Monday, May 30, 2011

Paul Newberry of the Associated Press says a two-strike-and-you're-out-rule would prevent Calipari from skipping around the country just ahead of pesky NCAA investigators

5 comments:

Marc said...

What a hack, comparing Cal to Tressel, a man who willingly and knowingly allowed infractions is ludicrous. I am not against some kind of punitive action besides firing against coaches who willingly abuse the rules but I can hardly see where you can punish one for infractions he had no control over. By the weak logic used here university presidents and athletic directors would be responsible too...

It's easy to jump on the wagon proclaiming "He was at the helm of the ship, so he must go down", but it's not really that simple.

Anonymous said...

This story makes an interesting point, except for the fact that Cal still has zero strikes.

Anonymous said...

If thats the case, then Roy Williams and Bill Self better be on their best behavior. They already have violations that led to KU being on probation. And I agree with the 1st poster, comparing Cal to Tressel is like water and vinegar. Cal didnt know what Camby done at home that summer. Tressel knew, allowed it, and covered it up. Big difference.I just think its funny that Tressel was a media darling and now he's as guilty as Pete Carrol. Apparently not as smart though since he didnt leave beforehand. Media needs to leave Cal alone and focus on the real cheaters.

Anonymous said...

Media needs to leave Cal alone and focus on the real cheaters.

Sounds like OJ looking for the real killer. Face it. He slithered away from 2 programs who were tainted on his watch. He can't get all the credit for the good and take no responsibility for the bad. Again you guys are hypocrites.

Marc said...

^^^Care to explain how you can justify labeling us "hypocrites" in this instance?