Stallion wrote:I know that kind of adulation of the "Immortal 9" makes you a "cool guy" at the Mustang Club Preseason Hoot-and Annie but those [deleted] devastated athletics and the university for generations. We didn't turn those guys into the NCAA-WFAA, the Dallas Morning News and Dallas Times Herald exposed the bumbling dumb-fucks leaving the university subject to the Death Penalty. So keep those "cool opinions" coming at the Mustang Club Jamboree among your fellow cheerleaders about how everybody was doing exactly what SMU was doing even though no other school has ever been caught red-handed doing what SMU did in the History of College Athletics-ie the Chairman of the Board and ad hoc committee of the Board authorizing the continued payment of a Payroll with the full knowledge of the President of the University, AD and Football Coach after 4 previous probations within a decade. Because after all guys like you can talk all you want on the sidelines and aren't one of the "Big Boys" that are responsible for coming in and cleaning up all the crap left behind when the NCAA, the Methodist Church, educational accrediting agencies want to have a talk. You aren't the one who is going to have to come in and fix the financial hole these idiots dug for SMU and lost revenue which runs into the hundreds of million dollars in damages. Screw all those [deleted]
You can say all you want about the 9 and present them as worse than what went on elsewhere, but the reality is that the school itself is to blame for allowing the boosters to proceed. I don't attend the Hoot and Annies as I am not a "cool guy".
The Truth...
The school and its boosters implemented a ΓÇ£phase-outΓÇ¥ plan, which meant they would continue paying the dozen or so athletes to whom they had promised money until their graduation. One of those students-athletes, David Stanley, came forward after being kicked off the team and gave a televised interview outlining the improper benefits he had received from SMU. His words alone may not have been enough to damn the university, but an appearance on Dallas’ ABC affiliate, WFAA, by
Coach Collins, athletic director Bob Hitch and recruiting coordinator Henry Lee Parker sealed the program’s fate.Their interview with WFAA’s sports director Dale Hansen is a mesmerizing watch. Hansen sets a beautiful trap for Parker involving a letter that the recruiting director had initialed, and the recruiting coordinator walks right into it, all but proving that payments to players came directly from the recruiting office. The fact that Parker, Collins and Hitch looked uncomfortably guilty the entire time didn’t help their case.
http://time.com/3720498/ncaa-smu-death-penalty/On another note - how is paying some players a small amount of cash worse than players being BOUGHT and SOLD by their HS coach in the SEC without the player even knowing that this is happening. See Albert Means case and Alabama.