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Pryor Appeals His Suspension

4 Sep

With Jim Tressel being hired by the Indianapolis Colts this week, Oakland Raiders quarterback Terrelle Pryor has notified the NFL to appeal his five game suspension according to the NFL Network’s Albert Breer. 

Some have applauded this as a smart move by Pryor since he was disciplined for the problems he had while he was still at Ohio State.

Yahoo.com’s Doug Farrar tweeted Sunday morning that it was a “Smart decision by Pryor and his people to appeal five-game suspension now. NFL has to address Tressel, change the [suspension], or REALLY look bad.”

In my opinion NFL commisioner Roger Goodell shouldn’t have power over anything that happens outside of the NFL unless it has to do wtih drugs or criminal activity. Pryor’s mentor and Pittsburgh Steeles backup quarterback Charlie Batch feels that Goodell overstepped his boundaries on this particular issue.

As of now the league faces a dicey situation. Tressel’s contract and status still has to be approved by the NFL. But he did resign from Ohio State under pressure from the NCAA and admitted  that he failed to share with the NCAA information regarding activities that jeopardized the eligibility of Pryor and other players. 

The best thing to do is to give both parties (Tressel and Pryor) a three game suspension. To me that would be the right thing to do, although since the Ohio State scandal didn’t come under his jurisdiction neither should be punished.

  

Ex-Buckeyes Have Doubts About Pryor Being NFL Ready

11 Jun

Terrelle Pryor has limited his options for his future since he spurned the Canadian Football League and the UFL for that matter. There are some who think he can make it in the NFL like Jon Gruden and some who don’t like Mel Kiper Jr.

There are two former Ohio St. Buckeyes that feel Pryor isn’t ready for the bright lights of the NFL. Chris Spielman and former Buckeye quarterback Greg Frey seem to fall in the camp of those who think Pryor could be a failure.

“I would be surprised if somebody took him before the fifth round in a supplemental draft,” said ESPN college football analyst Chris Spielman, a former All-American linebacker at Ohio State who played 10 years in the NFL, including eight with the Lions. “That’s the obvious statement that you’re not ready to play (but) you’ll maybe have an opportunity to grow into the job. Right now, he’s not close. That’s not to say he can’t get there, but right now he’s not ready to play at all in the NFL.”

“The big question I think everybody wants to know is: Can he play in the NFL? Yes. But there’s got to be some growth, certainly, from a fundamental standpoint and a maturity standpoint,” Frey said.
“From what I can see of the NFL game there are a lot of progression-type reads where you have to see the whole field. And that takes a special quarterback.”

If anyone would know it would be Frey. Considering he tried and failed to make it in the NFL.

I always say all someone needs is a chance. Pryor will get that chance, with who, I don’t know. He plans on entering the NFL’s supplemental draft and there will be a team that will take a flyer on a guy who was MVP in two BCS bowl games.

 

It Might Go From Bad To Worse At Ohio State

30 May

If things were bad at Ohio State now, it’s looking to get significantly worse if the NCAA has it’s way with the Buckeyes.

After Jim Tressel’s resignation earlier today, the NCAA will be starting an inquiry about quarterback Terrelle Pryor’s dealings.

Ohio State spokesman Jim Lynch wouldn’t confirm whether Pryor is being investigated.

“The university continues to work with the NCAA as they investigate matters involving our football program, and we will continue to do so until the conclusion of the investigation,” Lynch said. “We are unable to comment on specific players’ situations because of federal law.”

Sounds like a roundabout denial to me.

Pryor has been questioned before by OSU, specifically surrounding the cars that he has been tooling around campus with since he became a Buckeye. Pryor has been linked to Columbus area car salesman Aaron Kniffin.  Kniffin reportedly has sold cars to Pryor’s mother and brother as well.

Right now it looks like Ohio State’s cover up might tumble like a house of cards. If it’s anyhting like what happened to Michigan’s basketball program, not even having Tressel step might not help them.

If Pryor is guilty of more than penny-ante infractions, this will be a bizarre case of what goes around comes around.

Tressel chose to cover up Pryor’s shenanigans, which came to light anyway. Once they came to light, it cost Pryor five games. The only reason he’s here to serve his five games is because he promised Tressel he wouldn’t go pro. But now Tressel is gone, and if anything else comes out, Pryor will probably have to sit out the season. That will hurt his NFL draft prospects.

