and that.....in my opinion....is a positive ruling by the Cleveland County district judge. It's good for all concerned and especially for Mixon, who by all indications, has decided to learn from his mistake. He's applied himself academically, stayed in shape, done community service and undergone cognitive behavior counseling....and remained at OU.
Public viewing of this video would have represented a form of punishment that I believe would have been excessive and might have ruined Mixon's life far beyond just his football career. It's a reprieve that was fair when considering the bigger picture for both participants....in my opinion.
The more I read of him, the more I believe he made a bad knee jerk response in a situation he never should have been in.
What I hope, more than anything else, is that all the players learned something from this terrible event....that they represent the team, the university, their families and themselves as high profile athletes at a big time football program both on and off the field. I also hope that the coaches use this event as a warning and/or reminder to incoming players about responsibility and accountability and that the celebrity status they have had in high school is no excuse for bad behavior in the adult world....and that there is now a zero tolerance policy for violating rules of conduct.
Coach Gundy believes Mixon has learned his lesson and is a better person now. That is good enough for me.
As for Amelia Molitor, I hope she learned the same lesson and has fully recovered from her injuries. Perhaps she has also received some behavioral counseling.....it seems to me that she needs it at least as much as Mixon.
Public viewing of this video would have represented a form of punishment that I believe would have been excessive and might have ruined Mixon's life far beyond just his football career. It's a reprieve that was fair when considering the bigger picture for both participants....in my opinion.
The more I read of him, the more I believe he made a bad knee jerk response in a situation he never should have been in.
What I hope, more than anything else, is that all the players learned something from this terrible event....that they represent the team, the university, their families and themselves as high profile athletes at a big time football program both on and off the field. I also hope that the coaches use this event as a warning and/or reminder to incoming players about responsibility and accountability and that the celebrity status they have had in high school is no excuse for bad behavior in the adult world....and that there is now a zero tolerance policy for violating rules of conduct.
Coach Gundy believes Mixon has learned his lesson and is a better person now. That is good enough for me.
As for Amelia Molitor, I hope she learned the same lesson and has fully recovered from her injuries. Perhaps she has also received some behavioral counseling.....it seems to me that she needs it at least as much as Mixon.