gocats said:I think it said he's benched for the entire first game.
Sent from my HTC PH39100 using Tapatalk 2
Tudahl or 2506? :lol: Just kidding.
gocats said:I think it said he's benched for the entire first game.
Sent from my HTC PH39100 using Tapatalk 2
CatsFBfan said:gocats said:I think it said he's benched for the entire first game.
Sent from my HTC PH39100 using Tapatalk 2
Tudahl or 2506? :lol: Just kidding.
doebrmn said:Don't have to be a hypocrit or try to spin it because once again Ash handled it the exact same way he has handled every situation. It is called consistency. He was charged with a crime and was suspended until it was resolved (of course because it was a felony it is now automatic, but you can bet if it was a misdemeanor Ash still would have suspended him because that is what he has always done in the past). Due to how it was resolved he was allowed back on the team and will no doubt miss a game. Also (even though it has not been stated anywhere) given the way Ash has handled these situations you can bet if he makes another mistake he will be looking to long snap at an NAIA school.
Once again, let's see if you can understand how this is different from UM's prior handling of these situations: immediately coming out and saying "we will let the legal system run its course" while the player remains on the team, then after a little public backlash suspend the player for one quarter. Then let the player remain on the team the entire time charges are pending only to have him plead out literally within a week of the last game of the season
If you can't see the difference or understand it, I think that says alot about you.
And yes I recognize this is not how UM is handling these situations now but it was this system that led it to where it is now (NCAA, DOJ and DOE investigations) and it is amazing that some griz fans simply cannot admit it was a problem. To those Griz fans that do get it, this post is in no way directed towards you.
the difference isn't so much about how felonies are handled, because i'm quite sure we indefinitely suspend players charged with felonies just like m.s.u. maybe we handle misdemeanors slightly differently, but not felonies. you'll have a hard time finding any school that doesn't suspend a player for a felony until it's cleared up or dropped to a misdemeanor. please show me a distinct difference between how we've handled a misdemeanor compared to how m.s.u. has handled them.doebrmn said:Don't have to be a hypocrit or try to spin it because once again Ash handled it the exact same way he has handled every situation. It is called consistency. He was charged with a crime and was suspended until it was resolved (of course because it was a felony it is now automatic, but you can bet if it was a misdemeanor Ash still would have suspended him because that is what he has always done in the past). Due to how it was resolved he was allowed back on the team and will no doubt miss a game. Also (even though it has not been stated anywhere) given the way Ash has handled these situations you can bet if he makes another mistake he will be looking to long snap at an NAIA school.
Once again, let's see if you can understand how this is different from UM's prior handling of these situations: immediately coming out and saying "we will let the legal system run its course" while the player remains on the team, then after a little public backlash suspend the player for one quarter. Then let the player remain on the team the entire time charges are pending only to have him plead out literally within a week of the last game of the season being over
If you can't see the difference or understand it, I think that says alot about you.
And yes I recognize this is not how UM is handling these situations now but it was this system that led it to where it is now (NCAA, DOJ and DOE investigations) and it is amazing that some griz fans simply cannot admit it was a problem. To those Griz fans that do get it, this post is in no way directed towards you.
doebrmn said:Because right on que you continue to make idiotic comments that reflect badly on UM and its fans as a whole when most actually realize the problems of the past and are happy that something is being done to clean it up.
getgrizzy said:please show me a distinct difference between how we've handled a misdemeanor compared to how m.s.u. has handled them.
EverettGriz said:doebrmn said:Because right on que you continue to make idiotic comments that reflect badly on UM and its fans as a whole when most actually realize the problems of the past and are happy that something is being done to clean it up.
What is being done-- and what has ALWAYS been done at Montana -- is the same as what was done by ash here. Reasonable cat posters understand that. The trolls like you (and here I'll give you the benefit of the doubt) also may understand it, but you're too large of tools to admit it.
Daly started the very first game his freshman year after his DUI, and ash never announced any suspension, penalty of otherwise until Daly quit the team then was welcomed back with open arms by everyone and the DUI has never been brought up?doebrmn said:getgrizzy said:MSU - Come out immediately and announce player is suspended, once misdemeanor is resolved player still receives team discipline (typically a one game suspension, but can vary. e.g., Minter received internal discipline, Trammel was kicked off the team).
doebrmn said:What are you talking about, nobody has suggested that UM has allowed a player with a felony charge to stay on the team. Now it wouldn't even be a choice under new student guidelines. The discussion, and let's see if you can follow it, has been whether UM and MSU has handled players getting into trouble the same. And as has been pointed out, that answer is no. Now that you have lost that debate you want to start making up a phantom issue regarding whether UM has ever allowed a player with a felony to stay on the team when nobody has ever made such a statement.
Perhaps you should just go back into denial and pretend the NCAA isn't investigating. That seemed to work for you for a while. It's just too bad UM had to come out and announce it and shatter the bubble you live in.
Bear Axed said:Daly started the very first game his freshman year after his DUI, and ash never announced any suspension, penalty of otherwise until Daly quit the team then was welcomed back with open arms by everyone and the DUI has never been brought up?doebrmn said:getgrizzy said:MSU - Come out immediately and announce player is suspended, once misdemeanor is resolved player still receives team discipline (typically a one game suspension, but can vary. e.g., Minter received internal discipline, Trammel was kicked off the team).
please explain? :?