Dooby wrote:I love it when people say there should have been or would be a lawsuit by alumni against the NCAA if the death penalty happened today.
THERE WAS ONE. IT WAS DISMISSED.
Details please (or is it on Rivals?

GO PONIES!!!
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For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas todayModerators: PonyPride, SmooPower
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Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas today
Details please (or is it on Rivals? ![]() GO PONIES!!!
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas todayThere was a case by an SMU alum, a booster and cheerleader (maybe a bandmember, too). It was shortly after the death penalty. It was filed against the NCAA in the US District Court. It was dismissed for lack of standing.
At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas todayMcCormack v. National Collegiate Athletic Asso., 845 F.2d 1338 (5th Cir. 1988).
(footnotes deleted) At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas todayDooby- thanks for the info. Very interesting. However, I believe the university would have had a right to sue and perhaps get a hearing rather than an action by some alums.
GO PONIES!!!
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas today
It would not have been a slam dunk case. This would not have been a criminal case, it would have been a civil case tried in a Dallas court and there would have been multiple theories, including breach of contract because the NCAA was not enforcing the rules equally among schools. I have no doubt that we could have found a friendly forum that would have at least temporarily enjoined the NCAA from enforcing its penalty against us, and then I would have fought like hell to bring every school within 500 miles of here into the discovery net. By the way, the case that was filed was correctly decided. The alum had no standing.
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas todayIf you take the Top 10 teams over the past 25 years in both BB and FB you would have 500 teams in total.
To JT, Stallion, or anyone else for that matter....how many of these top 500 teams do you believe 'cheated' i.e. paid some of their players? I would put that number at somewhere between 450 to 500. If that is indeed the case, the argument about 'how' the cheating was implemented becomes immaterial IMO, the bigger issue here is that everyone is breaking the rules yet only 1 is being punished. I find it ironic that our attorney friends feel there is no recourse through the judicial system for an obvious miscarriage of justice. While that might be true, there is also the court of public opinion. We should not have rolled over as easily as we did.
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas todaySo you want a Tier 2 National University to stand up and say that we admit we cheated, admit we were guilty 5 times in a little over 10 years but we think we have a right to continue cheating because we think everybody else is doing it. This is what I'm talking about-too many SMU fans too close to the situation regurgitating this crap to each other over and over again until they've actually believe this is logical. Lack of Leadership at all levels of the university that allowed this perverted thought pattern to fester. The defenition of lack of institutional control. SMU joined the NCAA and agreed to abide by their rules. SMU cheated its [deleted] off and broke NCAA rules even after Death Penalty sanctions created- SMU admits ALL FACTS necessary to establish lack of institutional control-otherwise known as "telling the truth for once". Either abide by NCAA rules you agree to follow or leave the NCAA and start your own University Professional Football League and play by your own rules. Case Dismissed. Attorney's fees awarded to the NCAA for SMU filing of a frivolous lawsuit. Next case.
"With a quarter of a tank of gas, we can get everything we need right here in DFW." -SMU Head Coach Chad Morris
When momentum starts rolling downhill in recruiting-WATCH OUT.
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas today
So you think the "death penalty" was fair? Do you remember that some of the infractions we were placed on probation leading up to this debacle included an assistant coach playing handball with a recruit (illegal tryout) and giving a recruit a polaroid photo of himself from a party (illegal gift). If you think we were treated equally to UT, then I agree with you. I live in Austin. It is a fools paradise down here and the athletes have the run of the town. The point is that the NCAA looks the other way when the teams that attract big money are involved, i.e. Alabama.
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas todayYes we certainly deserved the death penalty under the terms of the NCAA rules and regulations which we voluntarily agreed to follow. Quit minimizing by pointing out trivial, minor points. It was the most outrageous violation of both the spirit and specific rules and regulations by an NCAA Institution by the controling University officials ever clearly proven. No case comes anywhere close to this monumental screw-up by the each and every one of the AD, Head Coach, Coaching Staff, President, Board of Govenors, ad hoc committee of the Board Chairman and the great magical wizard Govenor Elect William "the Clown" Clements.
"With a quarter of a tank of gas, we can get everything we need right here in DFW." -SMU Head Coach Chad Morris
When momentum starts rolling downhill in recruiting-WATCH OUT.
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas todaySo where is the line drawn that seperates the "NCAA ignors the cheating because only ______ is involved" to " it's a Major infraction worthy of severe punishment because _______and _______and _______were involved?" Let's face it, we weren't given the DP because we were paying players just like everyone else was...we were given the DP because we flipped the NCAA a big stinking bird and told them to go F themselves (for all practical purposes). Right? Last edited by PK on Wed Feb 03, 2010 12:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
SMU's first president, Robert S. Hyer, selected Harvard Crimson and Yale Blue as SMU's colors to symbolize SMU's high academic standards. We are one of the few Universities to have school colors with real meaning...and we just blow them off.
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas todayI can't believe people even argue this. SMU, the last time it was put on probation, explicitly stated that Sherwood Blount was no longer associated with the university and had nothing to do with the program and that the paying of players had stopped. Then, SMU is caught again, and low and behold, not only is SMU still paying players, but Sherwood Blount is knee-deep in it. If you are the NCAA, what the hell are you supposed to do to SMU? The NCAA clearly could not trust a word SMU said.
At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas today
Stallion, if you care to respond, you can have the last word as I have truly kicked a dead horse and this will be my last post on this thread. I happen to think over 900 of the top 1,000 teams from the past 25 years have cheated. You encapsulated my whole complaint.....NOBODY is abiding by the rules. I do agree with you that if any school deserved it, it was us. I just believe nobody deserved it.
Re: For those interested Jeffcoat committed to Texas today
And there is the answer to you question as to why this "obvious miscarriage of justice" cannot be redressed through the courts. You have no competent evidence. But don't feel bad, nobody does. I'd kill for a Nobel Peace Prize.
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