With it, I can send the Ohio Players to my bedroom, Handel to the living room and Keane to the kitchen.
Additionally, none of these 5 offending Ohio State players are projected to go among the top 20 draft picks in 2011.
The big news out of college football Thursday was the pledge that Jim Tressel apparently made five of his Ohio State players take.
Tressel concealed the violations of five Ohio State players from school administrators, and Pete Carroll fled USC for the NFL when an NCAA investigation found that running back Reggie Bush had received improper benefits.
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In 2010, Terrelle Pryor and four other Ohio State football players were heavily sanctioned for selling memorabilia like jerseys, awards and championship rings.
Six players from the Ohio State Buckeyes were suspened by the NCAA for selling or trading uniforms and other memorabilia to a Columbus tattoo-parlor owner, according to the Columbus Dispatch.
The case is similar to one that played out in court this year in Steubenville, Ohio, where two star football players were convicted of rape for assaulting a girl who had too much to drink.
The case has drawn comparisons to one that played out in court this year in Steubenville, Ohio, where two star football players were convicted of rape for assaulting a girl who had too much to drink.
If Ohio State wanted to ensure that these players pay a steep price for what they did, Coach Tressel has the juice to sit them down for the Sugar Bowl.
By making these athletes make this pledge alledgedly, it shows (a) that Ohio State was prepared to sit these players out of the Sugar Bowl had they stated that they planned on bolting for the pros before their senior season, and (b) shifts the onus of the blame onto the players should they bolt for the pros.
He shouted at the surrounding Michigan players that they had been allowing Ohio State to walk all over them.
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In December 2011, the NCAA imposed a one-year bowl ban along with other penalties against Ohio State in response to allegations that eight football players sold memorabilia in exchange for cash and tattoos.
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Now that the NCAA has imposed its penalties against Ohio State and its former football coach Jim Tressel stemming from players receiving tattoos and other benefits in violation of NCAA rules, it is clear that the Emperor, or other superlatives once lavished on former Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel, has no clothes.
Coach Tressel does not have that luxury, especially since he and former players have had previous brushes with the NCAA both at Ohio State and his previous employer Youngstown State.
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An Ohio judge has ruled that the rape trial of two high school football players will take place in the county where the alleged attack happened.
Ohio State was later punished by the NCAA after it found that eight players accepted extra benefits in violation of its rules and that Tressel concealed the violations.
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Squires, a serial entrepreneur based in Chagrin Falls, Ohio, previously cofounded Findaway, a company that made digital audio book players called the Playaway (see story about the Playaway here).
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The gameplay offers players many options on how to sway voters in key swing states, such as Ohio.
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