WTAM 1100’s news staff started doing news for our sister station in Youngstown, 570 WKBN, back in about 1998.  We all learned a lot of about Youngstown and the Mahoning Valley as a result.

Some of the news stories had to do about the success of the Youngstown State University football team.  The Penguins won some NCAA Division 1-AA championships under head coach Jim Tressel.  I was rather impressed with what I heard about Tressel.  I even found out that he had ties to Greater Cleveland, what with all the years his father spent as head coach at Baldwin-Wallace College.

I was quite happy to hear the news that Jim Tressel had been hired at Ohio State University to replace coach John Cooper.  The thing that impressed me the most was when Tressel announced at the news conference exactly how many days it was before OSU would beat Michigan.  That, to me, proved that he understood one of the biggest rivalries in college sports.

Fast forward to this week.  Jim Tressel has resigned after it became clear that he covered up news that some players had traded their trinkets for tattoos.  Sports Illustrated has reported that this kind of thing has been going on for years.

Quarterback Terrelle Pryor, who received some of the freebies, is now being accused of being able to drive expensive cars from a used car dealer.    I’m sorry, but saying he was able to take a GMC Denali to his hometown in Pennsylvania on a test drive is just a crock.  Nobody gets to take a vehicle on a weekend test drive for a few hundred miles out of state!

Even though Tressel has resigned, there will still be an investigation by the NCAA.  It makes me wonder if this investigation could spread.

Maybe it’s about time that the nation’s major colleges give up the pretense that players in major sports are amateurs, and somehow give them some kind of payment.   Make them more like minor league teams in baseball.  Isn’t that really what major college football and basketball teams are, anyway?  Farm teams for the NFL and the NBA?

In this respect, it would also be nice if smaller colleges got more attention.  More of us should be following teams from NCAA Division III, like University of Mount Union.  The kids who play football for Mount Union are there because they love the game.  Division III schools cannot give out athletic scholarships.  If those players are getting a free ride through school, it’s because they received academic scholarships, not scholarships given for their ability to run or tackle. The Mount Union Purple Raiders have won a number of national championships, because they have a great program.  And yes, even one or two of those kids have actually made it to the NFL.  But they’re not there as a stepping stone to the pros, they play because they care about the game, not because it’s the means to an end.  Namely, an end in which they have lots of means, starting with giving up their memories for ink on their skin.