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    Column: Buckeyes just have all the luck

    What are the chances Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith was laughing out loud when he composed his response to the additional sanctions heaped on his school by the NCAA?

    "We are surprised and disappointed by the NCAA's decision," his statement read. "However, we have decided not to appeal the decision because we need to move forward as an institution."

    Based on the kid-gloves treatment afforded the Buckeyes, that shouldn't be a problem. Ohio State had already offered to vacate the 2010 season, return bowl money, go on two years of NCAA probation and use five fewer football scholarships over the next three years. On Tuesday, the NCAA tacked on a year of probation, took away four additional scholarships and imposed a one-year bowl ban. Even combined, those penalties are roughly half as severe as those the NCAA dropped on Southern California in June 2010.

    A comparison of the cases is instructive. At USC, Heisman trophy-winning running back Reggie Bush and basketball star O.J. Mayo were found to have pocketed thousands of dollars in improper benefits from agents. The bigger sin, though, appears to have been the Trojans' decision to be less than cooperative when NCAA investigators began snooping around the program and downright defiant when the enforcement people issued veiled threats. As a result, the NCAA leveled the dreaded "lack of institutional control" against USC, banned the Trojans from postseason play for two years and docked them 30 scholarships for the next three.

    In Ohio State's case, five players swapped jerseys, rings and assorted memorabilia for thousands in cash and tattoos, former coach Jim Tressel learned of the exchanges in April 2010, and not only kept the news to himself, but lied about it to his superiors or the NCAA on four separate occasions. There is no better example of lack of institutional control than what Ohio State's clueless president, Gordon Gee, said in the middle of the unfolding scandal, when he and Smith tried to staunch the damage last March by suspending Tressel for two meaningless games and fining him $250,000: "I'm just hopeful the coach doesn't dismiss me."

    But it got better. Barely 10 days later, Tressel's suspension was extended to five games and by the end of May, he was forced out. In July, Ohio State half-heartedly punished itself and in August appeared before the NCAA's Committee on Infractions. Then we learned that months after the original scandal made headlines, nine players got paid by a longtime booster for showing up at charity events and cozy summer jobs. By November, the NCAA upgraded the notice of allegations to include "failure to monitor" and Ohio State offered to cut five scholarships.

    But it got even better. For reasons that have yet to be explained, the NCAA's enforcement staff stopped short of lack of institutional control charges, meaning the infractions committee can't whack Ohio State the way it did Southern Cal. In the end, the school's athletic department gave Tressel a hefty severance deal and nearly all of the blame and that was good enough for the NCAA. It slapped the once-beloved coach with a five-year "show-cause" order that likely means he'll never coach in college again. Tressel has been reduced to a job as a game-day consultant with the NFL's Indianapolis Colts.

    And if the Buckeyes escaping the punishment they deserve because of a technicality sounds familiar, it should. The five players originally suspended last December after the tattoo-parlor portion of the story broke were allowed to play in the Sugar Bowl thanks to an NCAA ruling so favorable that it should have made everyone involved blush redder than one of Tressel's sweater vests. Together, Ohio State and the NCAA dusted off an obscure interpretation of the rules that allowed postponement of a suspension — in the case of the so-called "Tat 5" it was supposed to be five games — to preserve a "unique opportunity." Then, conveniently, they decided the Sugar Bowl presented just such an opportunity.

    Maybe some schools just have all the luck. Or maybe by cooperating, even as incompetent as Ohio State has been from the beginning of the investigation to the bitter end, the Buckeyes bought themselves enough good will to avoid the scorched-earth treatment USC got. Whichever it is, based on the lack of guts the NCAA showed in this case, it might be the one outfit in America that would finish behind Congress in a popularity poll — especially if the survey was conducted in the Los Angeles area.

    In the coming months, North Carolina and Miami will face the infractions committee for scandals that are every bit as juicy. When committee member Greg Sankey was asked whether the additional penalties the NCAA levied against Ohio State meant things would be tougher for future violators, he replied, "I would not suggest this is necessarily a new day, but these penalties are significant."

    Right. And North Carolina and Miami would sign on the dotted line for the same deal in a heartbeat. Ohio State, after all, is hoping to start recovering from its disappointment with a trip to the Gator Bowl, despite a 6-6 record.

    "I'm disappointed on the one hand," Gee said when reporters caught up with him at halftime of a basketball game Tuesday night. "But on the other hand I'm very relieved because I feel closure. I think we can now move forward.

    "I have been one of the most outspoken advocates for reform in the NCAA," he added a moment later. "My hope is that what the NCAA is signaling is a higher bar and a higher standard."

    Easy for Gee to say — right after he and his school slithered underneath it.

