@masemans@DankSchwag@netflixsports What a beta dad you are , kid did a stupid thing and now is being a little cry baby. I’m sure you will have his wall decorated with soccer participation ribbons too.
I understand why people are uncomfortable with the Brendan Sorsby situation. Betting on sports as a college athlete is serious. Betting connected to your own team creates an obvious integrity concern. Nobody has to minimize that.
But there is another side to this that college football people should at least be honest enough to acknowledge.
When a player becomes part of your program, he becomes part of your football family. That does not mean you excuse everything. It does not mean accountability disappears. It means you do not abandon him the second the situation becomes difficult, public, or uncomfortable.
There is a difference between defending the person and defending the mistake.
Texas Tech is in an impossible spot. Deep down, they may have hoped the final ruling would remove the decision from their hands. Exhaust every option, support the player, let the process play out, and if he is ruled ineligible, accept it. That is the cleanest outcome for a program trying to balance loyalty, discipline, public pressure, and competitive integrity.
But now the court has ruled that he is legally allowed to play. That changes the structure of the decision.
If Texas Tech turns its back on him now, what message does that send to every player and family they recruit? That we will fight for you until the pressure gets too loud? That we will call you family when you are producing, but distance ourselves when standing beside you becomes inconvenient?
If I were recruiting against Texas Tech and they abandoned him after he was legally cleared to play, I would use that every time. Not because the mistake does not matter, but because trust matters. Families want to know what happens when their son is injured, struggling, accused, embarrassed, or sitting in the middle of a situation nobody wants attached to the program.
Accountability and loyalty are not opposites.
You can believe justice should be served. You can believe the integrity of the game matters. You can believe gambling violations deserve real consequence. You can also believe that a program should stand by its people through the full process, not just through the easy parts.
That is the hard part of family.
You do not only fight for your people when the optics are clean. You fight for them through the good and the bad, while still demanding accountability, treatment, discipline, and truth.
Texas Tech may not like the position it is in. Most programs would not. But once he is legally allowed to play and remains part of the Red Raider family, abandoning him strictly because of social pressure would send its own message.
And that message may be harder to overcome than the controversy itself.
@McDonalds this is how my drink was handed to me. If I wanted a medium, I wouldn’t have ordered a Large. How can anyone justify handing this to someone who ordered a large with a straight face 😂
Drive around Athens, Georgia at 150 mph? Cool.
Slap your girlfriend around? No problem.
Fail a drug test? It’s all gravy, baby.
Bet on your team as a backup QB that wasn’t playing? BURN IT DOWN, COLLEGE FOOTBALL HAS BEEN KILLED. THE LOWEST POINT IN OUR SPORT’S HISTORY
Please someone explain this to me. Stephanie white and Caitlin Clark
Arguing, so she pulls her out for Raven right there. Poor Justine can’t believe it.
@JoelMBeall His legacy probably improved and on top of that, he’s a heck of a lot better person than you. Your cuck energy oozes from every asinine tweet you post. Try to be better , people will always remember Rahm, don’t think we can say the same for Joel Beal. Gods watching nerd
“I think a bunched leaderboard like this… is a sign of not a great setup.”
Another top player less than thrilled with the conditions this week.
What are your thoughts on the setup so far at Aronimink?