Over the weekend Florida cornerback Janoris Jenkins became the 24th Gator football player to be arrested in the past four years. Jenkins was tased after fighting with men he claims were attempting to steal his jewelry. That happens to all of us when we go out. You should have seen this dude step to me over my pinky ring the other night. Much of the nation, among them the Florida fan base, collectively shrugged their shoulders. Unless, that is, you happened to be a rival of Florida's who has lost to them on the field in the past few years. Then you were outraged. That's how it goes with college football arrests; we're all a bunch of hypocrites. If our team wins we don't care if the entire team gets sent up the river together, as long as they're back by Saturday. Any amount of off-field incidents can be brushed aside, so long as you're successful enough on the field.
Urban Meyer knows this. It's why he said the Gators would only recruit "the top one percent of the top one percent" which is, I guess, a tricky way of saying ".01 percent." (Although it would be interesting to hypothesize what percentage of Gator players could correctly come up with the above number. Hell, I'm not even completely sure my math is correct.) Gator fans chomped to their heart's content when they heard the statement, Tim Tebow probably circumcised an indigent child, meanwhile the top .01 percent were out terrorizing students on University Avenue. Turns out The Swamp is not just a field, it's where Gator ethics go to die.
But don't fool yourself, your program could do the same. How? By following a handy three-part recipe: 1. Recruit God's gift to football and play him at quarterback 2. Win 3. Pillage, rob and loot to your heart's content.
As for No. 1, Tebow can't be overlooked. He's a saint. If you're a man, you wish you were Tebow. If you're a father, you wish Tebow would marry your daughter. If you're a woman, you wish Tebow would impregnate you instead of your husband. Everything that Tebow touches turns to gold. Even his teammates' mugshots. Because here's the deal, 99 percent of all national media and sports fans equate Florida football with Tebow. Period. It doesn't matter what anyone else does, Tebow is perfection on and off the field. So the program is perfect as well. Sure it's a lazy and harebrained way to judge a team, by projecting Tebow's moral code onto the rest of the team, but clearly it's happened. Tebow is a stand-in for the entire Gator team.
You have to wonder whether Tebow ever looks around the locker room, shakes his head, and thinks, "Man, an awful lot of these guys are going straight to hell."
Step two, Florida has won. And won big. One SEC athletic director told me, "Urban Meyer changed everything when he won his second national title in four years. Everything." Including, evidently, all normal standards for off-field behavior.
Three, let your players turn Gainesville into the wild west. Let them use the credit cards of dead woman (Jamar Hornsby), let them fire an AK-47 into the sky after a traffic dispute with a fellow student (Ronnie Wilson), let them steal a laptop and then throw it out the window when suspected of theft (Cam Newton, allegedly), let them choke a girlfriend (Jacques Rickerson). That's just boys being boys. Gator chomp. Yep, winning cures everything in the mind of fans.
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Look deep within your fan's soul, you feel the same way. The only time you're really outraged by anything off the field is when a rival program has a player who commits a felony and he doesn't get suspended for the game against your team. Otherwise you talk a big game about how you want your guys to be good citizens, but you'd much rather win a rivalry game than avoid every player being arrested for a weekend.
For example, Tennessee hasn't had a football player arrested in a year. But guess what, we lost seven games last season and our coach got fired. Most Tennessee fans would gladly send a half-dozen players to the local Knoxville precinct if it meant we were going to win a single national championship in the next decade. Much less two.
My point isn't to pile on the Gators, successful football teams always have an awful lot of arrests. Because guess what ... they can. Most college kids do whatever they can get away with. See enough of your gridiron compatriots back on the field after a booking, and you start to think you're bullet proof. Back when Colorado won the national championship in 1990, the Boulder police kept the football media guide on hand so they'd know who they were arresting. Seriously.
Almost 20 years later, nothing's changed.
Why? Because deep down none of us really care about the arrest records of our favorite teams. At least not anywhere near as much as we care about the won-loss record. Coaches like Meyer know this. It's why they pay lip service to the alums with their bogus top one percent of one percent lines. Coaches know if they say the right things publicly while shaking their heads every time a player gets arrested that fans will forgive them. And they're right.
I'm asking this question with all honesty, how many player arrests would it take for you to say, "You know, I don't think this championship is really worth it?"
I can't think of a school that has ever hit that number. Chances are you can't either. But, man, that team that beats your team all the time, boy, they sure are a bunch of thugs, right?




