Jim Tressel: The Witch Hunt Has Ended
Congratulations NCAA! Your Witch Hunt at Ohio State has almost been completed! All you have left to do now is kick all of the players off of the team, strip the school of every game won under Jim Tressel, and fine The Ohio State University. What else… oh yeah, throw probation at them, keep them down.
Jim Tressel exudes class. I had the pleasure of being a guest coach of the Red-White Game at Youngstown State University in 1991 and met Tressel. I was impressed at his demeanor with the average student and his willingness to make his program the entire city of Youngstowns, his drive to make a Fall Saturday at the Ice Castle an event, but most importantly his desire to win. He did plenty of winning at Youngstown State and was promoted to his dream job coaching the nationally-prominent Buckeyes. Never an “in your face”, cocky, kind of coach either. Tressel often deflected praise with the only negatives he could scour up from week-to-week.
The only memorabilia I will ever associate to Jim Tressel is the countless piles of things he has donated to charities. I wrote Tressel a letter in 2006 asking for something to use for a Chinese Auction at the first-ever Korey Stringer Memorial golf outing. I took all of the required steps and had a signed mini-helmet sitting on my doorstep in a week. That item, along with some Kelly Pavlik memorabilia, drew the most money in the auction. In fact, it seems like every charity event I went to locally, there was always something with Tressel’s signature on it to assist the folks raising money.
The main function of a college football coach is to coach football. Tressel cannot babysit every player he has to make sure that they are doing the moral thing 24/7. As Ohio State Alumnus and current New Orleans Saints DB Malcolm Jenkins recently said, “They have a formal meeting with the players every year to go over the rules of what they can and can’t do. When they [players] do something wrong, they know it is wrong.”
The boosters are a good concept at the college level. However, there are always a couple of them who like to lean on the water cooler at work and brag about what they can do to manipulate a system for their own betterment. I will never badmouth anyone who supports collegiate athletics with scholarship donations. I will criticize people who do it for their own gain and notoriety as a status symbol.
Leslie Cochran, the former President at Youngstown State University recently made comments in Sports Illustrated that made Tressel and his coaching staff sound like the new regime of the Youngstown Mafia. Cochran referred to the program as “family” and said that those things happened but were always kept within the family. Pretty brash for the “father” who sat at the head of the table glowing with pride when Tressel was winning National Championships. Sad thing is, Cochran thinks that a fly pattern is the path an insect travels in a corn field.
I recently stopped to buy gas on my way to work. I was wearing an Ohio State shirt. When I went inside to prepay for my criminally-priced fuel, a Michigan fan, wearing a Michigan shirt pounced on the wrong Buckeye fan.
“Looks like you guys are done for awhile”, he said.
“Yeah, I guess we are. If you guys would have won any Big-10 Championships and had rings to sell you would have gotten into more trouble than us”, was about the best response I could give.
Congratulations on what you have achieved so far Coach Tressel. You have more to do and don’t let the minority ruin what you have created for yourself. Relish in your successes and learn from your defeats. This may be the biggest defeat of your storybook career, but I know it won’t be the end. You didn’t know your ex-quarterback was driving with a suspended license. You didn’t know your running back had a tattoo of a rose on his thigh. Guess the NCAA will have to add some more rules so they can move on to the next campsite to invade like coyotes.
The NCAA crackdown is coming to a school near you!
Good article! Seems the NCAA is going to try to level the field by knocking the good programs down a few pegs to compete with everyone else.
Very well said.