Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Re: [gatortalk] Fwd: [gatornews] GatorNews from the Miami Herald and Palm Beach Post, courtesy of JunoGator

Thanks Leon!

Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI
Real Estate Broker
Bob Parks, LLC
1517 Hunt Club Blvd
Gallatin TN 37066
615-972-4239
615-826-4040 
Sent from my iPhone

On Apr 17, 2013, at 3:27 PM, Arthur Polhill <lpolhill@bellsouth.net> wrote:

I've always admired Oliver's understated dry wit.

Sent from Yahoo! Mail on Android



From: Shane Ford <goufgators@bellsouth.net>;
To: gatortalk@googlegroups.com <gatortalk@googlegroups.com>;
Subject: Re: [gatortalk] Fwd: [gatornews] GatorNews from the Miami Herald and Palm Beach Post, courtesy of JunoGator
Sent: Wed, Apr 17, 2013 2:12:42 PM

AMEN, Brother Oliver!  Go Gators!  


Sent from Shane's iPad
Go Gators!    &    Skol Vikes!

On Apr 17, 2013, at 10:00 AM, "mail.bobparks.com" <oliver@bobparks.com> wrote:

I wonder. Where was Donna Shalala's righteous anger when the Ponzi schemer was standing right next to her handing out money?
His "uncorroborated testimony?"  The only part uncorroborated  is what Scum says was obtained illegally. Since when are lawyer acquired depositions obtained illegally?
Someone tell this Homer to grow up. And, tell Miami to take their well deserved punishment and Shut Up. 

Oliver Barry, CRS, GRI
Real Estate Broker
Bob Parks, LLC
1517 Hunt Club Blvd
Gallatin TN 37066
615-972-4239
615-826-4040 
Sent from my iPhone

Begin forwarded message:

From: JunoGator <broadreachfsc@earthlink.net>
Date: April 17, 2013, 5:45:31 AM CDT
To: GatorNEWS Lyons <gatornews@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [gatornews] GatorNews from the Miami Herald and Palm Beach Post, courtesy of JunoGator
Reply-To: gatornews+owners@googlegroups.com


MY OPINION

Greg Cote: UM is right, but NCAA has the might


 
<1r1DS4.Em.56.jpg>
UM president Donna Shalala has chosen to fight charges by the NCAA by outlining a number of violations by the governing body. 
JOSE A. IGLESIAS / STAFF PHOTO

GCOTE@MIAMIHERALD.COM

What is it they say about no animal being more dangerous than one wounded or backed into a corner? Apparently the same is true of a staggered NCAA, which suffers from the national embarrassment of its own corruption and buffoonery but nevertheless has some desperate fight left in it.

This cannot be good news for the University of Miami.

UM has done all it can to publicly shame the NCAA into submission — armed with ample ammunition — and yet the beleaguered governing body lurches and limps obstinately on, full of spectacularly unjustified pride. Give the NCAA and its hypocrite-president Mark Emmert this much: This body can take a punch.

Hurricanes sports run on a façade of life-goes-on-normalcy these days. Men's basketball was cheered into the Sweet 16. Baseball nears its playoffs. Spring football ended Saturday with an optimistic show by quarterback Stephen Morris and running back Duke Johnson.

But all the while something sinister boils under the serene surface, threatening a sinkhole.

It is the NCAA. Poked, prodded and not happy about it.

Of course none of this seems pressing at the moment as we try yet again to make sense of what's senseless: this time the Boston Marathon bombings.

UM's own little reality hasn't gone away, though. We are reminded in the new, 32-page report from NCAA Vice President of Enforcement Jonathan F. Duncan — a response to Miami's 45-page motion that beseeched college sports' judge and jury to end its laborious investigation of Miami with no further punishment.

Punch. Counterpunch. Miami has right in its corner, I think, the better argument here, but that's moot, because the NCAA has the heavier gloves in this fight, the last swings. And, of course, the people scoring this fight are neither neutral observers nor jurors under oath. They are members of the NCAA enforcement committee, whose boss just penned the defensive, derriere-covering report blasting UM.

If these dueling reports are a matter of he-said/she-said, UM might have the right argument, but the NCAA has the megaphone, and the last word.

We should have seen this coming.

UM and its president, Donna Shalala, have gambled in a big way by aggressively, harshly and publicly calling to task the NCAA for its various improper conduct in the long-stewing case of renegade booster Nevin Shapiro.

It is one thing for an independent review to have cited wrongdoing by the NCAA.

It is one thing for Emmert himself to have admitted to "enormous foul-ups" in the case.

It is one thing for the media (like myself) to have blasted the NCAA and called for an end to the case.

RISKY STRATEGY

But it is quite another thing for UM itself and its high-profile president to have gone on the attack with a scathing report that in great detail outlined "unprofessional and unethical" behavior by the NCAA and its investigators.

