At the gym last night...

GloryDawg

Heisman
Mar 3, 2005
19,012
15,096
113
while getting changed, there were two guys talking and one of them said with conviction as if he knew, that Miss State turned in Auburn because Miss State actually paid the money to the Newtons then they back out and did not give the money back. First of all you have to know me and know I usually will not let something like that go and it took all I could mustard not verbally abuse the guy but I was shaking my head while walking out thinking what a idiot. It just wasn't worth dealing with at the time.
 
Aug 26, 2008
58
0
0
I actually was told that this situation has happened to us beforre...

It was someone that was on Travis Outlaws AAU team...no clue if it was true or not but it sure sounded legit. I mean, what do you do in that situation? You can't turn them in...
 

Mephistopheles

Redshirt
Nov 15, 2010
14
0
0
I think it's BS, too.<div>
</div><div>But it brings up the scenario that I've been thinking of due to this latest loophole ruling by the NCAA, or whatever you want to call it.</div><div>
</div><div>Everybody's been saying that the ruling allows parents or other middlemen to solicit as long as the child-athlete doesn't know...yada, yada.</div><div>
</div><div>The wrinkle that it may actually allow, given the facts we know so far in this case, is for parents to solicit from schools/boosters at institutions that the athlete doesn't actually attend as long as the athlete is unaware, and the athlete can attend and be eligible at a school that the parent/middleman didn't allegedly solicit or take extra benefits from.</div><div>
</div><div>But further, does this mean that the parent/middleman can actually receive benefit from the schools/boosters that the athlete didn't choose to attend, and regardless of the parent or middleman receiving said benefit and given the athlete still is without knowledge, the athlete can still remain eligible at the school that he chose to attend that the parent didn't solicit?</div><div>
</div><div>Applied to this case, hypothetically if the MSU or Tennessee boosters agreed to and actually paid Cecil Newton upon his solicitation without Cam Newton's knowledge, and if Auburn and/or Auburn boosters were never solicited by Cecil Newton, then is there a violation that effects eligibility at Auburn based on the seeming standard that the athlete's knowledge of the solicitation is paramount?</div><div>
</div><div>If there is no violation, then there has been created a license to steal... and then go play without penalty at another school.</div>
 

brandondog

Redshirt
Sep 4, 2010
107
0
0
an episode of cops when the drugeetells the cops the drug dealer screwed him. Iwould think we are a little smarter than that......
 

Johnson85

Redshirt
Nov 22, 2009
1,206
0
0
No reason to think it's reliable, but the rumor was always that we gave him $25-30 thousand prior to the McDonald's All American game, where he put on a good enough show that going pro became the smart decision.