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King Crimson
7/13/2007, 04:16 PM
and by assertion, i mean "players" is actually "two players and a walk-on"....better to err on the side of exaggeration...

if you look at the provided pdf of total violations having the most violations doesn't land you on this list, but only recent memory and "pop" value. bootleggin is what Barry's dad did. and it continues.....more proof that sports needs less hey hey charismatic riffing, pop culture references and lame "hip" analogies, and better writing and at least some research from it's "journalists" more than an hour or two on the net.


what's a Boomer Sooner as a plural noun?

http://cbs.sportsline.com/columns/story/10255471



The University of Oklahoma was punished this week following revelations that a car dealership paid players for work they never did. C'mon, Boomer Sooners. Your standards are dropping. You can do better than that.

You can't blame Bob Stoops for having a headache after this problem.

You once ran one of the grimiest, dirtiest, gun-toting, bootlegging, hooligan coddling, cash-under-the-table programs in the history of college football. Barry Switzer was your coach ("And We're Gonna' Do it Ba-By!"). That's about all you have to say.

You are among the standard bearers for lack of institutional control with your sexy five probations. You are improper benefits. You are improper recruiting. You are failure to monitor, improper inducements, improper entertaining, unethical conduct, improper lodging and any other improper you can think of. You are stop your grinnin' and drop your linen.

You are ... gats and strippers.

Now, you have been reduced to the pedantic by partnering with car dealers. Imagine that. A car dealer involved with wrongdoing.

You used to be automatic weapons, now you're time cards on a car lot. Shame on you, Oklahoma. You're cliché now.

(Although Car-Gate does explain why Bob Stoops was recently asking recruits if, instead of a scholarship, they would like an extended warranty.)

But here is the good news, Oklahoma. In the pantheon of great rules-bending, NCAA-infuriating, college football programs, you are not No. 1.

Imagine that, Oklahoma. There are bigger NCAA violators than you.

The following are the top rules-breaking college football programs of all time. While squeezing in just 10 is like fitting Barry Bonds' head into a key hole, I tried my best.

10. Colorado. Two names: Slick Rick Neuheisel and Gary "Who Me?" Barnett. Five major institutional NCAA infractions at Colorado, including two this decade, according to the NCAA. Numerous rape accusations against recruits and players. Very solid work, fellas, very solid work.

The '93 Seminoles sure had nice footwear. Too bad some of it was free. (Getty Images)
The '93 Seminoles sure had nice footwear. Too bad some of it was free. (Getty Images)
9. Florida State. Pains me to put them here because I think Bobby Bowden is one of the best human beings on the planet, but I can't skip over Free Shoes University.

8. Texas A&M. The state of Texas, football and rules violations go together like ham, egg and cheese. Might deserve a higher slot, but the Aggies' cheat-to-win ratio is low. In other words, it hasn't been money well spent.

7. Washington. There's that Neuheisel name again.

6. Miami (Fla.). This is an interesting one. In terms of total school major infractions (all sports), the mighty Hurricanes are tied at five with universities like Baylor, Mississippi State and the University of Texas-Pan American, and behind the University of Memphis and the Minnesota Golden Gophers (such a cute mascot for such blatant rules violators). Thus Miami loses some street cred. You cannot be but so much a bad *** when Texas-Pan American nearly out-cheats you.

But ah, the Hurricanes. They are like the Smokey Robinson of rules breakers. They might not be the all-time best but they make the most out of their opportunities.

5. SMU. An old-school classic. Received the death penalty. Harkens back to a time when the NCAA had testicles and did not pucker up to the derrières of fat-cat college presidents. Those were the days, when men were men and cheaters took great pride in their work. Cash payments distributed in a timely fashion, luxury cars handed out like heads of lettuce, players bought and paid for. Made you proud to be an American.

4. Arizona State. Never has so much rules breaking gotten a school so little. But they are creative out there in desert. One NCAA investigation found that a compliance officer allowed a football player to utilize her personal credit account for buying $900 worth of car equipment. She also opened a utility account for the player. I don't understand. Can't a brother get his electric bill paid?

3. Oklahoma. Boy, was that Barry Switzer fun.

2. Auburn. The SEC is to cheating what Superman is to comic book heroes. The best. Just about every school in the conference has a major infraction. The SEC boosters are so wealthy that spending $20,000 on a recruit is the equivalent of a martini lunch. Auburn earns a solid silver in the cheating Olympics.

1. Alabama. This is all you need to know about the skill and greatness of Alabama. An NCAA committee found that booster forked over $150,000 to a high school coach as a guarantee that a defensive lineman would attend Alabama. Yes -- $150,000. Now that is how you break the rules, people.

(So what does a great running back go for in the SEC? A small diamond mine?)

No payment of water bills. Just lots of cold, hard cash. Even an Auburn booster says: "You guys are my heroes, Alabama."

