RIP Corley

TLankford

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Joe Schad ‏@schadjoe
Former Miss St WR coach Angelo Mirando resigned in wake of ongoing NCAA investigation into his recruitment of at least one Bulldogs player


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Cheating your way your mediocre results has to be tough to swallow for the fan base
 

TLankford

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Miss. St. cuts ties with booster


Updated: August 28, 2012, 5:58 PM ET
ESPN.com news services

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STARKVILLE, Miss. -- Mississippi State has disassociated from an athletics booster because of "impermissible contact" with a prospective student-athlete.
The booster's name was redacted from documents provided to The Associated Press after a Freedom of Information Act request was made. Mississippi State announced last week that it is cooperating with the NCAA because of a "potential recruiting irregularity."
The letter to the disassociated booster is dated July 13. The university says the NCAA's investigation has lasted several months and is close to a conclusion.
Mississippi State says in the documents that it has asked the disassociated booster to interview with the NCAA, but the booster has declined. It also says that "other violations of NCAA rules also may have occurred."
The disassociation letter says the booster is not allowed to participate in any organization that is recognized by Mississippi State as a supporter of the athletic programs; make a financial gift to Mississippi State's athletic programs; or receive any other privileges from the school's athletic program not given to the general public.
The disassociation letter is the latest look into a football program that is dealing with NCAA scrutiny as the Bulldogs' season opener against Jackson State approaches Saturday.
Mississippi State receivers coach Angelo Mirando resigned Aug. 19, citing "unforeseen personal issues."
Coach Dan Mullen would not elaborate on the reasons for Mirando's departure.
Mississippi State freshman defensive back Will Redmond was the subject of an NCAA interview that his coach at Memphis East High School gave, according to the coach, Marcus Wimberly.
"I told them as far as I was concerned his recruitment was on the up and up," Wimberly said. "Who knows what they're looking for. Will chose his school because he felt most comfortable and it was close to home."
Mullen said last week that Redmond is still practicing with the team.
The NCAA has declined comment, except to confirm that it is cooperating with Mississippi State.
Information from ESPN reporters Brett McMurphy and Joe Schad and The Associated Press was used in this report.
 

TLankford

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STARKVILLE ? Mississippi State has told a booster that he committed an NCAA violation and that he is no longer welcome as a supporter of the school's athletic programs.
The booster was found to have had "impermissible contact" with a recruit and may have engaged in other NCAA rules violations, according to documents provided Tuesday to The Clarion-Ledger through an open records request.

NCAA violations can lead to punishment ranging from scholarship reductions to post-season bans.

The booster refused "multiple" requests by MSU's compliance department to be interviewed by an NCAA representative, according to a letter dated July 13 and written by MSU's outside counsel. The name of the booster was redacted in three documents, including two emails, released Tuesday by MSU.

MSU receivers coach Angelo Mirando reportedly resigned Aug. 19 in the wake of an investigation into his recruitment of at least one player on the Bulldogs' roster. Memphis East High coach Marcus Wimberly told ESPN.com that MSU freshman defensive back Will Redmond, who Mirando helped recruit to MSU, was the subject of an NCAA interview earlier this year.

Wimberly told ESPN.com that Redmond's recruitment was "on the up and up."

Meanwhile, the disassociated booster will not be allowed to provide gifts, including monetary donations, to MSU's athletics programs or "receive any privilege" that is not available to the general public, according to documents.

MSU refunded the booster's season tickets, but the booster, in an email to MSU compliance director Bracky Brett on July 28, expressed concern that a separate donation had not been refunded.

"If you refuse to refund my donation, then I will assume that I will still have the right to purchase season tickets as a 2012 donor," according to the email.

The Bulldog Club has since refunded the football seat donation, according to an email authored Mike Glazier, MSU's outside counsel on NCAA compliance and infractions.


The NCAA has been focused on the city of Memphis since at least February and several players and coaches have either talked to or plan to talk to NCAA investigators.




