Sort of. I don't think they just cheated because their program improved and they didn't want it to end. There's more to it than that. The cheating directly contributed to their program's improvement in the first place. Not having to kick players off for misconduct, and taking players with toxic personal lives gave Baylor access to better athletes than they otherwise would have had. It has to be a major part of how they (temporarily) pulled their program out of the sewer.HeyMoe said:
Simply put, Baylor has been a football wasteland for most of its history and once the program started to achieve heights they had never dreamed of, they ignored all manner of misbehavior by their players because they didn't want the success to end.
That's it.
HeyMoe said:
Simply put, Baylor has been a football wasteland for most of its history and once the program started to achieve heights they had never dreamed of, they ignored all manner of misbehavior by their players because they didn't want the success to end.
That's it.
Your Friend said:
Anyone else thought he was emotionally disturbed?