If Pryor had held off on selling the trinkets, none of this would have happened and he’d either be looking forward to signing a lucrative NFL contract or making an NCAA championship run.

If Tressell had told the truth, Pryor would have served a one- or two-game suspension that wouldn’t have harmed his career, and Tressel would still have a job.

If everyone had agreed to Pryor being suspended for the Sugar Bowl–as he should have been–he could have gone pro after the season. Then he could spend the 2011 season locked out by the NFL instead of suspended by the NCAA. At least he’d have a job when the lockout ends. Instead he stays at OSU out of respect for a coach who won’t be there. And if these reports are right, he’ll wind up with more than a five-game suspension. So his draft stock, if he comes out at season’s end, will plummet.

This is like an Aesop’s Fable with a moral on the importance of truth-telling.

Michigan fans should consider themselves lucky that he didn’t end up with the Wolverines. In a strange way it’s almost like had got two coaches fired.

 

Jon Gruden Thinks Terrelle Pryor Can Succeed In The NFL

23 Apr

A few weeks ago NFL draftnik Mel Kiper Jr. came out and said that Ohio State quarterback Terrelle Pryor basically had no chance at being an NFL quarterback. He even went as far as saying that he might want to switch positions for his senior year.

Former NFL head coach Jon Gruden  is singing a different tune about the Buckeyes signal caller. Gruden says that Pryor has “dominated college football” and can make it in the NFL.

“I have met Terrelle Pryor, had a chance to watch him,” Gruden told the media after speaking at the 80th annual Ohio State Football Clinic. “This is a freak of nature. This guy is really something with the ball in his hands.”

I agree and disagree with Gruden. Pryor is an athletic freak and I think he’s been shackled by Jim Tressel’s offensive system. That may be sound harsh, but he should’ve turned Pryor loose a long time ago. I’m sure there are some Buckeye fans that will disagree with me. I think Cam Newton was everything Terrelle Pryor should be. But by no means has he dominated college football. Just check out last year’s Wisconsin game for further proof.

“Terrelle Pryor can run and he can throw and he’s a hell of a competitor,” Gruden said. “You might have to cater your offense, to a degree, towards his strengths, but I think this guy can develop his passing.

I do think Pryor should be given a chance to prove he can be an NFL quarterback. I don’t see any NFL offensive coordinators catering their offense to accomdate Pryor. If they’re not going to do it with Newton, why would they do it with Pryor. He can develop his passing if given chance. He’s not a once in a lifetime talent, but shouldn’t switch positions to make it in the NFL.
If Gruden takes another NFL coaching job, Pryor has someone in his corner.

   

Kiper Says Pryor Will Be A Tight End In The NFL

8 Apr

Ohio State’s Terrelle Pryor will be suspended for the first five games of the upcoming college football season. Almost everyone knows that. The question is how much will it hurt his NFL aspirations. If it’s up to draftnik Mel Kiper he would have Pryor switch positions. Maybe moving him to wide receiver while still at Ohio State.

Kiper also thinks Pryor will project to being an H-back or tight end in the NFL, pretty much the same thoughts he had about Tim Tebow.

“I’ve thought all along he was a tight end,” Kiper said on a conference call. “I talked about (former Florida quarterback) Tim Tebow the same way last year.



“I think his best chance to be a very good NFL player is as an H-back. I think Pryor is going to be a projection to tight end.”


Kiper feels that Pryor needs to work on some things, mainly throwing to succeed as a quarterback. I feel Pryor is an athletic wonder but he needed those five games to hone his skills at the position.

“Accuracy,” Kiper said when asked what he could improve on. “Throwing the football is the main thing.

“He has to throw the ball, and he has to be precise with the football, and he has to do the things from a pure passing standpoint.”


“Did he need to play those five games to prove he can be a quarterback? Yeah, he did,” Kiper said. “I think there is going to be some concern whether he is going to be a quarterback or a position change, like I said, to a tight end spot.”

Kiper is not the end all, be all of how a person does in the NFL. Maybe Pryor will surprise his skeptics and prove that he is an NFL worthy talent at quarterback and not tight end or some novelty player. I feel he should get a chance to play quarterback before they try to switch positions.

I think the talk of switching him to a different position might hurt him more than the five game suspension. That will get into the heads of the league executives before he gets a chance to prove he’s worthy of being a quarterback.