Redmond's 7-on-7 summer league coach, Byron De'Vinner of Nashville, told The Clarion-Ledger last week that Redmond's name never came up when NCAA investigators interviewed him in August.
Freshman Georgia cornerback Sheldon Dawson, a Memphis native, is set to interview with an NCAA representative Friday, according to the Memphis Commercial Appeal.
The common thread of these interviews, which have included at least two former Memphis high school players and one coach, has been Mississippi State, according to the Commercial Appeal story.
Brent Hill, the coach at St. George High in Memphis, said he met with the NCAA earlier this year and the questioner was interested in "a young man from Memphis" and Mississippi State, according to the report.
De'Vinner's summer team included Auburn University running back Jovon Robinson, who was ruled ineligible this month by the NCAA after Memphis City Schools said a guidance counselor falsified his transcript.
In a statement released Thursday, MSU said it was nearing the end of the examination of a recruiting "irregularity" and promised additional details upon its completion.
MSU athletic director Scott Stricklin did not return messages Tuesday seeking comment about the booster.
In an interesting twist, recruiting analyst Paul Jones posted on his website Tuesday that he knows the booster involved and that the booster told him last Friday he "would be involved in the investigation and would be questioned by MSU and the NCAA."
Jones, the editor of the 247sports.com website that covers Mississippi State, would not reveal the booster's name to The Clarion-Ledger.
Jones wrote he was posting this information because "my name has been tossed around wrongly in this."
He wrote that he knows the booster because, "I have talked football and recruiting with him like I do with numerous others," but denied knowing about any possible wrongdoing until the booster "hinted to me" early last week about it.
 

TLankford

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if there are any kind of sanctions, which who knows with the NCAA these days, they won't be that bad. And the NCAA moves at a snails pace so it wouldn't be anytime in 2012 regardless
 

TLankford

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Had to bump this when I finally saw the article Corley... Word is that the "javon robinson story" is actually more of a "the memphis story" and involves AU, MSU and Bama, and maybe more schools. Either way if it's something similar to this damning article MSU is gonna get the death penalty. $200 handshake = ESPN article. Man what a terrible company :mj07: :mj07: :mj07:


Coach claims booster paid recruit
Updated: September 12, 2012, 10:18 AM ET
ESPN.com news services

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A football coach in Nashville says he witnessed a booster give Mississippi State freshman defensive back Will Redmond money, according to a radio interview.

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Byron De'Vinner, who has been interviewed by NCAA investigators, told the Head to Head radio show in Mississippi on Tuesday that he saw a "handshake" between the booster and Redmond, and that former Bulldogs receivers coach Angelo Mirando was aware of benefits.

De'Vinner confirmed to ESPN's Joe Schad on Tuesday afternoon that he called into the radio show. He said the handshake between Redmond and the booster included about "$200."

"Will Redmond is a kid that was basically taken advantage of by a booster and by an assistant coach," De'Vinner said on the radio show.

Mirando resigned Aug. 19, citing "unforeseen personal issues."

"I've read what's been written but I have nothing to say about that," Mirando told Schad.

Mississippi State has been working with the NCAA to examine a "potential recruiting irregularity" over the past several months, but has declined to provide further details since Mirando resigned.

According to documents provided to the Clarion-Ledger on Aug. 28, an MSU booster was found to have had "impermissible contact" with a recruit and may have engaged in other NCAA rules violations. The school has since disassociated with the booster.

A Mississippi State spokesman said Wednesday there was no comment beyond the last statement issued by the school.

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TLankford

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Same thing, More detailed

Same thing, More detailed

Pretty much exact same story as ESPNs. Talks about MSU rogue booster giving out some money at 7-on-7s mostly. Says 2 sentences about Javon Robinson. No clue how/why Auburn keeps getting so much exposure for this story since it really has nothing to do with us

http://sports.yahoo.com/news/ncaaf-...ippi-state-booster-gave-money-to-recruit.html

A now-disassociated Mississippi State booster allegedly made cash payments to a recruit and arranged for complimentary lodging and meals for the recruit's seven-on-seven coach, Yahoo! Sports has learned.

In an interview with Y! Sports, Nashville-based seven-on-seven coach Byron De'Vinner ? recipient of the lodging and meals ? explained in detail how former Mississippi State booster Robert Denton Herring broke multiple NCAA rules in 2011 and '12 in an effort to land Memphis East High School defensive back Will Redmond.

