That the NCAA might shut their program down?
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That the NCAA might shut their program down?
I don't think the NCAA will ever shut down a program again. At the most they probably get 4 year bowl ban and a lot of scholly hits along with limited visits. The coaches probably get show clauses so Hugh may have his career ended in NCAA football. That is probably the worst hit they could take.
They aren't under repeat offender status. That's what got SMU.
Well, here's the problem with your statement - OM has most likely been caught flat out lying to the NCAA. That is not cooperating - that is full on hiding what you are doing. I not going to say that OM could get the death penalty, but they very well could get as close to it as possible when you consider that they lied and had multiple coaching and administrative members on the current staff involved in rules-breaking and it never came to light until after the original investigation was all but over.....yeah they might just wish they get the death penalty after the penalties are handed down. Burn that mother down I say
I don't want their program shut down. I want Ole Miss fans sitting in a half empty stadium watching their team get their ass kicked for 10 years.
When someone shuts you down, you move on to other things. You get into hunting, fishing, water polo, etc.. You find other things to fill your time.
When you don't get shut down but stink, you hold onto to the hope that things are turning around only to be continuously disappointed.
In realistic terms the short answer is no.
In terms of wanting every recruit in the nation to know how 17ed they are: Would you prefer firing squad or lethal injection?
My favorite hypothetical scenario was whoever's idea it was (my apologies for not remembering) to give their fans the choice of the program being crippled in the conventional manner, or getting a slap on the wrist but with the Grove being shut down for five years.
I don't think they'll be shut down, but if they are we'll need our stadium expansion sooner than later. Might even need that if they just get hit hard. They have a lot of bandwagon fans that would be willing to switch allegiance.
Trailer park
What if the NCAA considers the fact that administrators and coaches within the program who knew they were already under investigation continued to lie and pay players?
The ONLY REASON why this ISN'T the second round of investigations is because OM cheated SO MUCH that the NCAA could never get to the end of the investigation.
They may not be able to give them the death penalty but they should force OM to fire their entire staff and start from scratch because you can't trust anyone in that administration. That's what I want to see.
Never say never. It's gotten bad and they're going for the jugular. I'd be shocked it'll it happens, but it's definitely not out of the realm of possibility. If they just punished them according to their standard rules punishments (X scholarships per X violation), they could end up with 40+ scholarship reductions. They're going to have a team full of walk ons no matter what for the foreseeable future. They'd better win this year because it's going to be a while before they have a pulse again.
nt
my guess-- 4 yr probation, 2-year bowl ban, 30 scholarships, a couple of show causes
It is my understanding that players on a team that receives a 2+ year bowl ban can transfer and play immidiately. That is the death nail. Players will bail. Recruiting will be very limited.
Don't forget that UAB just "death penaltied" themselves and are back now. It CAN happen.
This is what I want to happen to them as a MSU fan. I want to blow out their walk-on legacy All-Stars 70-0 in the Egg Bowl about 5-6 times in a row and relegate them to Vanderbilt status or worse.
I want them to get blown out every SEC game and Vanderbilt to be considered ?an even match-up? for them. I want them to be barely competitive when they play the Citadel.
I don?t want to play USM or Alcorn in the Egg Bowl.
While the death penalty is unlikely, ask any "remaining" SMU fan whether they would have preferred a heavy probation instead of the death penalty. SMU "owned" Dallas and North Texas. Now, no one cares.
If they got the death penalty, they would likely get kicked out of the SEC. Think about it.:)