"Not bad," says Switzer.

Flagstaffsooner
7/13/2007, 04:26 PM
Another NC for Bama!

colleyvillesooner
7/13/2007, 04:32 PM
What a mother ****ing *********...

soonerinabilene
7/13/2007, 04:36 PM
You are ... gats and strippers.

I think that chant would sound better than we are...sc.

47straight
7/13/2007, 04:42 PM
"Freeman has been a full-time sportswriter for the Dallas Morning News, Boston Globe, Washington Post, New York Times and the Florida Times-Union covering every aspect of the sports world. Freeman is proud to announce that in his last job as a columnist for the Times-Union in Jacksonville, Fla., he twice angered thousands of Gators fans. OK, maybe it was 10,000. OK, maybe several hundred thousand"

That's all you need to know.

King Crimson
7/13/2007, 05:15 PM
i'll also say that while i know for a fact CU's athletic department is far from clean in terms of some things....the bottom line is that "rape accusations" are simply that: accusations. not indictments, not charges filed, not infractions punishable by the NCAA. none of which happened at CU on that basis.

so, again, assertion and assertion.

Octavian
7/13/2007, 05:18 PM
http://img146.imageshack.us/img146/294/headerfreemandz2.jpg (http://imageshack.us)


Hi, my name's Mike Freeman and I've hated Barry Switzer and Oklahoma for a couple decades now. I hated Barry Switzer when I worked in Dallas. I had to cover him and the Sooners as they ran roughshod over the University of Texas. I hated Barry Switzer when he became the Dallas Cowboys' head coach and they won another Super Bowl. I said Switzer could never win a Super Bowl, so when he did...me and my buddies didn't admit we were wrong. We just it happened in spite of Switzer.

I enjoyed getting to slam OU and Switzer (even though he's been out of college football for almost two decades now) in this article. That kinda stuff's fun for me. I don't pretend to carry any of that pesky unbiased journalistic integrity stuff. Thanks for reading!

L Buff
7/13/2007, 05:33 PM
i'll also say that while i know for a fact CU's athletic department is far from clean in terms of some things....the bottom line is that "rape accusations" are simply that: accusations. not indictments, not charges filed, not infractions punishable by the NCAA. none of which happened at CU on that basis.

so, again, assertion and assertion.

Amen to that.

Jewstin
7/13/2007, 06:20 PM
Aside from his misguided football knowledge, he's also a very conventional writer.

Meh. I stopped caring about what other's think a long, long time ago. I, personally, have major, major fundamental disagreements with the entire establishment of college football and how it generates millions upon millions of revenues on the backs of young adults with complete disregard for their well being (sure, they get scholarships, but some of these guys are used and thrown away as the majority never complete a degree).

So, fundamentally, I really have no problem with us breaking the rules in the past to do what I think should be done anyways. I don't support rules just because they are "the rules."

What Barry and Bud did was "wrong," but only by the opinion and rumblings of snooty NCAA money hoarders that I don't see eye to eye with.

Some of you may not like this view, but it is mine.

oumartin
7/13/2007, 08:25 PM
he's right on the money. good read.. ;)

SCOUT
7/13/2007, 10:11 PM
Aside from his misguided football knowledge, he's also a very conventional writer.

Meh. I stopped caring about what other's think a long, long time ago. I, personally, have major, major fundamental disagreements with the entire establishment of college football and how it generates millions upon millions of revenues on the backs of young adults with complete disregard for their well being (sure, they get scholarships, but some of these guys are used and thrown away as the majority never complete a degree).

So, fundamentally, I really have no problem with us breaking the rules in the past to do what I think should be done anyways. I don't support rules just because they are "the rules."

What Barry and Bud did was "wrong," but only by the opinion and rumblings of snooty NCAA money hoarders that I don't see eye to eye with.

Some of you may not like this view, but it is mine.
Would you mind providing the link to the source showing that the "majority never complete a degree?"

Thanks.

SoonerBOI
7/13/2007, 11:13 PM
I had a dream last night. I saw this dude hanging in a @#%^&*.

insuranceman_22
7/14/2007, 12:14 AM
*******

birddog
7/14/2007, 12:18 AM
Would you mind providing the link to the source showing that the "majority never complete a degree?"

Thanks.

http://stanford.scout.com/2/481569.html

this is the most recent i could find on graduation rates-2005. you can do a google search and find alot of articles under "oklahoma football graduation rates"

Jewstin
7/14/2007, 04:30 PM
Would you mind providing the link to the source showing that the "majority never complete a degree?"

Thanks.

Hrm, based on the link birddog provided, my generalization about graduation rates was inaccurate. According to scout.com, the overall graduation rate for Div 1A teams is 63%. I withdraw that claim, then (I'm actually incredibly surprised ... I had recalled reading they were far worse). Definitely a plus.

Still don't see eye to eye with much of what the NCAA does, though. ;)