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
6-03-2009 @ 5:01PM
whoisdarr said...
Just think if this was Ohio State there would be all kinds of crap being written. But instead its Florida and no one could care less.
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6-03-2009 @ 6:05PM
kmb2729 said...
College football fans don't go to games to see role models, they go to see victories. Plain and simple. If delinquents can help achieve a national championship, then so be it!
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6-03-2009 @ 6:08PM
Kasey said...
College football fans don't pack the stadiums to see role models, they go to see victories. It's as simple as that. If a couple of delinquents can help a team to a national championship, then so be it! Think The Longest Yard, except not everyone is a criminal.
Reply
6-03-2009 @ 9:33PM
William said...
Clay Travis is just a cry baby Volunteer fan. Notice he didn't mention all the blunders of their new Head Coach, Kifflin. This guy will be lucky if he makes it 2 years beforee firing. Then it will take Tennessee a decade or more to get back to being decent. I would bet the Travis would approve of recruiting from the local prisons if it would help his team win. Typical hypocrite.
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6-04-2009 @ 1:26AM
cjgdnight said...
thugs and criminals..... but hey its a business... university gets millions of dollars.. several kids go to jail... so what.
This is the stuff NFL COMMISH is cleaning up... NCAA could take a lesson... I would suspend Meyer for four years if I ran the NCAA.
Like Patton said.. nothing like a dead General on the side of the road to improve morale.
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6-04-2009 @ 9:29AM
flahute said...
Jamar Hornsby: Gone
Ronnie Wilson: Gone
Cam Newton: Gone
Jacques Rickerson: Gone
Urban didn't "let" those guys do those things. He can't control their lives that tightly. But what he can control is the fall-out from their actions. That's why I can feel pride in being a Gator. Urban doesn't make them just run steps. And he doesn't just suspend them for the first two meaningless games. Marcus Thomas was the best player on the '06 team, and he got booted, and they still won the National Championship.
That said, you're right. The rosters are always dirtier on the other side of the rivalry. And their schedules are softer. And their tailgates are lamer.
And our rings are bigger.
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6-05-2009 @ 5:35PM
pasdadosia said...
you wrote what i was going to, they are bashing a program that has done the right thing, for the past 20 years, i cannot recall a single florida player who was arrested and convicted of a crime that made the roster the following season. you cannot predict what a recruit will do, and you cannot babysit them 24-7, all you can do is release them when they screw up. florida does get rid of problem athletes.
6-04-2009 @ 12:52PM
cjgdnight said...
To be clear I have no rivalry with FLA. 24 players is excessive by any standard.. and that doesn't count the "ones that got away" for minor stuff. He recruits trash like these guys and the punishment he doles out is not sufficient... so it continues. Meyer should be above recruiting this stuff... he is to blame.
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6-04-2009 @ 12:55PM
cjgdnight said...
how do you get the FLA bench to come to their feet at once....
"will the defendant please rise."
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6-05-2009 @ 4:01PM
Kevin said...
What Clay fails to mention is the team that gets arrested and still looses. Case in point: 07-08 Missouri Tigers Basketball. One game they only had 7 players suit up because the rest of their team was serving a suspension for a bar fight they got in earlier that week. It was tough to be a Tiger fan that year, and everyone in Missouri thought that the team was a bunch of punks.
Come this season, Mizzou is in the elite 8, and everyone forgets that 3 of their 4 seniors had been in prison within the past year, except for those people in Lawrence, Kansas
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6-05-2009 @ 9:04PM
cjgdnight said...
the difference between the missou and fla response is that fla fans don't feel like they are a bunch of punks like you stated in your piece here.
IN FACT FLA didn't win a lot of recent championships until they started recruiting these thugs.. that is the embarassing part for FLA fans... can't be proud of a program like that, but somehow they are???? you know ole boy may be in jail now.. but he was helluva player. We fla fans are so glad Meyer kicked him out after we won the title I just can't tell you how glad we are.... I am embarrassed for the fla posters that defend this behavior in their program. A bad person.... ok it happens... but 24????
6-18-2009 @ 8:21PM
mrabnerjames said...
reality check:
football players are arrested at a rate of 3.5% a year, the public is arrested at a rate of 3.1% a year. basically, football players have only a slightly higher chance of going to jail.
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