TO ALL PROSPECTIVE STUDENT ATHLETES...

Before considering a scholarship offer from
THE Ohio State University
please remember that if you drop a pass, say something they don't like, or accurately report on the multiple NCAA violations always occurring at OSU -- you will receive death threats and beware -- someday one of these cretins may go through with it.

Sunday, June 3, 2012

Another College Athlete has his life threatened by OSU fan


OSU fan sorry for bounty on UM recruit

June, 1, 2012
JUN 1
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First, we had Michigan recruit Logan Tuley-Tillman setting fire to his Ohio State recruiting letter and putting the picture on Twitter.

Then Tuley-Tillman received death threats for his gesture.

Then an Ohio State fan named Harrison Watson tweeted that he'd pay $2,000 to "whoever sidelines this kid permanently."

Now, Watson has apologized for that tweet and says he'll donate $2,000 to Michigan to make up for it.

Anyone still doubting the intensity of the Ohio State-Michigan rivalry?

Watson, a 22-year-old Buckeyes fan, wrote on his personal website that he meant his Twitter bounty offer as a joke before realizing his remarks were "regrettable and reprehensible."
"I ask for all of you to please excuse my remarks, and more importantly I ask for the forgiveness of Logan Tuley-Tillman," Watson wrote. "Best of luck to you in your endeavors in the classroom and on the football field.

"As a token of my deepest regrets in this situation – I will be making a $2000.00 donation to the University of Michigan to be used towards increasing the already spectacular educational programs that they possess. I hope that this donation will help to ease the pain of my unfortunate remarks. Thank you. I welcome suggestions from the University of Michigan family for which program to direct my donation towards."

This whole story has gotten out of hand, especially with the death threats against a high school rising senior. Watson's comment was irresponsible, but it's not the worst social media behavior by an Ohio State fan we've seen this spring.

I love the rivalry and how it sizzles 365 days a year. But, remember, think before you Tweet, especially if the topic is about something which you cannot be rational. Or it might just cost you a couple thousand bucks.

Monday, June 20, 2011

OSU School Paper gets death threats!


School paper gets death threats after ousting football scandal

Posted: Jun 02, 2011 4:18 PMUpdated: Jun 09, 2011 4:18 PM
 
Both the editor and the staff writer who wrote the piece exposing players selling memorabilia have gotten death threats over the story. (Source: WSYX/CNN)
Both the editor and the staff writer who wrote the piece exposing players selling memorabilia have gotten death threats over the story. (Source: WSYX/CNN)
COLUMBUS, OH (WSYX/CNN) - Students writing for the Ohio State University newspaper have received death threats after uncovering a football scandal.
Zack Meisel, the Lantern's editor, may be looking over his shoulder more often because of e-mails like this one:
"Great job bringing down the football program. When I see you on campus, I'll beat you up."
He said he's received a lot of hate mail and threats after theLantern published an interview with Ray Small, a former Buckeyes wide receiver.
Small admitted to selling Buckeyes memorabilia for cash while playing for OSU and said that everyone on the team was doing it.
 Four days after the article was published, Head Coach Jim Tressel resigned.
"It was almost as if people were looking at us, as the go to people, almost as if we played a role in it, which we didn't," staff writer James Oldham said.
"I get it, I was born and raised in Columbus so I know when scarlet and gray is running through your blood. I understand the passion people have," he said.
Oldham interviewed small for the article.
He was surprised to read one e-mail stating that he and Meisel were likely candidates to be found dead in the Olentangy River.
"It took me a little off guard to be honest. I was a little nervous and scare that day," Oldham said.
As for Meisel, he is not taking the threats too seriously.
"I am not, talk to my mom and my grandma, they are but I have not really thought twice about it," he said.
He said he has thought about how much he has learned about journalism in the last four days.
"They got to realize that a journalist needs to report what they find and we did that instead of sweeping it under the rug or covering anything up which makes us worse than what players did," he said.
Five Buckeyes players will serve a suspension for five games at the beginning of the upcoming season after the admitted to trading Ohio State memorabilia.
Assistant Coach Luke Fickell is now the university's interim head coach.

OSU Wide Receiver gets death threats


After his interview with The Lantern essentially confirming the allegations of illegal activities by some OSU football players, Ray Smalls has become public enemy number 1! OSU fans have slandered his twitter page with a barrage of death threats and hateful comments.

Former OSU QB leaves state because of death threats


Herbstreit leaves Ohio because of fans' criticism

| 1 Comment
herbie-187.jpgThe Columbus Dispatch reports: Kirk Herbstreit and his family moved out of central Ohio because of the constant criticism he has received from a vocal minority of Ohio State fans who don't understand that his job at the network demands objectivity and fairness. 

"Nobody loves Ohio State more than me," said Herbstreit, a former Buckeyes quarterback. "I still have a picture of Woody Hayes and my dad (Jim, a former OSU player) in my office, and nobody will do more than I do for the university behind the scenes. But I've got a job to do, and I'm going to continue to be fair and objective. To continue to have to defend myself and my family in regards to my love and devotion to Ohio State is unfair."

