesting:Did you read the article?
According to the book: "Another regent said there was a concern that the no-testing policy drew recruits to Baylor who wanted to smoke marijuana, and contributed to the football program's problems of 'getting bad guys.' It also kept players who had addiction problems from getting help, with one regent referencing the 2010 arrest and subsequent suspension of Baylor football players Josh Gordon and Willie Jefferson, who were found asleep in a local Taco Bell drive-thru lane and charged with misdemeanor marijuana possession. Multiple failed drug tests would derail Gordon's NFL career. 'We didn't do anything to help him apparently,' the regent said."
Why do you think Stidham is at the Barn?Is he as crazy as this sounds:
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/...dium=newsletter&utm_campaign=college-football
In spring 2016, it seemed publicly as though Baylor officials were responding to one sexual assault incident after another. Behind the scenes, attorneys from the Philadelphia law firm Pepper Hamilton, which had been hired by Baylor to investigate the university's response to allegations of sexual assault by students, were sharing details of their investigation with the regents' three-member special committee overseeing the investigation-and it wasn't looking good.
Over the previous several months, regents had been shocked by allegations of gang rapes and the sheer number of incidents. Woman after woman said she'd told someone but nothing happened. One of the most worrisome issues-the one that led the regents to hire Pepper Hamilton-was whether anyone at Baylor knew about former Bears football player Sam Ukwuachu abusing his girlfriend at Boise State before he came to Waco, Texas. Ironically, that was decided in Baylor's favor and presented at the board's regular meeting in February 2016. School attorneys determined that no one at Baylor knew about the abuse until the woman testified at his trial in August 2015. That news, however, would end up being a tiny silver lining on a big cloud.
On Sunday, May 1, 2016, board chairman Richard Willis and regents Ron Murff, Christopher Howard, Jerry Clements, Dan Hord, Ken Carlile, Jeff Reeter and David Harper, along with Baylor attorney Chris Holmes, flew to Philadelphia, where they met up with J. Cary Gray, another regent. The group was about a quarter of the full board. The next day, they met at Pepper Hamilton's downtown headquarters.
They gathered in a large, stark conference room around a table on which attorneys Leslie Gomez and Gina Maisto Smith placed a stack of three-ring binders full of printouts of text messages, emails, interviews and other documentation. They started with a prayer. They stayed in that conference room from 8 a.m. well into the evening, listening to what the attorneys found. The attorneys reviewed about six cases, all involving football players.
Tiger-Cats are now my least favorite CFL team that I have never heard of.Art Briles lands as an assistant in the CFL
http://www.espn.com/college-footbal...-hamilton-tiger-cats-canadian-football-league
As long as he stays out of college football I couldn't care less what happens to that dirtbag.Art Briles lands as an assistant in the CFL