they're really quite strict.
My roommate was an NCAA basketball player. A big part of his job on the team was to pass drug tests, since there were a number of other players that couldn't. And, if they want to get Masoli on their drug stuff, then fine, announce that they are suspending him, and the other dude that was in the car with him for X amount of games or X months.
The problem I have with this whole thing is that the NCAA is pursuing a complete double standard here. They treat these infractions as jokes all the time, and then when there's this highly public case, they are all the sudden going to be hard asses. And to me, the worst thing is they aren't even really being hard asses, they're just being bureaucratic dipshits and chickening out from actually punishing someone by simply denying a request. They should nut up and either approve the transfer, or actually punish him, not this stupid in between crap that they're trying to do right now.
The NCAA across the board makes me sick. They remind me a lot of the old USOC. A bureaucratic joke that should be thrown to the wayside for a system that might actually do something for athletes and their sports once in a while. They need to get rid of all this stupid guessing about what will happen, and if a player will get to play, and when a player will get to play, establish standard punishments, and then stick to them.
I mean...I'm fine with punishing Masoli, the guy has messed up, and there should be consequences, but this isn't punishment, it's just stupid paper shuffling.
Bleh, I'm done. On some levels I do agree with what you're saying, I'm more bothered by the way the NCAA is handling his case in comparison to other athletes than anything.
The NCAA gets something right!
01/09/2010 04:57:20 PM
- 484 Views

Meh, I'm not sure it was the right call
01/09/2010 05:13:01 PM
- 272 Views
but in this case it was related to commiting a crime
01/09/2010 05:20:02 PM
- 256 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
- 258 Views
Why not? That's how life works.
01/09/2010 07:13:20 PM
- 263 Views
The possession charge was a simple civil infraction
01/09/2010 08:40:54 PM
- 249 Views
the NCAA has their own drug policies outside of the law.
01/09/2010 09:04:11 PM
- 240 Views
The NCAA drug policies are a joke
02/09/2010 08:39:42 AM
- 285 Views
I generally agree with Lady L ...
01/09/2010 08:12:45 PM
- 240 Views
I just really don't like the double standard
01/09/2010 08:46:31 PM
- 256 Views
I agree with you.
01/09/2010 09:23:25 PM
- 229 Views
and coincidently changes his mind RIGHT AFTER Oregon tells him he can't play?
01/09/2010 09:27:51 PM
- 240 Views
I do have to agree with the blount situation you mentioned above ...
02/09/2010 03:39:37 AM
- 245 Views
it's good to see the rules work properly
01/09/2010 05:17:25 PM
- 281 Views
I actually never thought about ...
01/09/2010 07:33:49 PM
- 258 Views
most of the rules were created due to the actions of football or basketball players
01/09/2010 07:46:00 PM
- 326 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
- 103 Views
Nope, no it doesn't. *NM*
04/09/2010 09:04:49 PM
- 109 Views
Karma, baby!
05/09/2010 06:10:46 PM
- 227 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
- 110 Views