Florida State QB Jameis Winston has no business playing college football for team that should be disbanded by NCAA

by Kent Sterling

Jameis Winston is playing college football today, and that defines the shame that surrounds a great game.

Jameis Winston is playing college football today, and that defines the shame that surrounds a great game.

Go ahead and read the New York Times report on collusion and corruption in the legal process that is so obviously employed by law enforcement in Tallahassee, and tell me that football program shouldn’t be subject to the death penalty.

Forget Jameis Winston, an apparent poster boy for entitlement and enabling so vile that Johnny Manziel looks like a choir boy by comparison. That he is playing today against Syracuse while Georgia’s Todd Gurley sits suspended for signing some footballs and mini helmets for between $8 and $25 per unit defines the level of inequity and illogic in college sports rule structure that has fans so perplexed and frustrated.

Click here to follow Kent on Twitter

Accused of rape, disciplined for engaging in BB gun fights that caused thousands of dollars worth of damage, caught shoplifting seafood, and suspended for one game for jumping up on a table and yelling something so misogynistic and vile it cannot be written here, Winston is not only a pox on college football, but on higher education as a concept.

Those are the allegations that are known about Winston.  There are so many other Florida State players with records of misbehavior swept under a rug that the only logical conclusion – one shared by the piece in the New York Times – is that football players are allowed the run of campus without fear of any consequence for bad acts.

The primary reason cited by the Times for the cops looking the other way is that the Seminole football program is integral to the economy of the area, and that many local police officers are compensated by the university as members of the football game day security detail.

That Florida State University is complicit in allowing police malfeasance to steer student-athletes away from adequate penalty must be addressed by the NCAA, or why does the enforcement arm of the organization even exist?

Nearly two years after the rape allegation was made in December of 2012, Winston will reportedly face a disciplinary hearing.  That has a lot more to do with a potential Title IX violation and media scrutiny than a sense of justice and empathy for the alleged victim.  Yet, Winston continues to play this afternoon.

When the Seminole Boosters pay the majority of coach Jimbo Fisher’s salary and bonuses, it becomes easy to see why Fisher might be enticed to look the other way when his best player steps out of line.  His bonus structure (according to the NY Times) also shows that the moral compass governing football in Tallahassee has been stowed safely in a drawer and is rarely, if ever, consulted.

  • $100,000 for winning the Atlantic Coast Conference Division Championship
  • $100,000 for winning the A.C.C. Championship
  • $75,000 for participating in the college football playoffs
  • $200,000 for participating in the national championship game
  • $200,000 for winning the national championship
  • $100,000 for participating in a Bowl Championship Series bowl game other than the national championship
  • $50,000 for participating in a non-B.C.S. bowl game
  • $200,000 for finishing with a final ranking in the A.P. Poll within the top 5
  • $100,000 for finishing with a final ranking in the A.P. Poll within the top 10
  • $200,000 for an undefeated season
  • $75,000 for being named national coach of the year
  • $50,000 for being named A.C.C. coach of the year
  • $25,000 for having a graduation rate between 65 and 84 percent; $50,000 for having a graduation rate higher than 84 percent
  • $25,000 for having a .930 academic performance rating or higher for the school year

The mandate to Fisher is clear – WIN!  Damn the female student population at Florida State.  Screw the safety of those near the BB gun fights and the damage done to windows and cars.  To hell with trying to educate students about right and wrong.  Win football games, and even the most egregious and repulsive antisocial acts are buried for the benefit of the Seminole glory.

Oversight organizations are needed to correct exactly the kind of corruption that reportedly rules behavior at Florida State, and every additional crime committed in Tallahassee is the responsibility of all those with the ability to correct the “win at all costs” mindset governing law enforcement there.

That requires Winston be expelled permanently from college football, and that the school suffers the sanction reserved for those who most egregiously lose their way.

9 thoughts on “Florida State QB Jameis Winston has no business playing college football for team that should be disbanded by NCAA

  1. Pauly Balst

    I would love to have a conversation over a few beers with someone from the NCAA. These situations are becoming surreal. How can the NCAA hacks sleep at night? Indiana citizens are subsidizing and harboring a RICO violator in the NCAA.

    Todd Gurley sits for signing his name for chump change.

    Florida State is neck deep in conspiracy to violate civil rights and basically racketeering, and Winston plays while Gurley sits!?!? It’s Alice in Wonderland and Kafka rolled into one.

    I never, ever would have imagined what the New York Times wrote could be true in 2014. Technology, internet, cameras, DNA testing, smartphones still cannot trump good old fashioned corruption.

    Reply
  2. Pauly Balst

    You should start a Facebook campaign to force the NCAA to vacate the Florida state 2013 season national championship. It already should have an asterisk.

    CONGRATULATIONS AUBURN!

    I’ll put the odds at 2 to 1 that that championship is stripped within 3 years. Just watch.

    Reply
  3. Franklin

    I have been a Florida State football fan, through thick and thin, for 40 years. I admit that I have been quite forgiving of indiscretions in the past, but I have had enough. I am not a Winston supporter. However, what does removing him from the school do other than hurt the football team? Will he or will he not be in the NFL real soon, making millions? Corruption is rampant in most of the big-time programs all across the country. There are so many narcissistic morons with nothing more than athletic ability out of control on college campuses who misbehave in various ways. The term “student-athlete” is laughable.

    Reply
    1. kentsterling Post author

      Franklin – I love your ability to separate your allegiance to the Seminoles from your sense of morality, but not your willingness to throw up your hands and give in to the injustice so pervasive. The good that would be done is to hold a young man accountable – even over a short period of time – for his self-indulgent bad acts.

      Reply
      1. Franklin

        You make a very good point about holding individual athletes accountable for their self-indulgent actions. What I’d like to see is society and perhaps government putting some pressure on the NFL to withhold lucrative contracts for these athletes – at least for some time.

        Reply
    2. jdk47

      In my experience FSU fans have proven themselves to be the kings of the “everybody else does it” defense. FSU should indeed get the death penalty. They have been the most corrupt program in the country for decades.

      Reply
  4. Bill Mahaffey

    This was well written and concise.

    There is no way FSU should be in a bowl game this year, and they absolutely should face the death penalty immediately for their interference with law enforcement.

    The NCAA has to deal with this. The NCAA refused to impose a death penalty on Penn State in another case of severe institutional corruption. If it lets FSU off the hook, it will have shed all legitimacy.

    Reply
  5. Pablo Libre

    The problem at FSU is particularly bad. It would be little more than a second rate community college without football. Hopefully the NCAA will step up and axe the football program anyways.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Pauly Balst Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *