Joe Burrow Confirms that the cash from OBJ was real

Submitted by Chipper1221 on January 15th, 2020 at 9:07 AM

In an interview with Pardon My Take Podcast, Joe Burrow was asked straight up if the money from OBJ was real. His reply is comical. "I'm not a student athlete anymore, so yeah the money was real."

The NCAA will do nothing about the cheating that goes on in this sport.

Any school that continues to play by the rules is ignorant. You can sit on your high horse and point the morality finger all you want, but don't complain when fans stop showing up and stop spending money. We'll stop letting buckeyes in the big house when you start showing that you're ready to take football serious. 

 

Link to podcast - interview starts at the 32 minute mark. https://podcastone.com/pardon-my-take 

JHumich

January 15th, 2020 at 9:10 AM ^

Pure thug take. Er... slug take. Uh, shrug take?

Seriously though, doing things the right way matters, and I suspect that's just something that this board will have to be divided about.

crum

January 15th, 2020 at 9:28 AM ^

If you are one of the few schools doing something a certain way are you wrong or is the rest of the country wrong?

 

I am fine if the school wants to keep doing things the 'right' way, as long as they dont expect us to pay for a product that will never progress to more than what it is.

UMxWolverines

January 15th, 2020 at 11:06 AM ^

Why would anyone continue to pay similar prices that OSU fans pay for 10-3 or 9-4 every year? That's ridiculous. I paid $150 for a end zone seat to see us get our asses beat by them AGAIN. Ticket prices for big games have literally almost tripled since 2005. And someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't believe the seat donation is tax deductible any longer. 

Sione For Prez

January 15th, 2020 at 11:55 AM ^

You really don't even need to go back all the way to 2005. 2015 endzone seats for both MSU and OSU (which section 17 would be considered) were $95 per ticket. I wouldn't consider a $35 increase from 2005 to 2015 to be that bad. The problem is 2017 were $125 and this year were $150 or so as you mentioned.

You're also correct the seat licenses are no longer able to be counted as contributions for tax purposes.

gustave ferbert

January 15th, 2020 at 2:44 PM ^

Ugghh.  That fucking game.  

Up by 2 scores in the fourth quarter.  LLoyd and that goddamn quarter back pooch punt to leave the game in the hands of an inept Jim Hermann.  O$U registers only one third down the last two drives (which of course they fucking converted).  

One of the most ignominious episodes of the "Game" I can recall. . . 

Michigan Arrogance

January 15th, 2020 at 4:07 PM ^

Why would anyone continue to pay similar prices that OSU fans pay for 10-3 or 9-4 every year?

 

Well then, if you feel you'd get better value at OSU, then may I suggest buying their product instead? In fact, I'd probably calculate Wins/Dollar ratio of every school and which ever D1 team has the maximum value, take your money there.

I'm sure you'd be super happy with the results this year if only you'd have paid $59/game instead.

UMxWolverines

January 15th, 2020 at 11:06 AM ^

Why would anyone continue to pay similar prices that OSU fans pay for 10-3 or 9-4 every year? That's ridiculous. I paid $150 for a end zone seat to see us get our asses beat by them AGAIN. Ticket prices for big games have literally almost tripled since 2005. And someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't believe the seat donation is tax deductible any longer. 

crg

January 15th, 2020 at 4:48 PM ^

Affection.  Many (perhaps most) people watch college sports because they have some form of affiliation with the school (directly or indirectly).  It is "their school" and not just a product chosen by a consumer out of various options.  Similar analogy for Olympics - most people do not transfer their support to another country's team simply because they may have a more appealing "product".

jcorqian

January 15th, 2020 at 10:17 AM ^

I'm really curious though, and honestly wondering when I see people write stuff like this, what is the "right way?"

Who sets the right way?  Is it the NCAA?  Is it the Big Ten?  Is it Michigan?  And who within Michigan?  The president, the AD, the head coach, etc.?  The collective will of the fans?

