Search
Log in
Register
Teams
Teams
Fan Sites
Forums
Shows
College
College Football News
College Football Player Rankings
College Football Rankings
College Football Playoff
College Basketball News
Women's Sports
NIL
NIL News
NIL Valuation
NIL Deals
NIL Deal Tracker
Sports Business
Transfer Portal
Transfer Portal News
NCAA Transfer Portal
Transfer Portal Rankings
Transfer Portal Team Rankings
Recruiting
Football Recruiting
Basketball Recruiting
Database
Team Rankings
Player Rankings
Industry Comparison
Commitments
Recruiting Prediction Machine
High School
High School News
Schools
Rankings
Scores
Draft
NFL Draft
NFL Draft News
Draft By Stars
College Draft History
College Draft Totals
NBA Draft
NBA Draft News
Pro
NFL
NASCAR
NBA
Culture
Sports Betting
About
About
On3 App
Advertise
Press
FAQ
Contact
Get a profile. Be recruited.
New posts
Menu
Install the app
Install
On3:
College Football Bowl Projections Week 3: Full list of matchups, playoff predictions
On3:
Brent Venables' OU overhaul produces big win over Michigan, but what comes next is most important
On3:
Florida's mistakes against USF weren't 'uncharacteristic,' they were emblematic of the Billy Napier era
On3:
College Football Playoff Prediction: Welcome to Oklahoma, Iowa State and USF
On3:
AP Poll Top 25: College Football Rankings see shake up after Week 2
Reply to thread
Forums
West Virginia
Mountaineer Message Board
Kenneth Starr and Baylor
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Message
<blockquote data-quote="HurdyGurdyEer" data-source="post: 129575401" data-attributes="member: 1746848"><p>Was he "demoted" to law professor? Or was he already a professor of law at Baylor?</p><p>There really is a difference.</p><p></p><p>And speaking of eggs, who came first to Baylor? Art Briles or Kenneth Starr?</p><p>The correct answer will tell you who got the head start on the way Baylor's football program was being managed.</p><p></p><p>Ken Starr stepped up and did the right thing .... I think we all agree it should have happened sooner. But he did do something and frankly, none of us know the inner workings at Baylor. We only know that Starr eventually did the right thing.</p><p></p><p>I mean .... think about it .... the alternative would have been to retain Briles and attempt to change the culture and move forward and make the best of things. Maybe Starr was attempting to do that all along and realized too late that he was failing and then called in the investigators. None of us really know. But I'll give him the benefit of the doubt since he is the one who got the ball rolling on the investigation.</p><p></p><p>One day, I suspect, the whole story will come out. And if I were a betting man I would bet that Starr will be seen as a good man who stepped into the middle of a mess and only screwed up by trying to steer things in the right direction before he realized he would not be able to do so. I would bet on it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="HurdyGurdyEer, post: 129575401, member: 1746848"] Was he "demoted" to law professor? Or was he already a professor of law at Baylor? There really is a difference. And speaking of eggs, who came first to Baylor? Art Briles or Kenneth Starr? The correct answer will tell you who got the head start on the way Baylor's football program was being managed. Ken Starr stepped up and did the right thing .... I think we all agree it should have happened sooner. But he did do something and frankly, none of us know the inner workings at Baylor. We only know that Starr eventually did the right thing. I mean .... think about it .... the alternative would have been to retain Briles and attempt to change the culture and move forward and make the best of things. Maybe Starr was attempting to do that all along and realized too late that he was failing and then called in the investigators. None of us really know. But I'll give him the benefit of the doubt since he is the one who got the ball rolling on the investigation. One day, I suspect, the whole story will come out. And if I were a betting man I would bet that Starr will be seen as a good man who stepped into the middle of a mess and only screwed up by trying to steer things in the right direction before he realized he would not be able to do so. I would bet on it. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Name
Post reply
Forums
West Virginia
Mountaineer Message Board
Kenneth Starr and Baylor
Top
Bottom