though I do see the argument could be made that Oregon kicked him off their football team, (I don't think the NCAA specifically punished him in lieu of Oregon), and so Ole Miss shouldn't be subject to decisions made by the Oregon administration. Perhaps Ole Miss will use this argument in their appeal.
I still side with the NCAA that he is using a loophole to avoid any punishment. The fact that other athletes have in the past used the loophole to the same effect doesn't make it right. It is just unfortunate for Masoli that he is high-profile enough that the NCAA paid attention this time. As far as wrong place wrong time ...
... perhaps. I did read the SI article involving it. I still side with the NCAA. You can say he's a good kid who got stuck in a bad situation and then made it worse by initially lying to the police, but he's now been stuck in bad situations 3 times (the high school robbery, college robbery and the traffic stop), I mean ...
Also, there didn't seem to be any definitive proof that he wasn't involved in anyway. It is mostly his word against his word in court. ::shrugs::
I still side with the NCAA that he is using a loophole to avoid any punishment. The fact that other athletes have in the past used the loophole to the same effect doesn't make it right. It is just unfortunate for Masoli that he is high-profile enough that the NCAA paid attention this time. As far as wrong place wrong time ...
... perhaps. I did read the SI article involving it. I still side with the NCAA. You can say he's a good kid who got stuck in a bad situation and then made it worse by initially lying to the police, but he's now been stuck in bad situations 3 times (the high school robbery, college robbery and the traffic stop), I mean ...
Also, there didn't seem to be any definitive proof that he wasn't involved in anyway. It is mostly his word against his word in court. ::shrugs::
The NCAA gets something right!
01/09/2010 04:57:20 PM
- 486 Views

Meh, I'm not sure it was the right call
01/09/2010 05:13:01 PM
- 274 Views
but in this case it was related to commiting a crime
01/09/2010 05:20:02 PM
- 258 Views
His crimes aren't really open and shut cases though...more the variety of wrong place wrong time
01/09/2010 05:31:21 PM
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Why not? That's how life works.
01/09/2010 07:13:20 PM
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The possession charge was a simple civil infraction
01/09/2010 08:40:54 PM
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I generally agree with Lady L ...
01/09/2010 08:12:45 PM
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I just really don't like the double standard
01/09/2010 08:46:31 PM
- 257 Views
I agree with you.
01/09/2010 09:23:25 PM
- 230 Views
and coincidently changes his mind RIGHT AFTER Oregon tells him he can't play?
01/09/2010 09:27:51 PM
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I do have to agree with the blount situation you mentioned above ...
02/09/2010 03:39:37 AM
- 246 Views
it's good to see the rules work properly
01/09/2010 05:17:25 PM
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I actually never thought about ...
01/09/2010 07:33:49 PM
- 259 Views
most of the rules were created due to the actions of football or basketball players
01/09/2010 07:46:00 PM
- 328 Views
Decision appealed and reversed, by the way. Guess the NCAA doesn't agree with you after all. *NM*
04/09/2010 03:45:40 PM
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Nope, no it doesn't. *NM*
04/09/2010 09:04:49 PM
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Karma, baby!
05/09/2010 06:10:46 PM
- 228 Views
It wasn't really his fault though that his defense stunk it up. He did his part. *NM*
05/09/2010 07:30:42 PM
- 111 Views