Author: Gerardo Orlando (Page 46 of 75)

Gerardo is the founder of Bullz-Eye.com along with Black Mountain Publishing, LLC which publishes 30 blog titles across a variety of topics.

NCAA finds no new violations by Ohio State

Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel claps after a play during their NCAA football game against Indiana in Columbus, Ohio, October 9, 2010. REUTERS/Matt Sullivan (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT FOOTBALL)

Ohio State got great news today, as the NCAA informed the school in writing that it found no new violations other than those that were reported by the school, and that the Buckeyes would not be hit with a failure to monitor charge. This makes it far less likely that Ohio State will get hammered with new sanctions.

The NCAA has notified Ohio State University that it will not face charges of failing to appropriately monitor its football team as part of a memorabilia-sales scandal that brought down former Coach Jim Tressel.

The NCAA has not uncovered any new, unreported violations during its investigation and agrees with Ohio State that Tressel was the only university official aware of violations by his players and that he failed to report them.

“Other than (two redacted player names) and (Ted) Sarniak, there is no indication that Tressel provided or discussed the information he received … with anyone else, particularly athletics administrators,” the NCAA reported in an enforcement staff case summary.

In the summary that was delivered to Ohio State yesterday and released today, the NCAA again stresses that Tressel failed in his duty to report the violations and knowingly fielded at least two ineligible players.

The NCAA will not hammer Ohio State with its worst-possible findings of loss of institutional control or failure to monitor, which would bring significant punishment.

“Considering the institution’s rules education and monitoring efforts, the enforcement staff did not believe a failure to monitor charge was appropriate in this case,” the NCAA informed Ohio State.

The NCAA also reported that it investigated a Sports Illustrated report that identified nine additional players as selling OSU memorabilia to tattoo-parlor owner Edward Rife and interviewed the athletes, but confirmed only one as dealing with the man who is soon to be sentenced on marijuana-trafficking charges.

Will SI apologize to Ohio State and the eight students who were named in their story but ultimately cleared by the NCAA? I doubt it. SI reported the story today with a brief AP report.

As stated above, this is big news for the Ohio State program and it might just let them get a fresh start in 2012 without more sanctions. At the very least they should avoid crippling sanctions like those imposed on USC.

This changes nothing with respect to the mess in college football. We’ve seen a top coach lose his job and a premiere player run off to the the NFL over a bunch of tattoos, while an entire season was vacated, erasing the hard work of all the other players. The entire episode is absurd.

It’s also a warning sign that people shouldn’t jump to conclusions. Other programs clearly have problems as well, and some of them will be hit hard, but we have to wait and see how investigations play out.

The NCAA needs to do some soul searching and reconsider its outdated rules and the absurd notion of having schools vacate wins.

NFL owners vote 31-0 to ratify settlement with players

Atlanta Falcons owner Arthur Blank (L) arrives for a NFL owners meeting as he is followed by the media including Steve Wyche (R) of the NFL Network, in College Park, Georgia July 21, 2011. REUTERS/John Amis (UNITED STATES – Tags: SPORT FOOTBALL)

We’re one step closer to seeing the end of this mess. The owners ratified the settlement tonight with a 31-0 vote, and now we’re waiting on the NFLPA*.

Tough loss in World Cup for Team USA

Team USA scores two beautiful goals, but they weren’t able to hold off Japan for the FIFA Women’s World Cup. Abby Wambach’s header off a great cross seemed to put the US in a the driver’s seat for a 2-1 lead, but they gave up the equalizer and then fell apart during the penalty shootout.

Japan has had a terrible year with the tragedy at Fukushima, so hopefully this brings some joy to that beleaguered nation.

Meanwhile, Team USA had a great run, and it’s a shame they couldn’t hold on for the win. Missing the first three penalty kicks is puzzling, but Japan capitalized and they deserve the championship.

Goofiest fan photos at the 2011 World Cup

Fans at the 2011 FIFA Women’s World Cup were full of enthusiasm, as expressed by some of the goofiest outfits we’ve ever seen.

A supporter of Canada’s soccer team awaits the start of the Women’s World Cup Group A soccer match against Nigeria in Dresden, July 5, 2011. REUTERS/Tobias Schwarz (GERMANY – Tags: SPORT SOCCER)

See more after the jump.

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