Herbstreit said he and his wife, Allison, visited several cities before deciding on Nashville. 

OSU Tight End gets death threats for dropping pass


Give Hamby a break

Let it go! Buckeyes' TE not to blame for Texas loss

Posted: Wednesday December 28, 2005 11:42AM; Updated: Wednesday December 28, 2005 11:42AM
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How much did Ryan Hamby's dropped pass against Texas really matter?
How much did Ryan Hamby's dropped pass against Texas really matter?
David Bergman/SI
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In the spirit of the holidays, the Mailbag was pondering a way to make its own contribution to peace, love and understanding in this edition when it ran across this disturbing e-mail sent a few weeks back:
Stewart, what no one seems to be mentioning is that the BCS was one Ryan Hamby dropped catch from all hell breaking loose. Having undefeated USC and one-loss Texas, Ohio State, Oregon and Penn State would be the biggest controversy yet. The BCS got very lucky Hamby can't catch.
--Zack Daubenmire, Jackstown, Ohio
Certainly, it's been fun to play the "What if?" game this BCS season. What if Matt Leinart's fumble against Notre Dame hadn't gone out of bounds? What if Michigan hadn't gotten those two extra seconds against Penn State? And, as the above e-mail references, what if Texas hadn't come back to beat Ohio State? All would have made for a far more controversial Rose Bowl.
But to pin the whole thing onRyan Hamby? You've got to be kidding me.
Hamby, you may recall, is the Ohio State tight end who received numerous death threats after bobbling, then dropping a wide-open touchdown catch in the much-watched Buckeyes-Longhorns game on Sept. 10. Pretty disgusting. Three months later, you would think all would finally be forgotten, but judging by my inbox, there are still plenty of Ohioans who blame Hamby for the Buckeyes falling short of the Rose Bowl (never mind that they lost a second game, to Penn State), while others seem to consider his drop one of the seminal moments of the season, right alongside the Reggie Bush push.
Personally, I'd completely forgotten about it until watching an ESPN Classic replay of the Texas-Ohio State game a couple weekends ago, during which I came to the following conclusion: Ryan Hamby may be the most unfairly vilified player in the history of college football.
OK, so that may be overstating it a bit, but there's one indisputable fact about the play that makes e-mails like the one above so ridiculous: IT HAPPENED IN THE THIRD QUARTER. You read that right. Hamby did not drop the game-winning touchdown on the final play. Rather, his gaffe was the difference between the Buckeyes going up 26-16 instead of 22-16, opening the door for Vince Young to throw the winning touchdown... more than a quarter later. How are we to know how the rest of the game would have turned out if he had scored? Both teams might have played differently. Maybe Young would have thrown a second touchdown. Maybe he would have tried to force things, thrown a pick, and fallen behind by 17. We'll never know whether that drop truly made the difference.
What we do know is that Ohio State had plenty of other opportunities to extend its lead and a chance to come back after Young's touchdown. In fact, watching the Buckeyes drive to the Texas 29 with less than six minutes to go, already up six, you'd have a hard time believing they actually lost the game.
On the very next play, however, Texas defensive tackle Rodrique Wrightstuffed Ohio State tailback Antonio Pittman for a 4-yard loss, forcing Josh Huston to attempt a 50-yard field goal that missed by fewer than 4 yards. Then, on what would become the game-winning drive, an OSU player lined up offsides on a 'Horns third-and-1 play, giving them a first down (Young threw the touchdown to Limas Sweed two plays later). Finally, on the Buckeyes' first play after getting the ball back, quarterback Justin Zwick got chased out of the pocket and got stripped by Texas LB Drew Kelson as he was running downfield.
Somehow, this was all Hamby's fault.
In the spirit of holiday giving, the Mailbag is asking all its readers to please, in the name of sanity, give poor Ryan Hamby a break. The fifth-year senior will be playing his final collegiate game in the Fiesta Bowl against Notre Dame, and while the Mailbag has no rooting interest, if Ohio State does win, here's hoping Hamby catches the game-winning touchdown.

OSU Tight End gets death threats for dropping pass


September 14, 2005

Ohio State TE getting hate mail for dropped pass

TE Ryan Hamby is receiving hate e-mailsfrom Ohio State football fans for having dropped a sure touchdown during the Buckeyes loss to Texas last weekend.
Asked about the content of the letters, Hamby said, "I'm not going to talk about them, but they're just dumb things. You almost want to say, 'You know, in the scheme of life there are things going on around the world. It's just a game."'
You hear that, folks? Hamby is just trying to get on with things and deserves your support. In fact, I'm going to publicly suggest that all the Texas Longhorns football fans should send Ryan Scott Hamby an email - that ought to help.

