However, in your 1st post you stated that would put us in UGA range if included these guys who are no longer on the team. But that doesn't make sense because you would have to add up all those situations after they were gone from the team and the recruits who were arrested for all the other SEC programs over the 3 year period.
Les Miles needs to handle Jeremy Hill situation with a heavy hand During his brief tenure at LSU, Jeremy Hill has displayed a rare ability to run over, through and away from opposing defenders. Unfortunately, the Tigers star runner hasn't shown the same elusiveness with the law. By now you know the sordid details of the latest Hill saga in Baton Rouge. His April 27 arrest for simple battery in connection with a bar fight comes 15 months after he pled guilty to engaging in a sexual act with a 14-year-old girl while in high school. He's now earned the dubious distinction of simultaneously being on probation and the early Heisman Trophy watch lists for 2013. His inclusion on the latter list is now tenuous at best. If Hill is found guilty, he could see jail time because conditions of his probation mandate he "refrain from all criminal conduct." Coach Les Miles understandably wants to wait until the legal process plays out before deciding Hill's fate. All eyes will be on Miles to see how handles the situation. This isn't just any player. Hill is a future high NFL draft pick. Anyone who watched him run roughshod through the LSU defense during the spring football game at Tiger Stadium could see he's on the brink of stardom. Regardless, playing college football is a privilege, not a right. Especially so at a school like LSU. And especially for someone like Hill, who'd already been granted a second chance. Even if Hill skates on the battery charge, he still deserves discipline for getting himself into the predicament in the first place and then handling it so poorly afterward. Who started the fight and why is irrelevant at this point. It almost surely will dissolve into an unwinnable he said-she said argument. Hill, though, will have a more difficult time explaining what happened after the incident. He fled the scene and lied to police. What's more, he embarrassed the program. The last thing LSU needed in the wake of the Jordan Jefferson, Tyrann Mathieu, Tharold Simon incidents was another black eye, much less one from its best player. These things don't happen in a vacuum. Each arrest causes untold collateral damage to the program's reputation. Forget the law, Hill is guilty of violating the rules of common sense. What's a guy on probation doing in a bar at 2:13 a.m.? We've all heard the saying about nothing good happening after 2 a.m.? Hill is living proof. No, Miles needs to make a statement here and a strong one. Stiff punishment is required, beyond the requisite early-morning suicides and stadium stairs. A slap-on-the-wrist sit-down for a game or two won't be enough. This isn't about Hill anymore. It's about LSU football, which has generated an inordinate amount of negative headlines in the past 18 months. Is the LSU football program out of control? Hardly. Hill's arrest is disturbing, no doubt. It's the sixth in the past three years and that doesn't include the incidents involving Simon, Mathieu, Jefferson, Karnell Hatcher and Derrick Bryant after they left the program. Still, it'd be stretch to say Miles has lost control of the program. In the same span, Arkansas (12), Florida (13) and Missouri (16) have had twice as many players arrested. Even Kentucky (8) and Ole Miss (8) have had more players run afoul of the law. Any group of 100 teenagers and twenty-somethings is going to have a few find trouble. Young people make mistakes. Some of them are athletes. No school is immune. Besides, Miles' program largely avoided off-field incidents during the first five years of his tenure. Miles handled the Mathieu situation about as well as can be expected. He deftly walked the tightrope of showing empathy for a young player from a trouble background while also doing what's best for the program. It speaks volumes about Miles leadership that Mathieu continues to hold the coach in such high regard despite being exiled from the program. But it's a slippery slope. The descent from dominance to downtrodden can be precipitous and fast. In Urban Meyer's first five seasons at Florida, the Gators went 57-10 and won two BCS titles. But as the wins mounted, so, too, did the off-field incidents. By 2010, the program had spun out of control. Approximately 30 players were arrested in Meyer's six seasons. Meyer resigned after an 8-5 season in 2010. A year later, Florida went 3-5 in the SEC and was unranked. Mighty Southern Cal experienced a similarly meteoric rise and fall in the Pete Carroll era. It can happen. Miles is being compensated handsomely to ensure the same fate doesn't befall LSU. Hill's situation requires a heavy hand. In the end, Hill and LSU football will be better off because of it. Spare the rod and spoil the program. http://www.nola.com/lsu/index.ssf/2013/05/les_miles_needs_to_handle_jere.html#incart_river
LOL! THE PANIC BUTTON! HIT IT FOR THE LOVE OF GOD SOMEBODY HIT IT OH MY GOD OH MY GOD KICK HILL OFF THE TEAM OH MY MY GOD THE WHOLE PROGRAM IS ABOUT TO GO OUT OF CONTROL OH MY GOD OH MY GOD AHHHHHHHH!!!!! but seriously: "Yellow journalism techniques may include exaggerations of news events, scandal-mongering, or sensationalism." thank you, Jeff Duncan, Times Picayune
doesn't Kentucky have the nation's highest percentage of people born with down syndrome? it is the most common chromosome abnormality in humans.
Looking at those photos, it makes it look like his ears flap back and forth like Dumbo (possibly Pinocchio related). it's also striking how much he looks like Forrest Gump. As anybody who has been out of state can attest to, it really is embarrassing how crappy our local media yahoos are, and it's not on them, i think the guys running our local media outlets hire retards on purpose, so they will agree to work for low wages with no security and be so happy with it that they won't think to do pieces on how crappy our media outlets are here in Louisiana...that's why the guys running our local media are like, "we need a new guy, oh this candidate seems to have down syndrome? Perfect!"
And speaking of embarrassing scandals and how crappy the Louisiana media is... Vince Marinello was a well-liked, well-respected on-air personality for close to 40 years (WWL and WDSU). He recently murdered his beautiful (3rd) wife (that was 25 years younger than him) for who knows what, probably because she pointed out he was retarded. The guy bought a mask and beard from an area store, rode a bike up to his wife, shot her twice in the face in front of security cameras, then rode off and hoped everyone would pretend it was a random robbery.
It's not Jeff Duncan as much as it is the Times Picayune and its parent company...there's no real analysis any more in Journalism. There's only baseless opinionism. Any paper that doesn't publish a newspaper daily and has a website filled with such fluff as nola.com has reduced its role from news reporting to something akin to what the real fluffers do in the porn movie industry.
I mean, Duncan correctly chronicles how well Miles handles situations like Hill's....and then recommends that Miles departs from that and kick Hill off the team now. It's as if LSU loses some games next year, it won't be because it's a rebuilding year after losing so many juniors to the NFL, it'll be because Miles didn't listen to Duncan and caused Florida's fate to happen to LSU. It's a set up for "I told you so."