That risky, unprecedented strategy left the NCAA little choice but to acquiesce or fight back. It pushed the wounded animal into a corner.

"We anticipated it," a member of UM's Board of Trustees whom I have know since the 1980s told me Monday of the NCAA's defiant response. "There was not unanimity in the decision to file our motion [to dismiss], particularly in the language we did, because all it could do is make the other side get its back up."

There is no provision in NCAA bylaws to dismiss a case prior to the enforcement committee meeting, which in this matter is set for mid-June, so in retrospect Miami's attack strategy in calling for an immediate end to the case might be doubly questionable.

Don't get me wrong. UM vigorously defending its interests and calling for a resolution without further penalties seemed justified, for a combination of three major reasons:

The NCAA investigation being tainted by its own well-documented wrongdoing; the main accuser against Miami being a convicted Ponzi-schemer, some of whose allegations have been uncorroborated; and UM's own self-imposed, already-served penalties, including two football bowl games and the ACC championship game.

'GRASPING AT STRAWS'

Miami's and Shalala's actions still seem understandable to me, because of all of those things.

The question, though, is whether UM might have played it smarter with behind-the-scenes lobbying rather than a scathing public demand.

It was the latter that brought Sunday's pointed NCAA response accusing Miami of "grasping at straws" with "merit-less claims" and "unsupported attacks."

Miami now finds itself in an uncomfortable position partly of its own doing: Hoping for mercy — or at least fairness — from the same NCAA it has publicly denounced and angered.

Fairness alone in this case was a lot to ask under the best of circumstances, given all that has turned this investigation into a blooper reel.

All UM can hope now is that the NCAA in its June ruling acknowledges the extraordinary circumstances of this case, weighs fully its own wrongdoing, and ends this surreal saga so that the embarrassed on both sides can start to leave this mess behind.


Florida up to nine recruits committed for next year

by Jason Lieser
The Gators are piecing together quality recruiting class for 2014 with nine players already committed.

None of those commitments are binding until the player signs a letter of intent or enrolls in January, but the current group is ranked No. 3 by Rivals and Scout heading into the summer.
Both websites rank Texas No. 1, followed by Texas A&M and the Gators.
Here is a look at Florida's commits:

Florida 5, Florida Gulf Coast 3: Taylor Gushue went 2-for-4 with two RBIs and Bobby Poyner (1-0) allowed one run in 5 1/3 innings to earn the win as the visiting Gators (20-18) beat the Eagles (20-13) to extend their season-high winning streak to six games.
Poyner allowed four hits and no walks while striking out four. Justin Shafer went 3-for-5 for UF.


Gators center Patric Young undergoes ankle surgery By Matt Watts, the Miami Herald

Florida center Patric Young on Friday underwent surgery on his right ankle to remove a bone spur.

Young is on crutches and will not be able to participate in lower body workouts for roughly six weeks. A UF spokesman confirmed the surgeryto Landon Watnick of The Independent Florida Alligator.

Young played in all 37 of UF's games this season, starting all but one and finishing with an average of 10.1 points and 6.3 rebounds per game. Through the school, Young announced on April 8 that he would return for his senior season. He was projected as a second round pick in the NBA Draft. 

In a press conference held last week to wrap up the season, coach Billy Donovan spoke of wanting to see more out of the 6-9 big man next year.

"With him going into his senior year now, I think if you look at him when he was a sophomore, he averaged 10 and 6. This year he averaged 10 and 6. I really felt that Patric has the potential and ability to rebound more," Donovan said. "People wanted look at his offense, that he has gotten better offensively. But I feel him playing with a consistent motor would not only help him, it would help our team. I think he has the capability of doing those things."

Perhaps playing on a gimpy ankle limited Young in 2012-13, but there won't be any room for that in 2013-14 as Florida has transfersDamontre Harris (6-11, averaged 6.8 pts, 5.5 rebs with 71 blocks as a sophomore at South Carolina) and Dorian Finney-Smith (6-8, averaged 6.3 pts and 7.0 reb as a freshman at Virginia Tech) as well as incoming freshman Chris Walker (6-10) to add to the competition for minutes in the frontcourt.



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GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
1996 National Football Champions | 2006 National Basketball Champions
2006 National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions
2008 National Football Champions |
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
Tim Tebow (2007) - Visit our website at www.gatornet.us
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GATORS: ONE VOICE ON SATURDAY - NO VOICE ON SUNDAY!
1996 National Football Champions | 2006 National Basketball Champions
2006 National Football Champions | 2007 National Basketball Champions
2008 National Football Champions |
Three Heisman Trophy winners: Steve Spurrier (1966), Danny Wuerffel (1996),
Tim Tebow (2007) - Visit our website at www.gatornet.us
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