Will Redmond signed with Mississippi State, but hasn't played. (Rivals)De'Vinner said he also told his story to NCAA enforcement representatives, who have been investigating the allegations jointly with Mississippi State's compliance department over the course of several months. In July the school sent Herring, who lives in Roswell, Ga., a letter informing him that he had been disassociated from the athletic program for "impermissible contact" with a recruit. In August, Bulldogs assistant coach Angelo Mirando resigned for what the school termed "unforeseen personal issues," but sources told Y! Sports that his resignation was because of the NCAA inquiry. De'Vinner said Mirando introduced Redmond to Herring, but that the coach and booster both wanted De'Vinner "to take the fall" for their relationship.

Vanessa Brown, Redmond's mother, declined comment to Yahoo! Sports Wednesday morning. Attempts to reach Herring and Mirando were unsuccessful. Herring has not cooperated with investigators from both the NCAA and Mississippi State.

Redmond was a four-star recruit according to Rivals.com and reportedly had offers from Georgia, Tennessee, Ohio State, Notre Dame and Vanderbilt, among others. He signed with Mississippi State last February and is currently a freshman on the team. He has not yet played in a college game. Redmond has been interviewed by the NCAA, according to De'Vinner, and there have been multiple media reports that the NCAA interviewed his coach at Memphis East, Marcus Wimberly.

[Dan Wetzel: Notre Dame protects football schedule in ACC move]

De'Vinner said another Memphis product, defensive back Sheldon Dawson of Ridgeway High School, also was interviewed recently by the NCAA about his recruitment by Mississippi State. Multiple media outlets have reported that as well. Dawson is a freshman at Georgia and has seen limited action this season. He did not return calls and messages Tuesday.

A source with knowledge of the investigation said the NCAA contacted nearly a dozen players who were recruited by Mississippi State.

De'Vinner said he believes Mirando was the only Mississippi State staff member who knew "Denton" Herring was committing recruiting violations.

"I don't think there were no other coaches in the know, but Denton was dealing with a lot of players over there," De'Vinner said. "Will was the one caught up, but he was dealing with a lot of players."

De'Vinner provided Yahoo! Sports with hotel bills and other documentation to back up his claims of violations. Under NCAA rules, benefits to a third party associated with a prospect are impermissible from any representative of a university. That includes boosters, and Herring ? a season-ticket holder prior to being disassociated ? fits the definition of a booster.

Because of the ongoing NCAA investigation into Memphis-area prospects ? including Auburn signee Jovon Robinson, who was declared ineligible earlier this summer by the NCAA after it discovered the player's high school transcript had been changed ? De'Vinner has become the focus of fan interest across the region. He said he came forward to Yahoo! Sports to make public what information he's provided to the NCAA in the hopes of clearing his name. He said he's been accused on fan message boards and in other outlets of being a "bag man" who was selling access to recruits who had played on his seven-on-seven team.

"Not one person out here has given me anything," De'Vinner said. "If me getting gear from schools when I work a camp is a violation, then everything's a violation. ? Do I have a relationship with coaches at virtually every school? Yeah, I do.

"I'm the scapegoat for everything that's going on. ? I'm telling the truth."

Asked for comment Tuesday night, Mississippi State athletic director Scott Stricklin referred to the statement he made last month, which said the school had "worked in cooperation" with the NCAA to investigate "a potential recruiting irregularity" and that the investigation is "nearing the end." Stricklin declined further comment.

NCAA spokesperson Stacey Osburn declined comment, citing the association's policy of not commenting on current, pending or potential investigations.

De'Vinner said he first met Herring before the South Carolina-Mississippi State football game on Oct. 15, 2011. De'Vinner drove Redmond, who had committed to the Bulldogs in August, to Starkville for the game. De'Vinner said that when they arrived at Davis Wade Stadium, Redmond received a phone call directing them to Herring's tailgate.

"We walk out there, we get to [Herring], they shake hands and Will introduces me to him," De'Vinner said. "We have something to eat at the tailgate, and he tells Will to come back to the tailgate after the game, he has some gas money for him. After the game was over, we go back out there and he gives Will the traditional handshake. Will didn't know what the heck was going on. He tells Will, ?Shake my hand.' He put the money inside Will's hand. It was probably $150, $200. I'm just guessing how much it was. We get in the car and I told Will, ?You take this [expletive] to your grave.' The guy was introducing us to other boosters and stuff, saying they were glad to have him at Mississippi State."

