@BrennanBaxt What they are doing wrong is allowing a player who admitted to gambling on his own team to play, simple as that. Take away the courts, the rules. Your boys at Tech could just simply dismiss him from the team but act like they're taking the moral highground by supporting their guy
@CodyC64 Man I've loved everything you're doing for college sports and I'm a die hard WVU guy. Then you go and say something like this and it removes every ounce of credibility you've built up in this space.
@kirbyhocutt This is an easy one Kirb. Is what he did against every written and unwritten rule of every sport that matters? Yep. You as the AD can make the decision to not allow him to play for your team. You are decision to allow him to play, regardless of what a court says.
@CraigCartonShow His 'sickness' didn't make him bet on his own team. There's a lot of other sports and teams out there he could have chosen. That argument is weak.
@heitner "Inequitable treatment of athletes" - even for an attorney who benefits financially from the current state of college athletics, that one is a doozie.
@mountaineerjdub SC gave that one away. Closer crumbled under pressure and couldn't throw a strike. 3rd baseman easily should have caught that foul and what was the CF doing on that final play, literally slid for no reason nowhere near the ball.
@ckone47 The positive attention all over sports media has been great for our program, team, school etc. But why is this just now getting so much attention? We do it every football, basketball, soccer game - heck maybe even rifle who knows. The attention is great, but kind of surprising.