Wartdawg wrote: Move on is right.
If he plays again for us, he does... if he doesn't, he doesn't.
One thing I am not forgetting here is that while the NCAA is a corrupt power hungry pile
of hypocritical hippo dung.... Todd Gurley did this to himself and the team, knowing full well it was a violation.
Gnash all the teeth we want, wear your discontinued "Free Gurley" shirts.. cheer like mad if he's ever on a field again for us, call me names for daring say things like this instead of portraying him as an innocent victim.. whatever, but that is a fact.
Gurley was special....., but Chubb is far from ordinary. We win and lose not based on this one
player.
Maybe I am missing the point, but it never hurts to look at more than what the athlete did or did not do. Yes Gurley knew, little doubt about that. That information (all of it) I would bet was sent to the NCAA through the efforts of Georgia officials involved with this.
Move on to me is in a way saying, everything that can be done has been done. In this particular case, the Gurley/Georgia case leads me to this question. Why did it take the NCAA, Emmert in particular the length of time that it did to conclude Gurley's "knowing he messed up"? That is showing "power", when actuality it is a failure of leadership. Gurley failed, NCAA has failed for generations. Reminds me a bit of the current things that are going on with the IRS. People scared to death of the IRS, that in the not too distant past was the same situation with the NCAA, universities scared to death of the NCAA.
Speaking for myself, not going to have some half hearted folks not being questioned by me or boards like this one and others that simply want a level playing field. Out of site, out of mind, not where I come from.