Patterson will not suspend Pachall. What a surprise
Posted: Sat Aug 04, 2012 11:24 am
Mac Engel came down pretty [deleted] the GP and the TCU program calling for them to suspend Pachall. I was a little surprise but hard to argue about the possibility of a suspension. But it will not happen according to you know who
By Mac Engel
[email protected]
All of those students, and the growing number of ex-lettermen, who insisted that TCU coach Gary Patterson was really pushing it with his starting quarterback, were right.
There was way more going on with Casey Pachall than the general public knew.
I was wrong -- guilty of wanting to believe the kid rather than my gut.
Turns out TCU quarterback Casey Pachall was one of the players who failed a drug test for smoking weed. And then he told the cops he used cocaine. And ecstasy, too.
Friday's news put his head coach in one of the worst positions possible.
Gary should suspend Pachall for the first four games of the 2012 season. But he told me a suspension is not coming.
In light of the fiasco at State College, Pa., now is really not the time for a college head football coach to even remotely be perceived as either covering up or permitting any illegal behavior on his watch in order to protect the status quo.As much as Gary Patterson needs Casey Pachall to win games, and ultimately wants to do what's right for the young man's well- being, neither he nor TCU can afford to give the appearance the punishment for these behaviors is running wind sprints after practice.
"Casey failed one drug test in 25 -- one," GP told me in a phone call Friday evening. "I tested him every Monday during the season. We followed every proper procedure the university has in place with a failed drug test."
By definition, Gary is absolutely, 100 percent correct. Both he and the school did act within the pre-established guidelines in regards to Pachall's off-the-field behavior.
One failed drug test, by TCU standards, means, according to the TCU Student Handbook, section 3.2.10 Drugs, "a. failing a non-incident motivated drug screen one time will result in mandatory drug education counseling and/or required drug treatment."
That is what Pachall has done.
Since failing the test on Feb. 1, GP told me Friday, Pachall has been tested an additional six times -- each with negative results.
Gary said he was unaware of the released police affidavit obtained by TCU360.com until Friday afternoon.
That is plausible because the entire report of this February arrest was only released a matter of days ago. Gary said he didn't know his QB admitted to the cops he used cocaine and ecstasy.
"I really don't know why he would say that," Gary said.
Pachall likely said it because he was being honest, and he was scared.
Officially, Pachall did not fail a drug test for anything other than weed. That's what TCU can go on.
But why would he lie about using two illegal narcotics?
Weed is one thing. Coke and X reside in an entirely different part of the illegal drug spectrum.
This is what you have: A football program that on Feb. 15 quickly dismissed four players who accused of dealing drugs; even if the amount was small, drug dealing is a deal breaker.
At that moment, the very least you have is a program that has a little bit of dirt on it, and that is actively moving forward to distance itself from the incident.
Now you have a starting quarterback who failed a drug test for marijuana on Feb. 1, and two weeks later, with no motivation other than being honest, admitted to police he has used cocaine and ecstasy as a one-time thing.
There is no way around the fact it just looks bad.
Now is not the right time to merely adhere to university policy regarding this type of conduct from such a high-profile person, or program. It furthers a perception that both the school and the team insist it is merely an aberration and not part of the culture of the program.
Gary said he will make his QB available Sunday for comment at the Horned Frogs' media day, which is the official start to fall practice. Expect Pachall to make a statement, and that is it.
Even if Casey issues a "no comment" to this the rest of the season, it will follow him all year. He is going to hear about it from Dallas to Norman to Morgantown.
According to TCU policy, he has no margin for error now in regard to drug testing. One more strike and it's buh-bye.
On July 23 at Big 12 media day, Pachall told me that some of his previous behavior helped create an unfavorable perception: "I regret a lot of that stuff, but I have learned from it. I know what is a stupid decision, and to not go around or attempt to be around [stupid decisions]. The scrutiny and the crap that comes along with that, that is the part I do regret."
I don't believe Gary is cheating the system to protect a kid who, he says, needs just 25 hours to earn a degree. But I do believe Gary is taking advantage of the fact the rules work in his favor.
