tmfr15 Posted June 11, 2011 Share Posted June 11, 2011 Watched ESPN 30 for 30 on SMU called Pony Excess. I am sure many of you have watched and it is a good show in reviewing what went on there on the death penalty. The only issue that I have with it is that, right at the end, they show clips of coaches and have snippets of commentary about rules violations. They show Alabama coach Nick Saban and Bama has had major violations, albeit not with Saban, but major nonetheless. They show Bowden and he had problems with the NCAA. Then the show T.O. holding up the trophy after NU won down in the Fiesta against Florida. That was possibly the best team at Nebraska, if not in CFB overall. By including the clip, ESPN is saying, IMO, that Nebraska must have cheated to be that good. That just pisses me off. Nice snipe job ESPN. I am sure it was totally unintentional Quote Link to comment
Enhance Posted June 11, 2011 Share Posted June 11, 2011 Watched ESPN 30 for 30 on SMU called Pony Excess. I am sure many of you have watched and it is a good show in reviewing what went on there on the death penalty. The only issue that I have with it is that, right at the end, they show clips of coaches and have snippets of commentary about rules violations. They show Alabama coach Nick Saban and Bama has had major violations, albeit not with Saban, but major nonetheless. They show Bowden and he had problems with the NCAA. Then the show T.O. holding up the trophy after NU won down in the Fiesta against Florida. That was possibly the best team at Nebraska, if not in CFB overall. By including the clip, ESPN is saying, IMO, that Nebraska must have cheated to be that good. That just pisses me off. Nice snipe job ESPN. I am sure it was totally unintentional They might have been referring to the LP situation, even though I don't believe that had anything to do with the NCAA and was purely a Nebraska issue to deal with. Other than that I can't think of anything, unless Herbstreit was a co-producer of the show. Quote Link to comment
zinner111 Posted June 11, 2011 Share Posted June 11, 2011 Isn't it pretty common knowledge that there were players using steroids during the 90's? I would venture to guess 70-80% of D1 schools have players who commit "major" infractions - its just a matter of who gets caught. Quote Link to comment
Enhance Posted June 11, 2011 Share Posted June 11, 2011 Isn't it pretty common knowledge that there were players using steroids during the 90's? I would venture to guess 70-80% of D1 schools have players who commit "major" infractions - its just a matter of who gets caught. I would venture a guess that every program had somebody juicing at some point. Quote Link to comment
REDSTEEL Posted June 11, 2011 Share Posted June 11, 2011 Isn't it pretty common knowledge that there were players using steroids during the 90's? I would venture to guess 70-80% of D1 schools have players who commit "major" infractions - its just a matter of who gets caught. Maybe in the early 80's but Nebraska instituted steroid testing around the mid 80's to prove they werent using. Former UCLA (Terry Donahue) head coach always tried to imply that's how Nebraska was tremondous running the ball without actually coming out and saying it. Quote Link to comment
In the Deed the Glory Posted June 11, 2011 Share Posted June 11, 2011 I noticed this as well and it pissed me off too. Why include us, we have never had a major NCAA violation in football regarding paying players. I don't understand why they show Tommie Frazier at one point and then TO with the Fiesta Bowl trophy. Quote Link to comment
Hercules Posted June 12, 2011 Share Posted June 12, 2011 Isn't it pretty common knowledge that there were players using steroids during the 90's? I would venture to guess 70-80% of D1 schools have players who commit "major" infractions - its just a matter of who gets caught. Maybe in the early 80's but Nebraska instituted steroid testing around the mid 80's to prove they werent using. Former UCLA (Terry Donahue) head coach always tried to imply that's how Nebraska was tremondous running the ball without actually coming out and saying it. Right. It was after Steinkuhler and Rimington and all those freaks from the early 80's teams that everyone started accusing us of steroid use. We might have been using steroids, but our main advantage at the time was that our weight training program was years ahead of everyone else in the nation. My guess is that ESPN showed the clip of Osborne because of the LP controversy. That 95 team had a bad rep, multiple players arrested, but I think that LP was the only case where the charges stuck. Quote Link to comment
jsneb83 Posted June 12, 2011 Share Posted June 12, 2011 Isn't it pretty common knowledge that there were players using steroids during the 90's? I would venture to guess 70-80% of D1 schools have players who commit "major" infractions - its just a matter of who gets caught. Maybe in the early 80's but Nebraska instituted steroid testing around the mid 80's to prove they werent using. Former UCLA (Terry Donahue) head coach always tried to imply that's how Nebraska was tremondous running the ball without actually coming out and saying it. Right. It was after Steinkuhler and Rimington and all those freaks from the early 80's teams that everyone started accusing us of steroid use. We might have been using steroids, but our main advantage at the time was that our weight training program was years ahead of everyone else in the nation. My guess is that ESPN showed the clip of Osborne because of the LP controversy. That 95 team had a bad rep, multiple players arrested, but I think that LP was the only case where the charges stuck. Didn't Barry Switzer say one time that Nebraska and Oklahoma were probably the only two schools that knew what steriods were, or something to that effect. Quote Link to comment
Notre Dame Joe Posted June 12, 2011 Share Posted June 12, 2011 My favorite anecdote is the the husker players taking weights off the bar when the reporters came into the weight room. Quote Link to comment
Count 'Bility Posted June 12, 2011 Share Posted June 12, 2011 Yes, our strenth and conditioning program was light years ahead of everyone in the country. That's why we were whooping up on NFL caliber loaded teams with a lot of walk on country boys. I also think that that advantage spilled over to other sports such as mens basketball. Nebraska basketball had pretty much it's most successful run at the same time the football program did. By 2000, everyone was catching up in that category and it started to show. As far as the Lawrence Phillips incident, everyone knows we didnt need him for another down that season to be successful, and to say otherwise is just kidding yourself. Lawrence held his end of an ulitmatum and he was rewarded. It show how much honor Osborne has if you actually know the real story. 1 Quote Link to comment
walksalone Posted June 13, 2011 Share Posted June 13, 2011 ESPN's still butthurt over the fact that the 71 Huskers went against the 95 Huskers in the greatest CFB teams of all time.... Quote Link to comment
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