Terrelle Pryor eligible for NFL but must sit first five games - ESPN
Good riddance to bad rubbish. I have never seen a more unethical player in my life. I'm glad he's gone, and both he and his attorney can perform anatomically improbable acts of self gratification on themselves.
9 months ago
Glenn Logan
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Wonder if this will start a trend.......??
Of penalties, that is, not lowlifes looking for a payday.
I am now and shall forever be the Cat in The Hat, The Artist Formerly Known As ABC!!!
by Greg Alan Edwards on Aug 18, 2011 10:24 AM EDT reply actions
For the love of everything holy...
Please don’t let the bengals pick him up. I do not trust mike brown however.
Slower Traffic Keep Right!
by SevenRings on Aug 18, 2011 1:22 PM EDT via mobile reply actions
doubt it
But only because Brown already has a starting QB on his team…Carson Palmer.
I'm trying to figure out if this is tongue in cheek or not
Of course its difficult, its a shortcut... if it was easy it'd just be "the way."
I hope its not the beginning of a trend
First… lets be honest, the penalty doesn’t really mean anything because Pryor wouldn’t be playing in those games anyways.
Second… I don’t think that the NFL should be in the business of cleaning up the NCAA’s mess. They set the stage for this sort of foolishness, they should handle it.
Of course its difficult, its a shortcut... if it was easy it'd just be "the way."
I feel like there was a little justice done, here.
Pryor caused a lot of this mess. And he was walking away scott free. Athletes have left programs in shambles and consistently suffered no real consequences. Yes, this may blur the line between NCAA/NFL… but that may not be so bad, imho. The NCAA can’t do anything once these jerks leave school. And I hate seeing them make good money while those left behind have to pick up the pieces.
No matter where you're at, there you are
BTW, the complete men's basketball schedule is out
http://www.ukathletics.com/sports/m-baskbl/sched/kty-m-baskbl-sched.html
No matter where you're at, there you are
Setting aside Pryor's ethics....
This is extremely curious to me. Is Pryor already a professional football player, even though he has yet to be even drafted, let alone sign a contract? If he is already a professional, I suppose by playing for Ohio State as part of the NFL minor leagues, his suspension MAY have some credence. If he is not yet a professional, then why does his conduct as an amateur breaking no laws other than NCAA rules, have anything to do with professional football and thus subject to the whims of the NFL commissioner?