De'Vinner said that several weeks later, Redmond told him he had received a jacket from Herring.

In mid-January, Redmond made his official visit to Mississippi State as part of a major recruiting weekend at the school. De'Vinner said Herring encouraged De'Vinner to accompany Redmond to Starkville. De'Vinner said there were multiple NCAA violations committed during that visit.

Bulldogs assistant coach Angelo Mirando resigned in August for "unforeseen personal issues." (AP)"Denton said he could hook me up to stay at the Old Waverly Resort," De'Vinner said of the elite golf club with traditional southern lodging in nearby West Point, Miss. De'Vinner stayed in room 13, part of a cottage on the grounds of the club. Such a room currently costs $150 per night according to the Old Waverly website, expensive for rural Mississippi.

"I had no idea what it was," De'Vinner said. "I Googled the address. He told me on Friday that when I got there it was taken care of, to go to the front desk and get the key. I was thinking I had to pay for it. I got there and they had my key already, and so I checked in. Then I go over to State with the coaches and told them, ?It was like I got lost and wound up at Old Waverly Resort. This place don't belong here.' "

De'Vinner said several Mississippi State coaches knew he was staying at the luxury resort and named recruiting coordinator/safeties coach Tony Hughes, cornerbacks coach Melvin Smith and defensive coordinator/line coach Chris Wilson.

De'Vinner provided Yahoo! Sports with a copy of his hotel receipt for that trip which showed his room listed as "complimentary," with no charge. The only charge for his stay was a $55 cleaning fee, plus $4.40 in taxes on the cleaning charge. But De'Vinner said he never paid the cleaning fee and was never asked to pay it.

"I know for a fact [the Mississippi State coaches] didn't have any idea how it was arranged," De'Vinner said. "Denton told me to ask for Shane [Williams, director of lodging at Old Waverly] when I got to the front desk. Shane and I talked for a while before I went to my room. He told me I would be the only one in the cottage that night. I was so amazed at how nice the room was with the marble floors. I didn't want to leave. When I met the coaches and the recruits parents at some hibachi restaurant is when I told everyone about where I was staying and how nice it was. The coaches told me they usually go out there and play golf."

[Also: Football player says he was dismissed because of sexual orientation]

De'Vinner also said that on Redmond's official visit to Mississippi State he ate at least one complimentary meal at Anthony's Good Food Market, a restaurant in nearby West Point, Miss. De'Vinner said Herring instructed him to speak with the owner of the restaurant, Ray Hamilton, and to say that he was sent there by Herring and his bill would be taken care of.

De'Vinner said he ate complimentary meals at Anthony's on three separate trips to Starkville.

"Ray met me," De'Vinner said. "He knows who I am. Denton told me to let Ray know I was there."

On Saturday night, Jan. 14, De'Vinner said he went to the Hilton Garden Inn, in Starkville, where Redmond and the other recruits were staying and went into Redmond's room to talk to him. De'Vinner said during that visit, Herring called Redmond.

"At that point in time, Will told me, ?I got to get with Denton, I need some more money.' " De'Vinner recalled. "I said, ?More money? Money for what?' He said, ?He's already gave me some. I need some more.' I said, ?Will, you need to chill out. This is going to get you in trouble.' "

During the official visit, Mirando told De'Vinner that Mississippi State wanted to interview him for a staff position as an assistant recruiting coordinator. De'Vinner said that about two weeks later ? shortly before National Signing Day ? he returned to Starkville and had a seven-hour interview.

De'Vinner said he had lunch with Hughes, Mississippi State's recruiting coordinator and safeties coach, then met with director of player personnel/high school relations Rockey Felker, then was taken to meet with the Mississippi State compliance staff. After that, De'Vinner said he met with most of the staff before having a 20-minute discussion with head coach Dan Mullen. De'Vinner said he received about $300 from the university as a reimbursement for his travel to the interview and lodging.

"The interview was supposed to be a formality to pretty much get Will [to sign]," De'Vinner said. "But after I interviewed it shocked them, because of the way I sold myself, and it went from being a formality to they wanted to hire me. Compliance wasn't sure because I didn't have any experience in the position, and so did the athletic director [Scott Stricklin]."