    ___

    Jim Litke is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at jlitke(at)ap.org. Follow him at Twitter.com/JimLitke

     

    45 comments

    • MadMark  •  5 mths ago
      And of course, Auburn got away with a proven violation where Scam Newton was offering his services for pay but that only amounted to a ONE DAY SUSPENSION! Can't hurt that National Title Game revenue cash cow. What a load of crap the NCAA is. They violate any rule they want and then act all sanctomonius about OSU players selling things they owned for money. Tressel failed big time and is gone for it but stop being such idiots about everything. So many OSU haters out there. Where was this level of interest when Scam's family ADMITTED they sought cash. Why did he play at Auburn when Miss State had not yet turned down the request for $125000? Where did his dad come up with the cash to pay for the repairs that were going to shut down his bogus church! Why did they avoi giving Scam the athlete of the year award from the SEC? They were still certain that the NCAA would take it all away. But nooooooo. Not the cash cow. Auburn doesn't have their own network, Big Ten does. NCAA gets way pess from those scolls so they punish them far worse. Auburn paid him and they all know it. #$%$ #$%$ #$%$!
    • Johny Q  •  Chandler, United States  •  5 mths ago
      No investigation into Cam Newtons play for pay...NCAA slithered that one
      • mtpwolverine 5 mths ago
        No investigation? What planet do you live on?
      • MadMark 5 mths ago
        Right, they investigated, found he had asked for pay, suspended him for ONE day and nothign else. The rules states that if the player or someone in his family representing the player asks for pay, they are to be suspended. Somehow this wasnt applied to Scam though. Wonder why........
      • JaimeAtHome 5 mths ago
        The SEC has a special clause allowing it to pay its players.
    • Beavis  •  5 mths ago
      get rid of the ncaa and the bowl system too
    • Kirk  •  Philadelphia, United States  •  5 mths ago
      USC got "scorched earth?" Nonsense. The NCAA barely did anything to USC, and likewise Ohio State. Your analysis starts in the wrong place - the NCAA is a joke at all levels.
      • X 5 mths ago
        Barely did anything? The loss of 30 football scholarships, a Two year Bowl Ban for the actions of 1 Football Player, a Basketball player and a Tennis Team? Each individual sport should have got penalties equal to the crime in the sport. For the SC Football team, that should have been the loss of 2 scholarships for the each football player involved with the crime a la what happened with Alabama. In today's competitive college football world, the loss of ten scholarships per year means that USC will only have 55 scholarship players in 2014 vs the 82 that OSU will have. However, you are right when you say the NCAA is a joke at all levels.
      • josephd 5 mths ago
        ncaa hammered Bama a few years back
      • JaimeAtHome 5 mths ago
        USC had cheating going on in three different programs. Hence the "loss of institutional control".
    • fro  •  5 mths ago
      Penn State Abuse not on the NCAA radar for ten years but Ohio State Tattoos are? Great job of policing the schools, this organization is the most corrupt of all.
    • Rick  •  Surfside, United States  •  5 mths ago
      The NCAA is more corrupt than any of the institutions it purports to govern.
    • shadog  •  Cincinnati, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Those players were allowed to play in the Sugar Bowl because the SUGAR BOWL wanted them to play! Those players NOT playing meant less $$$ to the Sugar Bowl in attendence and TV ratings. Can't have that in college sports!

      And why the hell did this take so long, this should have been finalized a long time ago and the bowl ban should have been for this year.

