How can this be? Isn't there any Football Gods?

Winter Woman

Well-Known Member
Fri Sep 02 04:48pm EDT
Colts hire Jim Tressel as ‘gameday consultant’, but where’s his suspension?

By Doug Farrar

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Former Ohio State head coach Jim Tressel, who lost his job in the wake of Ohio State's version of the NCAA's latest round of impermissible benefits scandals, has landed in the same NFL that recently agreed to take his former quarterback, Terrelle Pryor(notes). While Pryor will see his first time on the NFL on Friday after getting a third-round look from the Oakland Raiders in the supplemental draft, Tressel will work for the Indianapolis Colts as a "gameday assistant." Tressel will serve as a replay consultant, freeing up other Colts coaches to deal with strategic and personnel matters.
"He's a guy I have known for quite some time and have a good relationship with," Indianapolis coach Jim Caldwell said on Friday. "We have hired him as a gameday consultant. He was around last night and will be working with us next week."
It's an odd title for a man who spent most of the last decade pretending he didn't see what was going on right in front of him.
In March of 2011, Tressel was suspended two games and fined $250,000 by the NCAA for failing to report recruiting violations that at least partially involved a local tattoo parlor. Five players, including Pryor, were suspended for trading championship memorabilia and gameday gear for tattoos. Just over a month later, the NCAA revealed that it believed Tressel had lied to keep athletes that would otherwise have been ineligible on the field.
Pryor and the other four players were suspended five games by the NCAA, and Tressel requested that he be suspended the same number of games for the 2011 season. However, when Pryor left school and applied for the supplemental draft, he had to accept the NFL's ruling that he serve that five-game suspension to start his rookie regular season because he had somehow violated the spirit of the supplemental draft. This despite the fact that other suspended players (such as Kentucky defensive lineman Jeremy Jarmon) had used that same method to enter the NFL without punishment.

With Tressel's hire, the motivation seems to become a bit clearer — though Tressel has no specific NFL experience, he's obviously a league pet, and it's certainly easy to argue that Roger Goodell was using his matchless skill for selective prosecution to settle a score, as opposed to doing what was best for the league. It's reasonable to assume that Pryor was going to have to pay a price solely because he got in Tressel's way.
Yahoo! Sports' own Mike Silver may have put it best on Aug. 18, when Pryor's five-game NFL suspension was announced:
If and when Tressel, whose lying and cheating ultimately led to his resignation last May, tries to slide into the NFL in any capacity — coach, personnel executive, assistant to the regional manager — I expect to see Goodell announce a (minimum) one-year unpaid suspension for making "decisions that undermine the integrity of the eligibility rules for the NFL draft." That's the rationale, under the broader authority of Article 8.6 of the NFL Constitution and Bylaws, which the league gave for giving Pryor the spanking that the NCAA wanted to but couldn't.
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I wouldn't hold my breath. While Pryor was doing and agreeing to anything possible — even sacrificing the possibility of an NFLPA-mandated appeal of his suspension — to get to the next level, Tressel was being welcomed as a conquering hero at training camps for the Cincinnati Bengals and Cleveland Browns. Tressel's move to the NFL isn't really a surprise; the only possible aspect to give pause is that he's got the guts to put himself out there as any sort of administrator of anything after committing what Ohio State head goon Gordon Gee once called "mistakes of the heart."
At best, it's borderline offensive to think that Tressel will be allowed to enter the NFL without some sort of equivalent punishment. At worst, it's a pure violation of the supposed ethical equity that is supposed to exist between players and coaches. Because if anyone violated the spirit of what the NFL claims to hold dear -- if anyone in this tawdry little scenario refused to (as Goodell always likes to say) "protect the shield," it was the coach who made millions of dollars off the backs of his players, lied to the NCAA to insure that those players would continue to benefit his employment when they clearly should not have been doing so, and kept lying to cover his butt even after the fact.
This is not a man I would want in charge of my replay challenge system. This is not a man I would want taking my car to be washed, but apparently, the Colts feel differently. And that means that the NFL, by proxy, feels differently. Perhaps Tressel will be allowed to suspend himself as he did at Ohio State — and to complete the farce, maybe he can come back to the replay booth, as Bobby Valentine once did to the dugout, in disguise.
Valentine did it as a joke. One gets the feeling that Tressel would have no issue excusing his own attempts to return to the game under any guise or pretense.
After all, he's the expert.
 
Cheaters almost always get caught...Just ask reggie bush what 2-4yrs after he left college they take his heisman...Someone will always sell u out is my feelings..And tressel is being punished if u ask me he looks at replays after being 1 of the most wanted coaches in NCAA..JMO
 
Did you know that OSU alumni gives the most amount of money to their college than any alumni group does for any other college. Impressive.

Tressel did know and he didn't disclose. Winning was more important to him than good character. Ohio and Tressel need to pay the price just like the others did before them.

He's gone now. One of the best coaches in history and went out in disgrace. You should have seen all the bill boards in Ann Arbor laughing at him. All paid for by rich people that are graduates.
 
God I hate THE Ohio State University...had a smugass idiot boss once who was an alum, thought her shit didn't stink, shame my niece is a freaking Buckeye :-(
 
God I hate THE Ohio State University...had a smugass idiot boss once who was an alum, thought her shit didn't stink, shame my niece is a freaking Buckeye :-(
ive never been an OSU fan either..but my fav player of all time played there , but redeemed himself by playin for the Lions lol
 
Can you sum the wall up?

Basically he was dishonest, andeveryones having a fit because instead serving his suspension, hes switching to the NFL where the suspension WAS NOT MADE! You guys are getting bent out of shape for nothing!! If you got suspended from work for being dishonest for 5 weeks (which is about the equivalent to how long it would take to play 5 games, if im not mistaken) It would be wrong for you to go to work somewhere else to work?? FUCK NO!! Hes doing it legally, and should not be punished for trying to work. Remember he got in trouble with the NCAA NOT the NFL!!
 
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