bamawriter
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So, your ire is based on the assumption that the SEC would not have suspended Davis is Saban hadn't already done so?
So I suppose the league office can now rewatch past games and dish out penalties or suspensions. I only played ball through high school and I can’t count the number of times I got stepped on after a play. I think of the vandy players helmet had not been removed, this would be a non issue.
GBO!!
Why should he have been suspended by the SEC when he was already suspended for the prescribed amount of time by the team?
And the fact it is apples and oranges. The tide player undoubtedly threw punches. To lump Jennings in a conversation to that situation is ridiculous.
But it is also reasonable to say yes, I do make that assumption.
Uh...because maybe teams don't get to set discipline in the SEC?
And if the suspension is a 'he is suspended if we want, but not if we don't', then it really isn't anything at all.
Because, gosh, if teams can just set their own suspensions under their own terms, then JP should announce a Spurrier-like 2 series suspension (if he wants to, but none if he doesn't) for JJ and move on.......
I've not posted anything on Jennings till now, but a few random thoughts. First, intent v. lack of intent. Can we definitively determine, NOT assume, but definitively determine Jennings' intent was to step on the face of the Vandy player? I don't know and we may never know. I tend to think there's no way I, personally, don't know where someone's head is when I get up from tackling them.
You must not have tackled many people but any decent tackler knows this situation ands does not need to look.
With that being said clear intent is difficult to decipher. I think the punishment comes from the entirety of the situation. Per usual, JJ's biggest problem is JJ.
Take a cleat to the head? Did you see injuries.
And to add your choices are still irrelevant. One was purposeful and the other is inconclusive in terms of intent.
Bama was allowed to handle it however they saw fit. Tennessee was not. That is where the bias is clear.
Did he not step on the dude's head? Sure looked like he did. If he didn't, then I'm with everyone who says he shouldn't have been suspended.
Like I said last night, I don't believe that a lack of intent precludes any punishment. It could certainly be a mitigating factor, but the SEC hasn't made it clear if that's the case.
Welp JP, we finally disagree.well, if you wouldn't know...and i would...maybe i'm more of an athlete than you!
p.s. how does standing in the back end of a C-130 flying nap of the earth while the pilots pretend they're evading ground fire, waving and shouting while giving commands to 62 paratroopers, keeping from getting tangled up in your own static line, and paying attention to the open door right beside measure up? That's about the most extreme set of conditions I've faced in the last couple of decades, but I knew where I was stepping--without looking--every time I did that.
If you're not sure, then you dont need to be suspending someone. Surely there were visible injuries if he did.
The SEC does a great job of making very little clear.
