Found this while cruising UteFans.net:
Of course the masses over there blew up over all of Coach Bronco's ethical lapses in response.
This was cool as well:
Stand-up guys. With wayward coaches such as Ohio State's Jim Tressel and backstabbing coaches such as West Virginia's Bill Stewart, the college football world is left to wonder if there are any legitimately good coaches out there who do the right thing and play by the rules. The coach I would be most surprised to find out was breaking the rules? Georgia's Mark Richt. While Tressel had the facade of being a religious man, Richt's convictions are authentic. I really do think the Bulldogs' boss is driven by an inner belief to do the right thing. Is he perfect? Of course not. But I don't think he would knowingly break NCAA rules or do something with the intent of undermining a colleague. Here are other Big Six coaches I would be stunned to learn willingly broke NCAA rules: Baylor's Art Briles, Duke's David Cutcliffe, Maryland's Randy Edsall, Northwestern's Pat Fitzgerald, Kansas' Turner Gill, Wake Forest's Jim Grobe, N.C. State's Tom O'Brien, BYU's Bronco Mendenhall, Penn State's Joe Paterno, Oregon State's Mike Riley, Iowa State's Paul Rhoads, Texas A&M's Mike Sherman, Louisville's Charlie Strong and Utah's Kyle Whittingham.
This was cool as well:
Keystone camaraderie. It was great to hear that Pittsburgh and Penn State will renew their rivalry. The programs haven't played since 2000 but have agreed to a home-and-home series in 2016 and 2017. The first meeting will be at Pitt. Let's not stop there. Here are some other games I'd like to see on an annual basis - or at least a few times a decade: Nebraska-Oklahoma; Maryland-West Virginia; UCF-USF; Texas-TCU; Florida-Miami; Clemson-Georgia; Arkansas-Texas; Boise State-Oregon; BYU-Notre Dame; Indiana-Kentucky; Boston College-Connecticut; North Carolina-South Carolina; Cincinnati-Ohio State; LSU-Texas A&M; Illinois-Missouri; Marshall-West Virginia; and East Carolina-North Carolina.
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