I find a couple of things interesting here.
According to national sentiment, judging from the comment sections on various articles online, the SEC is full of thugs, and Slive is a corrupt warden, letting the inmates run wild. AJ Green selling a jersey was the biggest and clearest example of this for selling his jersey.
Jesus, are these guys going to have
anything to show for their time spent at Ohio State? Sounds like every trophy, ring, and official gear was taken to Pawn Stars. Sounds much more egregious than selling one jersey.
Of course, to many of these fans outside the SEC (or hell, just outside of Auburn), Cam's dad
talking about $180,000 to a different school Cam didn't go to is a bigger deal than these guys actually collecting close to that for any memorabilia they can scrap up.
And what's with this all about?
The players are eligible for the bowl game because the NCAA determined they did not receive adequate rules education during the time period the violations occurred, Lennon said.
"We were not as explicit with our student-athlete education as we should have been in the 2007-08 and 2008-09 academic years regarding the sale of apparel, awards and gifts issued by the athletics department," Ohio State athletic director Gene Smith said in a statement. "We began to significantly improve our education in November of 2009 to address these issues. After going through this experience, we will further enhance our education for all our student-athletes as we move forward."
What? They didn't know the rules...
how the hell did they not know you can't sell all of your awards, jerseys, etc. after the high profile AJ Green case?...so we're not going to punish them right away...just starting with the
next game, after this bowl game. How does that make sense? I'm trying to connect the dots and make the punishment fit the crime, but if they're guilty, why wait until next season to punish them? So that three out of the five players involved can jet for the NFL and not actually be punished at all?