More SEC selective discipline

#1

rexvol

The Minister of Defense
Joined
Apr 29, 2006
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#1
LSU kicks off LB, not Perrilloux
LSU coach Les Miles kicked backup linebacker Derrick Odom off the team after he was charged with a misdemeanor Wednesday for allegedly smashing a car window after a brawl at a nightclub last week. Backup quarterback Ryan Perrilloux, who also was in the fight, wasn't charged and will remain on the team but won't play Saturday at Alabama.
 
#5
#5
And that was the 2nd time (might be 3rd) that this guy has been involved in an altercation this season
 
#6
#6
The other kid was charged with a misdemeanor....Ryan wasnt, what did you expect him to do??? I bet Spurrier would have did a roundhouse kick to the temple and then through magic fairy dust down and brought Danny Weurfel back to lead them in Tuscaloosa Saturday...

Give me a break man...
 
#7
#7
LSU kicks off LB, not Perrilloux
LSU coach Les Miles kicked backup linebacker Derrick Odom off the team after he was charged with a misdemeanor Wednesday for allegedly smashing a car window after a brawl at a nightclub last week. Backup quarterback Ryan Perrilloux, who also was in the fight, wasn't charged and will remain on the team but won't play Saturday at Alabama.

Odom was caught going back to the fight and smashing a car window on video tape.
 
#8
#8
When you say "more" selective discipline in the SEC, what prior instances of selective discipline are you referring to?
 
#10
#10
You can't be charged with a misdemeanor felony, it is either one or the other.
 
#11
#11
I guess you didn't read the article. Perrilloux didn't get charged with a crime and Odum did. Sounds like a fair deal to me...

Geeze Rex, are you having a bad day?
 
#12
#12
When you say "more" selective discipline in the SEC, what prior instances of selective discipline are you referring to?

Jaytrain5, you have the best avatar on the board. It kills me every time I read your comments and look at it. :post-4-1090547912:
 
#13
#13
the article plainly says that Ryan was in the fight and didnt get charged...so a player has to be charged to be disciplined? there's part of the problem. the coaches office is not a court of law, if a guy's in the wrong place involved in suspect activities then he should be disciplined. Do you disagree with that???
 
#15
#15
the article plainly says that Ryan was in the fight and didnt get charged...so a player has to be charged to be disciplined? there's part of the problem. the coaches office is not a court of law, if a guy's in the wrong place involved in suspect activities then he should be disciplined. Do you disagree with that???

Depends on what the involvement was Rex. Sometimes for these guys it is way too easy to be at the wrong place at the wrong time.
 
#16
#16
Fulmer kicked Daniel Brooks off the team, and that is why he's a better coach than Spurrier.
 
#18
#18
Depends on what the involvement was Rex. Sometimes for these guys it is way too easy to be at the wrong place at the wrong time.


true, but sometimes I think we forget about the 95% of players that never get mentioned in the papers. thus it is possible to get through 4 years and not get in trouble.
 
#20
#20
true, but sometimes I think we forget about the 95% of players that never get mentioned in the papers. thus it is possible to get through 4 years and not get in trouble.

I will sound like a broken record, but on issues like this as early as 15 or 20 years ago the player would be "escorted" by the campus or city police to the head coache's house. The head coach would then inact his revenge for the interruption (whether sleeping or getting his groove on) by making the offending player run the steps of Neyland until one of his legs fell off. Most of the incidents now reported, should never really have legs.
 
#21
#21
the article plainly says that Ryan was in the fight and didnt get charged...so a player has to be charged to be disciplined? there's part of the problem. the coaches office is not a court of law, if a guy's in the wrong place involved in suspect activities then he should be disciplined. Do you disagree with that???


Being involved could mean that he (Perrilloux) got popped and was defending himself. Doesn't mean that he was at fault. Do they have a team rule for not going out to a clubs/bars? I remember seeing Peyton out many times having beers (during the season) with friends in K-town. Should he have been disciplined for that? I think the point is to let the coaches discipline how they see fit. I'm sure they get more of the story than we do....
 
#22
#22
I will sound like a broken record, but on issues like this as early as 15 or 20 years ago the player would be "escorted" by the campus or city police to the head coache's house. The head coach would then inact his revenge for the interruption (whether sleeping or getting his groove on) by making the offending player run the steps of Neyland until one of his legs fell off. Most of the incidents now reported, should never really have legs.

Amen Brother preach it! I miss the days of less media scrutiny and handling discipline issues at the team level.
 
#23
#23
The head coach would then inact his revenge for the interruption (whether sleeping or getting his groove on) by making the offending player run the steps of Neyland until one of his legs fell off. Most of the incidents now reported, should never really have legs.

Because the coach should have made them run steps until they had no legs...:ermm::p
 
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