Ole Miss news - sort of

#4
#4
Why does ole miss still have a program. They should have been buried under the jail by now.
 
#5
#5
LOL at Hugh Freeze. It's like Bernie Madoff "looking forward" to his day in court. :w00t:
 
#6
#6
Our Pearl/hostesses issues will probably go down as the last time the conference ever sanctioned a member program.
 
#14
#14
Sub "Freeze" for "Nixon" and bammer for "John Dean"

art_buchwald_nixon_backers_fb-865x452.jpg
 
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#15
#15
What about all those expensive cars that the Bama players drive? That seems more egregious and problematic than anything that Ole Miss is being accused of doing.
 
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#16
#16
What about all those expensive cars that the Bama players drive? That seems more egregious and problematic than anything that Ole Miss is being accused of doing.

You should call up the folks in Indy and let them know about it. They obviously need an inquiring mind such as yours to get the ball rolling.
 
#17
#17
You should call up the folks in Indy and let them know about it. They obviously need an inquiring mind such as yours to get the ball rolling.

I'm sure they already know. Obviously, they choose to look the other way.

If Bama gets caught cheating again they could be in line for the death penalty, and that's a case the NCAA is NOT willing to make, it's much easier to pick on Ole Miss than go after a powerful college football program like Alabama.
 
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#18
#18
I'm sure they already know. Obviously, they choose to look the other way.

If Bama gets caught cheating again they could be in line for the death penalty, and that's a case the NCAA is NOT willing to make, it's much easier to pick on Ole Miss than go after a powerful college football program like Alabama.

There is no line for the death penalty. It will never be done again, at any level.
 
#19
#19
There is no line for the death penalty. It will never be done again, at any level.


You are probably correct about that. Giving a school the death penalty affects too many other schools in the conference and it will likely not be done again.
 
#20
#20
There is no line for the death penalty. It will never be done again, at any level.

Maybe so but with Alabama past history with NCAA violations they would certainly deserve it if they were caught cheating again.

ALABAMA'S HISTORY OF MAJOR NCAA RULES INFRACTIONS

1964

Sport involved: football
Violation: improper recruiting contact
Probation: none
Penalty: public reprimand
1995

Sport involved: football
Violations: extra benefits, amateurism, lack of institutional control
Probation: two years (three before appeal)
Among other penalties: bowl ban in 1995; reduction from 85 to 81 total football scholarships for 1995-96 and 1996-97; reduction from 25 to 12 initial scholarships for 1996-97; forfeiture of eight football victories and one tie in 1993
Five-year repeat offender window: would have expired Aug. 1, 2000
1999

Sport involved: men's basketball
Violation: impermissible recruiting
Probation: none
Penalty: none against institution; four-year show cause against former assistant coach
Five-year repeat offender window: would have expired Feb. 8, 2004
2002

Sport involved: football
Violations: "rogue boosters" broke football recruiting and extra-benefit rules and provided impermissible recruiting inducements through high school coaches; numerous secondary violations
Probation: five years
Among other penalties: two-year bowl ban (2002, 2003); loss of 21 football scholarships over three years; disassociation of four boosters (three permanently)
Five-year repeat offender window: expired Jan. 31, 2007
2009

Sports involved: football, baseball, softball, gymnastics, men's basketball, womens basketball, men's golf, women's golf, men's swimming, women's swimming, men's tennis, women's tennis, men's track (indoor and outdoor), women's track (indoor and outdoor), women's soccer, volleyball
Violations: impermissible benefits obtained by student-athletes at least as early as 2005 through misuse of the institution's textbook distribution program
Probation: three years
Among other penalties: vacation of 21 football victories (10 in 2005, six in 2006 and five in 2007); in men's tennis, men's track and women's track, records of 15 student-athletes vacated and team point totals reconfigured accordingly; $43,900 fine
Five-year repeat offender window: expires June 10. 8, 2014
Source: NCAA
 
#21
#21
So we're not even in the repeat violator window anymore? That would mean we are not, in fact, in line for the death penalty.

It's like I can't even trust you, gunner.
 
#22
#22
So we're not even in the repeat violator window anymore? That would mean we are not, in fact, in line for the death penalty.

It's like I can't even trust you, gunner.

Ha ha, only a Bama fan could or would defend a violation history like that.

It's like they say in Bama, if you ain't cheatin you ain't tryin!
 

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