Under current bylaws, hiring a non-scholastic coach for a non-coaching position would be an NCAA violation in college basketball, but not in football. However, there is ongoing NCAA discussion about broadening that rule to also cover football as the influence of third parties grows in that sport.

Days after the interview, De'Vinner said Mullen called to tell him he did not get the job, but still wanted him to come back to Mississippi State to speak at a clinic in mid-April. De'Vinner said he made two visits to Starkville in April ? one was to speak at the coaching clinic, and the other was for the Mississippi State spring game. De'Vinner said he received roughly $700 from the university for a speaking fee and to cover his lodging and travel expenses for the three-day clinic.

"At that point, I think Will had been interviewed by the NCAA," De'Vinner said. "Mirando told me they wanted me to take the fall, to say I introduced Denton to Will at the South Carolina game. I said, 'No, I'm not going to hang myself. And plus, that's not what happened.'

"So him and Denton said they'd take the blame for it. I said, ?Whatever, I'm not doing it.' Whenever Angelo was interviewed [by the NCAA] was the last time I had any communication with him or Denton."
 

TLankford

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I saw that too. Graduated from UAB and apparently is a Bama fan but switches back and forth between Bama and OMiss :shrug:

Saw today that he was never in contact with AU or Bama so it's down to MSU, UT and Vandy. Most recent article implicates $60K offered for Will Redmond from MSU if I read it right



Report: 7-on-7 coach says several NCAA violations occurred during Redmond?s recruitment

Posted on September 12, 2012 by Brandon Marcello

A 7-on-7 coach in Nashville alleges former Mississippi State booster Robert Denton Herring made cash payments to then-recruit Will Redmond and arranged for complimentary lodging and meals for the coach, according to Yahoo! Sports.
The Yahoo! Sports report details several recruiting violations and arrives a day following Byron De?Vinner?s revelation to Head to Head radio and The Clarion-Ledger that he once witnessed a booster provide Redmond, a Memphis East High player, an estimated $200 in a handshake in 2011.
De?Vinner explains, in length, the details of the alleged recruiting violations and how former MSU receivers coach Angelo Mirando and the booster wanted the 7-on-7 coach to ?take the blame? for the violations involving the booster in the report. He also claims Herring dealt with more than one player, and that Mirando introduced Redmond to Herring.
Update, 1:25 p.m.: De?Vinner told the Clarion-Ledger in a phone interview Wednesday morning that Herring attempted to persuade ?at least 10″ recruits to attend MSU.
De?Vinner also said Herring contacted him two weeks ago, when news of the investigation heated up.

?He wanted me to keep quiet,? De?Vinner told the Clarion-Ledger.
Attempts by the Clarion-Ledgerto reach Herring have been unsuccessful since August.
More from the Yahoo! report:

De?Vinner said he believes Mirando was the only Mississippi State staff member who knew ?Denton? Herring was committing recruiting violations.

?I don?t think there were no other coaches in the know, but Denton was dealing with a lot of players over there,? De?Vinner said. ?Will was the one caught up, but he was dealing with a lot of players.?

De?Vinner provided Yahoo! Sports with hotel bills and other documentation to back up his claims of violations. Under NCAA rules, benefits to a third party associated with a prospect are impermissible from any representative of a university. That includes boosters, and Herring ? a season-ticket holder prior to being disassociated ? fits the definition of a booster.
De?Vinner said Herring arranged a complimentary stay for the coach at the Old Waverly Resort in West Point in mid-January, when De?Vinner accompanied Redmond on a recruiting visit to Starkville. De?Vinner backed up his claims by providing Yahoo! Sports with a receipt for his hotel stay.
MSU assistant coaches Chris Wilson, Tony Hughes and Melvin Smith are named in the story, but De?Vinner doesn?t believe they were aware of the arrangement.
?I know for a fact [the Mississippi State coaches] didn?t have any idea how it was arranged,? De?Vinner says in the report. ?Denton told me to ask for Shane [Williams, director of lodging at Old Waverly] when I got to the front desk. Shane and I talked for a while before I went to my room. He told me I would be the only one in the cottage that night. I was so amazed at how nice the room was with the marble floors. I didn?t want to leave. When I met the coaches and the recruits parents at some hibachi restaurant is when I told everyone about where I was staying and how nice it was. The coaches told me they usually go out there and play golf.?
Herring also arranged complimentary meals for De?Vinner at Anthony?s Good Food Market in West Point on several trips to Starkville, according to the report. The restaurant?s owner, Ray Hamilton, denied such meals.

