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From ESPN Big 12 Blog guy, Link
Burney's CU blog nixed after only one submission
August 13, 2009 6:40 PM
Posted by ESPN.com's Tim Griffin
Colorado senior cornerback Ben Burney has learned that blogs sometimes can provide too much inside information.
Burney was slated to write a season-long blog for CUBuffs.com, but Burney told the Colorado Daily that he was flagged after his first draft.
Burney's blog "The sad goodbye" apparently provided a little too detailed picture of playing college football than Colorado officials were prepared for -- or wanted readers to know.
His introduction began with a description of him waking early Thursday morning next to a woman in his bed, and graduated to mention his libido as he commented that reporting day for players is actually viewed as the end of fun times and freedom.
Instead, it becomes the beginning of a regimented schedule and a more asecetic lifestyle associated with preseason training camp.
Burney told the Colorado student paper the blog was later edited without consulting him. He said the plan was for him to write the blog all season. He has learned that further editions won't be necessary.
"I have been censored. They took parts out of my blog and they took it away from me," Burney told the Daily. "It was my idea and it saddens me. They didn't tell me why I got censored, they changed it and it was taken away from me."
Here's a link to Burney's edited copy that still appears on Colorado's web site.
But thanks to Google, here are the better parts of his original work.
* He describes waking up next to his "girl of the night" and noting that, because of the impending training schedule, his "libido sheds a salty tear aware she can't be back for awhile."
* The team's dinner on reporting was described as "Two dead pigs oozing with goodness, pretty in pink salmon, and crayon green salad all laid our over black and gold table clothes" and how, after eating all that, "our toilets pay for it."
* Burney also noted that the administrative meeting run by staff members after dinner "sucks the life out of each one of us, coaches and players alike."
Burney said he doesn't believe he crossed a line for what would be considered appropriate content on a athletic department Web site. Instead, he said he was simply sharing some honest insight into college football and its players.
"I was just trying to portray how it is," Burney said. "I wasn't trying to be risqué or anything like that. I was just trying to make it realistic. I guess it was too realistic."
Unfortunately for Burney, he was keeping it "too real" for his editors at the school web site.
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