OSU Student Journalist gets death threats


Blaming the student messenger at OSU

Zack Meisel is paying a stiff price for a story that helped bring Jim Tressel down

WojciechowskiBy Gene Wojciechowski
ESPN.com
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Jim Tressel's 10-year, disingenuous reign at Ohio State was undone by lots of people.
By the FBI. By a Columbus, Ohio, tattoo parlor owner. By an OSU senior majoring in economics and journalism. By the so-called "Senator" himself, whose clumsy, panicked and defiant cover-up contradicted the myth of Tressel as someone who -- how did the 2010 Ohio State football media guide put it? -- "emphasizes organization, planning and accountability as not just important in football, but as skills for life."
Wait, an OSU double major?
That would be Zack Meisel, a 21-year-old Buckeyes senior who in less than two weeks will pick up his diploma at the same Ohio Stadium where Tressel defeated Michigan last November -- unless, of course, one emailer follows through on his threat to track down Meisel on campus and beat him up.
"I've learned more about journalism and the way the media works in the last 72 hours than I did probably in my first 21 years of living," says Meisel. "It's been a whirlwind."
Meisel is the editor-in-chief of The Lantern, Ohio State's student newspaper. Thursday's edition was only 12 pages, but it featured an interview with former Buckeyes wide receiver Ray Small that instantly made national news and further confirmed that Tressel and Ohio State had lost control of the football program.
[+] EnlargeJim Tressel
AP Photo/Terry GilliamJim Tressel is no longer a part of the Ohio State team, and some of his supporters are blaming the student newspaper for his departure.
Small told Meisel and staff writer James Oldham that while playing for OSU, he sold a pair of Big Ten championship rings and assorted Buckeyes memorabilia for cash, received special players-only discounts on cars and that "everyone was doing it." This is what the NCAA calls an "improper benefit."
Small later accused Meisel and Oldham of twisting his words, but too late -- The Lantern had the audio tapes of the interview and made them available online. Small didn't have a denial to stand on.
Four days after the Small story appeared, Tressel's OSU coaching career disappeared. But not before an emailer wrote Meisel and predicted that The Lantern editor and Oldham were the most likely candidates to be found dead in the nearby Olentangy River.
"I did read through most of them, if not all of them," says Meisel. "There were definitely more than 100. Some were, 'Thanks for trying to take down our program.' For all the fans who reacted negatively, half wanted me to move to Michigan, half wanted me to move to Nashville with Kirk Herbstreit. I wish there would have been a consensus."
ESPN's Herbstreit, a former Ohio State quarterback, moved from Columbus to Tennessee earlier this year because he was weary of the criticism he and his family received from a vocal minority of OSU supporters. But Meisel is staying put. He'll walk across the stage during the June 12 graduation ceremony and then spend the summer covering the Cleveland Indians as an associate reporter for MLB.com.
Meisel and Oldham (who graduates in August) took no special pleasure in helping seal Tressel's fate. Meisel is from a Cleveland suburb and Oldham is from the Columbus area. They rooted for OSU football success as much as the next person.
In fact, Meisel conducted about a 30-minute interview with Tressel in mid-February. It was a chance for Tressel to reflect on his 10-year career at Ohio State, which began in 2001 with the newly hired coach telling a Buckeyes basketball crowd, "I can assure you that you will be proud of your young people in the classroom, in the community, and most especially in 310 days in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on the football field."
Meisel's story appeared on Feb. 17. Sweater-vest hell didn't break loose until several weeks later.
"At that point," says Meisel, "I didn't know he was covering up the entire scandal."
[+] EnlargeRay Small
AP Photo/Carolyn KasterFormer OSU wide reciever Ray Small's interview with The Lantern was one of the last straws for school administrators weighing Tressel's fate.
We know it now. And a Sports Illustrated story published Monday details even more alleged widespread incidents of NCAA violations by Ohio State players during Tressel's … cough … watch.
Meisel received a call from his faculty adviser Monday morning telling him to check his email. When he did, there was a copy of the Columbus Dispatch story detailing the news of Tressel's resignation. There was also a copy of OSU president Gordon Gee's email to the Ohio State faculty members.
The resignation wasn't much of a surprise to Meisel. He had already written a "Tressel Resigns" story in anticipation of the inevitable announcement. When the Dispatch broke the news, Meisel finished his own story and filed it to The Lantern. I talked to him Monday, when he answered the phone at the newspaper's office.
"It's definitely sadness," Meisel says when asked to describe the mood on campus. "I think everyone here knows the type of person he is. The guy's so involved in community service. No matter what he did, there's going to be an aura of sadness. But there's going to be a sigh of relief. I think this is at least one shoe dropping. It's a little bit of solace for the fans."
So Meisel will leave Columbus with a double major in economics and journalism, with half of a hellacious scoop and with an Ohio State degree he'll cherish. He has the MLB.com gig in the summer, but then he goes hunting for full-time employment.
"What would be your dream job?" I ask.
"Nothing to do with economics," he says.
Meisel was walking across campus recently when something unexpected happened. A fellow student recognized him and actually congratulated him for The Lantern's work on the Small story.
Hey, beats floating face-down on the Olentangy.
Gene Wojciechowski is the senior national columnist for ESPN.com. You can contact him at gene.wojciechowski@espn.com. Hear Gene's podcasts and ESPN Radio appearances by clicking here. And don't forget to follow him on Twitter@GenoEspn.