?I have spoken with MSU compliance and the NCAA,? Hamilton said in an email to the Clarion-Ledger. ?They have asked that I remain silent until all the details are sorted out. The story is inaccurate.?
As we reported on ClarionLedger.com on Tuesday, De?Vinner later interviewed at Mississippi State for a position in the football office in January. De?Vinner tells Yahoo! Sports that interview spanned seven hours and included a face-to-face meeting with coach Dan Mullen.
?The interview was supposed to be a formality to pretty much get Will [to sign],? De?Vinner says in the report. ?But after I interviewed it shocked them, because of the way I sold myself, and it went from being a formality to they wanted to hire me. Compliance wasn?t sure because I didn?t have any experience in the position, and so did the athletic director [Scott Stricklin].?
When asked by the Clarion-Ledger Wednesday if he knew De?Vinner and whether he is aware of the alleged NCAA violations detailed in the Yahoo! Sports report, Mullen declined to comment.
?The NCAA is doing their work on that and we?re not commenting on any of that stuff at this time,? he said.
Redmond allegedly accepted more than one payment from Herring during his recruitment. De?Vinner claims he first met Herring at a tailgate prior to MSU?s home game against South Carolina on Oct. 15, 2011 and witnessed money exchange hands. Herring also called Redmond during a visit to Starkville on Jan. 14, De?Vinner said.
?At that point in time, Will told me, ?I got to get with Denton, I need some more money.? ? De?Vinner says in the story. ?I said, ?More money? Money for what?? He said, ?He?s already gave me some. I need some more.? I said, ?Will, you need to chill out. This is going to get you in trouble.? ?
Redmond, a Memphis native, signed with MSU in February. De?Vinner was not hired by MSU, but Mullen, De?Vinner says, invited him to speak at a coaching clinic in the spring and received $700 from the university for a speaking fee and to cover lodging and travel expenses during the three-day clinic.
Update, 1:31 p.m.: De?Vinner told the Clarion-Ledger he spoke at the coaching clinic after NCAA investigators and the members of the MSU compliance department interviewed him about Redmond.

?That proves right there that there is no problem between me and Mississippi State,? he said Wednesday.
De?Vinner told the Clarion-Ledger in August he had cooperated with NCAA investigators and MSU?s compliance department during the investigation. Redmond, a freshman, has not played or suited up for MSU through two games this season. Mullen said MSU has yet to set its travel roster for the Bulldogs? trip to Troy on Saturday.
MSU has been working with the NCAA to examine a ?potential recruiting irregularity? over the last several months but has not provided further details since Mirando resigned for ?unforeseen personal issues? on Aug. 19. ESPN has since reported Mirando?s exit was because of the NCAA?s investigation. Stricklin would not comment on De?Vinner?s accusations and referred to an Aug. 23 statement, which promises ?further details? when the investigation is complete.
MSU distanced itself from a booster who had ?impermissible contact? with a recruit and may have engaged in other NCAA rules violation in the summer, according to documents provided to The Clarion-Ledger on Aug. 28. The booster refused ?multiple? requests by MSU?s compliance department to be interviewed by an NCAA representative, according to a letter dated July 13 and written by MSU?s outside counsel.
Mirando has not responded to numerous interview requests.
 

baldheaded stranger

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sec and comish pharoah slive

sec and comish pharoah slive

would like to commit on slive throwing the flag on ole miss freshman trea elston for a legal hit on utepplayer last week. coach freeze is trying to lead ole miss out of wilderness but the pharoah slive decided to try and keep them there if it had been an ala player before the michigan game this would not have happened if he wants to penilaze teams for hard hit he should suspend the entire leaague and play flag fb thanks corley for letting me vent in your thread good luck for rest of season excpt for last game.
:mj07:
 
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