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Discussion Topic: Trouble in Minnesota
Mike Vash added to this discussion on May 29, 2016
I see this situation ending much like the Tressel era at Ohio State. You have a coach with long term success whose athletes put them in a bad situation and they end up trying to fix it and try to go into damage control mode instead of following procedures. It is truly a shame but I don't see how Jrob survives this situation.I also think Minnesota wrestling will be hit hard with severe penalties and the next coach will have a rough road ahead.
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Discussion Topic: Trouble in Minnesota
Jason L. Jackson added to this discussion on May 29, 2016
While I see the analogy, the Ohio State athletes did nothing illegal. The Minnesota wrestlers committed felonies. Much, much worse to me.
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Discussion Topic: Trouble in Minnesota
Dan Harris added to this discussion on May 31, 2016
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Discussion Topic: Trouble in Minnesota
Brady Hiatt added to this discussion on May 31, 2016
Tressel didn't get in trouble because of "what" his players did, rather his actions in their wake.
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Discussion Topic: Trouble in Minnesota
Mike Stann added to this discussion on June 1, 2016
Quote from Brady Hiatt's post:
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"Tressel didn't get in trouble because of "what" his players did, rather his actions in their wake."
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If the InterMat article is correct then the real difference between Tress and JRob is that JRob reported his suspicions and asked for follow through. IMO if Tress had done the same he probably would still be our coach.
Thanks Dan for sharing that link. Much more boring for media to to go after institutional incompetence. Much better story if you can bring down storied coach so don't let facts get in the way. What passes for reporting today baffles me.
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Discussion Topic: Trouble in Minnesota
Brian Mathews added to this discussion on June 1, 2016
Is there any proof that J Rob knew for sure about the dealing? If the only thing he knows for sure is that some of his wrestlers were taking Xanax without prescriptions, I don't think his actions were necessarily out of line.
Furthermore, does anyone have any real proof that wrestlers were dealing drugs, and not just popping pills together to party? Other than the word of one informant.
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Discussion Topic: Trouble in Minnesota
Bill Splete added to this discussion on June 12, 2016
read JRob response, via attorney, it appears the sequence of events, was not as originally reported. it appears he notified the university when he suspected that there might be kids using, also notified them of the specific drug that should be tested. They were not tested for this drug, nor have we heard anything about if any athlete was let go from the program,
Testing what is being used, oxi, xanax, and ped's are not being tested, we are not serious about drug use, distributing or solving this issue. Its as if we all know what is going on, how easy it is to get and how hard it is to beat, if you can beat it at all.
It can't be a cost issue, you have facilities on every major university campus doing high level drug studies.
These drugs are everywhere being delivered by fed x usps, and ups and it seems we are powerless. there is no school immune or income level above this issue.
Its getting worse, and JRob is in the middle of this, I hope he gets the program through this.
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Discussion Topic: Trouble in Minnesota
Chris Shepherd added to this discussion on June 30, 2016
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Discussion Topic: Trouble in Minnesota
Brian Grimm added to this discussion on September 7, 2016
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