In cases such as this and in times such as these, going above and beyond normal university protocol is the more prudent decision, even if it could mean a loss or two.
Mac Engel, 817-390-7697
Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/2012/08/03 ... rylink=cpy
By Mac Engel
[email protected]
All of those students, and the growing number of ex-lettermen, who insisted that TCU coach Gary Patterson was really pushing it with his starting quarterback, were right.
There was way more going on with Casey Pachall than the general public knew.
I was wrong -- guilty of wanting to believe the kid rather than my gut.
Turns out TCU quarterback Casey Pachall was one of the players who failed a drug test for smoking weed. And then he told the cops he used cocaine. And ecstasy, too.
Friday's news put his head coach in one of the worst positions possible.
Gary should suspend Pachall for the first four games of the 2012 season. But he told me a suspension is not coming.
In light of the fiasco at State College, Pa., now is really not the time for a college head football coach to even remotely be perceived as either covering up or permitting any illegal behavior on his watch in order to protect the status quo.As much as Gary Patterson needs Casey Pachall to win games, and ultimately wants to do what's right for the young man's well- being, neither he nor TCU can afford to give the appearance the punishment for these behaviors is running wind sprints after practice.
"Casey failed one drug test in 25 -- one," GP told me in a phone call Friday evening. "I tested him every Monday during the season. We followed every proper procedure the university has in place with a failed drug test."
By definition, Gary is absolutely, 100 percent correct. Both he and the school did act within the pre-established guidelines in regards to Pachall's off-the-field behavior.
One failed drug test, by TCU standards, means, according to the TCU Student Handbook, section 3.2.10 Drugs, "a. failing a non-incident motivated drug screen one time will result in mandatory drug education counseling and/or required drug treatment."
That is what Pachall has done.
Since failing the test on Feb. 1, GP told me Friday, Pachall has been tested an additional six times -- each with negative results.
Gary said he was unaware of the released police affidavit obtained by TCU360.com until Friday afternoon.
That is plausible because the entire report of this February arrest was only released a matter of days ago. Gary said he didn't know his QB admitted to the cops he used cocaine and ecstasy.
"I really don't know why he would say that," Gary said.
Pachall likely said it because he was being honest, and he was scared.
Officially, Pachall did not fail a drug test for anything other than weed. That's what TCU can go on.
But why would he lie about using two illegal narcotics?
Weed is one thing. Coke and X reside in an entirely different part of the illegal drug spectrum.
This is what you have: A football program that on Feb. 15 quickly dismissed four players who accused of dealing drugs; even if the amount was small, drug dealing is a deal breaker.
At that moment, the very least you have is a program that has a little bit of dirt on it, and that is actively moving forward to distance itself from the incident.
Now you have a starting quarterback who failed a drug test for marijuana on Feb. 1, and two weeks later, with no motivation other than being honest, admitted to police he has used cocaine and ecstasy as a one-time thing.
There is no way around the fact it just looks bad.
Now is not the right time to merely adhere to university policy regarding this type of conduct from such a high-profile person, or program. It furthers a perception that both the school and the team insist it is merely an aberration and not part of the culture of the program.
Gary said he will make his QB available Sunday for comment at the Horned Frogs' media day, which is the official start to fall practice. Expect Pachall to make a statement, and that is it.
Even if Casey issues a "no comment" to this the rest of the season, it will follow him all year. He is going to hear about it from Dallas to Norman to Morgantown.
According to TCU policy, he has no margin for error now in regard to drug testing. One more strike and it's buh-bye.
On July 23 at Big 12 media day, Pachall told me that some of his previous behavior helped create an unfavorable perception: "I regret a lot of that stuff, but I have learned from it. I know what is a stupid decision, and to not go around or attempt to be around [stupid decisions]. The scrutiny and the crap that comes along with that, that is the part I do regret."
I don't believe Gary is cheating the system to protect a kid who, he says, needs just 25 hours to earn a degree. But I do believe Gary is taking advantage of the fact the rules work in his favor.
In cases such as this and in times such as these, going above and beyond normal university protocol is the more prudent decision, even if it could mean a loss or two.
Mac Engel, 817-390-7697
Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/2012/08/03 ... rylink=cpy