      The NCAA is a joke
    • zisbal  •  Dayton, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Why no mention of South Carolina ? Ten football players received $55,000 in preferred lodging at a hotel and gifts from boosters. I think that is significant.
    • Mack fo Shiz  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  5 mths ago
      To compare Miami to OSU is rediculous. The booster involved was on the sidelines at Miami. He provided booze and #$%$ to players at parties where Miami coaches were said to be in attendance. The booster puts the value of what he provided to the players in the millions (if I corrrectly recall the Yahoo story on that). Ohio State players got maybe $10,000 in cash and free tattoos, plus it was $200 a player to attend the charity function. Wheres the mention of Cam Newton playing after it became known that his father was negotiating with schools for his services. The sins of the father are supposed to become the sins of the player. But the NCAA had to protect the BCS setup.
      • mtpwolverine 5 mths ago
        Once again, the OSU zombies leave out the fact that their own administration was complicit in the cheating. Tressell lied on no less than 4 occasions to the NCAA. Much worse when your staff is involved. No allegations yet about Miami's coaching staff being involved. May come out, but that is the big difference. OSU was dirty from the inside out.
      • James H 5 mths ago
        Tats v. Tutes--who is worse?
    • sseek  •  5 mths ago
      If the NCAA or any other group did an indepth investigation into any big time program they would find infractions of varying levels at ALL of them. Every coach at each of these schools sits in their office everyday and says to themselves, "I don't want to know, I don't want to know". The pressure on these coaches is so huge that really most people cannot imangine including the joker that wrote this article. While Tressle was WRONG, he did what 99% of us would do in the same situation. The kids own the stuff and made a trade. Funny how every journalist is a saint while hammering someone else. I would love to look inside this guys closet!
      • mtpwolverine 5 mths ago
        Deflect, accuse others, accept no responsibility. It's the arrogant Buckeye way!
      • bobby gunz 5 mths ago
        He already said Tressel was wrong - that is not deflecting. Lighten up Mtpwolverine.
    • The Chuckster  •  Peoria, United States  •  5 mths ago
      It's actually quite simple. The NCAA is in it for the money. They realized the only one who got hurt by banning USC from a bowl was the NCAA. It did nothing to stop other athletes from taking money. The NCAA is the organization with no control and now they realize penalizing schools just costs them money. They will turn a blind eye to the violations at Miami, S Carolina, Auburn and Oregon as well.
    • C  •  Tallmadge, United States  •  5 mths ago
      The NCAA is the joke here. They make millions while some kids trade personal property they earned for something they wanted. Does the NCAA stop athletes from selling their books after classes are over? What is your problem with OSU? Obviously you have a personal beef.
      • beach424 5 mths ago
        It was only their personal property because they were athletes. The average student doesn't have this stuff to sell to pay for their education. The athletes get a free education and then sell the stuff they are given because they are athletes.
      • mtpwolverine 5 mths ago
        I love how OSU zombies say its trading memorabilia. It's about being bribed to show for charity events, being paid for non-existant Summer jobs, and your head coach knowing about it and LYING to the NCAA about it, while rigging Summer football camps to give out swag to top recruits. At least be honest when you make your argument against the NCAA. That's my problem with OSU. Condescending, arrogant imbeciles that think everybody want to be like them. You're a joke outside the state of Ohio. You don't even root for your own team. You chant O-H-I-O for the school 75 miles southeast of you and your band roots for them as well with a script Ohio. Are you embarrassed about the STATE part of your name? tOSU? Really? Nobody hates the University, just their retarded fans.
      • MadMark 5 mths ago
        Hey Mtpwolverine, tell me about the Fab 5 again?
    • Vincent  •  5 mths ago
      Biased article.... moving on.

      Never actually compared the amounts of money involved. USC's violation rank in the $500,000 range not $14,000.

      Compares to OSU to Miami as if these are close to the same. Give us a break. OSU players got busted for selling THEIR OWN property. The improper benefits for the charity event were the value of the free ride they got to the event. Oh no, call the cops becaise kids got transportation to a charity event in a limo.
    • Independent  •  Columbus, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Sanctions wrongly punish current and future players who were not involved. To punish the university, NCAA should have allowed post-season play next year but confiscated any money earned. Only way to get OSU's full attention is to hit 'em in the wallet.
    • Toby12  •  Indianapolis, United States  •  5 mths ago
      I think that most of the discipline is appropriate, except for the questionable sanity of allowing the players who caused the problem to play in last year's bowl game.

      I see no good reason why they were allowed to play, as discipline should be proximate to the transgression. Because of the delay in assigning the penalties, OSU's QB, the primary culprit in rules breaking, did not have any discipline accorded him. So, the not so veiled message to players is that if you can possibly get away with it, go ahead and do it, and if you are caught, the university alone is punished.
    • Obama's Stash  •  5 mths ago
      This author needs to consider two things:
      1) What USC did was far worse, both in monetary terms and in their willingness to cooperate with the investigation. Now compare Tressel’s punishment to Pete Carroll’s (hint: Carroll suffered no punishment)
      2) The NCAA whacks the Buckeyes for a few thousand dollars worth of memorabilia, yet Auburn pays Cam Newton six figures and the NCAA couldn’t appear less interested.

      Still think the Buckeyes got so ‘lucky’?
    • Chad H  •  Cleveland, United States  •  5 mths ago
      The biggest difference is about $200,000 that would be what just Reggie Bush was paid as compared to all the benefits the OSU players got for selling their property.
    • Obama's Stash  •  5 mths ago
      These players were in the wrong because by selling their OWN personal jerseys and memorabilia, they threaten our ability to squeeze out a few more dollars of profit on the millions we already make selling merchandise bearing their names and likenesses.

      Sincerely,
      The NCAA Cabal
    • Shannon  •  Columbus, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Litke, you're a jackass.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  5 mths ago
      Jim, the butthurt is obvious. Let me guess, you're a USC fan, right? Your cheating team got what it deserved. Now stop whining that other teams aren't getting punished "enough". Ohio State's behavior as a school was nothing like USC's "you can't touch us" attitude!
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