It seems arbitrary in terms of what is right or wrong, especially if the NCAA is willing to lie for LSU when LSU goes against its own "rules."

I could easily argue that morally, paying people for their talents /services is right when you are profiting off of their work.  I could also argue that that it's hard to support capitalism without supporting this.

mjv

January 15th, 2020 at 11:56 AM ^

The issue with paying players when it is illegal is that you become captured by the corrupt regulator.  They have the ability to end you on a whim.  Look at what happened to USC.  

The solution is to fix the problem by announcing that we will be openly challenging the rule in the near future and defend ourselves in the court of law and public opinion.  

Kevin13

January 16th, 2020 at 8:48 AM ^

Do you honestly think these kids are not compensated for playing college football?  They are suppose to be there for an education first   People think they only get free tuition that is just the tip of the iceberg of everything they get. If we want to play college athletes then set it up like a minor league for the NFL. Drop the word university from the teams and have them pay the university a rental fee for using the facilities. Players don’t attend class and make it a job and hopefully players develop enough to make it in the NFL someday 

You can still have many schools that decide they still want to abide by rules and have true student athletes and educate athletes. Since probably more then 90% of P5 players do want an education and have no chance at the NFL you get a nice balance. But let’s stop with this paying amateur athletes to play a sport in college 

FrozeMangoes

January 15th, 2020 at 5:02 PM ^

Doing things right is important.  Deciding what is right based on arbitrary rules decided on by a corrupt institution is illogical.  

Why is is right to pay Jim Harbaugh 7 million but it is wrong to pay players what they're worth? UM will look down their noses at other programs and all they'll have to show for it is being on the wrong side of history. 

xtramelanin

January 15th, 2020 at 9:10 AM ^

i watched that video yesterday and two things were clear.  first, that the money was real.  the body language, the hugs, the prolonged whispering in the ear would never occur if you're handing out monopoly money

second, pretty sure OBJ's blood alcohol content was not .00%   nothing necessarily wrong with that, but lets hope he wasn't driving. 

Jon06

January 15th, 2020 at 9:15 AM ^

If LSU told the NCAA (rather than just the media) it was fake, this should get them nuked. But presumably they haven't officially told the NCAA anything yet. It'll be interesting to see how this develops.

Mblueforlife

January 15th, 2020 at 9:16 AM ^

Video I saw showed him giving it to Jefferson (who is going into the draft. I doubt he only gave money to players going into the draft, but I am sure that is what LSU will say.

MGoStretch

January 15th, 2020 at 2:31 PM ^

Not only was that their "explanation" but did you happen to catch their rationale for saying it was fake?  They essentially said that because play money was found somewhere on the field, at some point after the game, that meant that the multi-millionaire who pulled a wad of bills out of his pocket was distributing fake money.

It's such a nonsensical explanation, one has to wonder why they even bothered.  They clearly DGAF.

MGoStrength

January 15th, 2020 at 9:16 AM ^

Agreed, let's stop pretending to prioritize school for kids with NFL potential and antiquated rules around student athletes and give them what they deserve (and what's probably needed to sign top 5 classes).

The Mad Hatter

January 15th, 2020 at 9:48 AM ^

Agreed.  I've come to the conclusion that we should make it as easy for football players as possible, just like the other top programs do, online classes, whatever.

The ones that want an excellent education (most of the players I think) have all the resources they need to get one.  But if there's a 5* QB that wants to practice 12 hours a day and take online classes, let him.  It won't affect our academic reputation in any way, since most people already assume (correctly) athletes are not doing the same work as regular students.

Fuck it.  Lets win.  Even the ivies cut some corners with their football players.

crg

January 15th, 2020 at 10:06 AM ^

Why stop there?  Just cut to the chase and spin off the revenue sports completely from the school and them simply be school-sponsored semi-pro franchises, open to the legitimate students as well as non-student affiliates.

 

Or, we could have this be something only for real students - which is what college football was for the first 130+ years.