This is true:
Urban Meyer Goes Out a Winner as Florida Tops Penn State in Outback Bowl
Florida's Urban Meyer is leaving coaching at age 46. Penn State's Joe Paterno is not, at age 84. The two manned opposite sidelines Saturday in the Outback Bowl, and Meyer was sent out a winner with a 37-24 victory.The game was actually much closer than the final score. It was neck-and-neck throughout and Penn State actually held the lead for a good chunk of the game. Meyer was doused, fittingly, with Gatorade and later seen with his teary-eyed wife and children.
http://ncaafootball.fanhouse.com/2011/01/01/urban-meyer-goes-out-a-winner-as-florida-tops-penn-state-in-outb/
This is also true:
Florida says football arrests shouldn't define its program overall
Numbers mostly flatter Florida football coach Urban Meyer, who has produced two Southeastern Conference championships, three Bowl Championship Series appearances and a couple of national titles in his five-plus years in Gainesville.
But another statistic is more bedeviling: at least 31 off-the-field arrests involving 25 of Meyer's players dating to the summer of 2005, according to a running count by the Orlando Sentinel. Many have been typical college-years brushes with the law, from alcohol possession to disorderly conduct. But a dozen involved initial charges of felonies or violent misdemeanors, and the run of incidents has shared front-page space with Florida's on-the-field accomplishments and invited pointed questions about the program's virtue.
In a closing commentary on this week's Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel on HBO, Gumbel compared Florida's arrests with the agent-related violations that subjected Southern California to a two-year postseason ban and other stiff NCAA sanctions. Arguing that "driving drunk, robbing a convenience store, and hitting your girlfriend are all worse offenses than dealing with an agent," he took the NCAA to task for not dealing as sternly with the Gators and other programs with police-blotter problems.
After Florida receiver Chris Rainey was booked last week on a felony charge of aggravated stalking — for allegedly sending an ex-girlfriend a threatening text message — Orlando columnist Mike Bianchi wrote, "Sadly, this outlaw reputation is now the national image of the Florida Gators." http://www.usatoday.com/sports/college/football/sec/2010-09-23-florida-football-arrests_N.htm
Gator's college football athlete arrest problems go back to the mid-1980s but has gotten progressively worse. I'm sure there are many reasons for it. After all, black athletes get arrested at all schools.
But one thing that singles out U of F is that the local whites hate niggers.
Rosewood was only a few miles from Gainesville.
Blacks historically had more chance of being lynched in northern Florida than any other place in the South. (Good article here: http://www.gainesville.com/article/20050903/DAYBREAK/50903003?p=1&tc=pg)
So, maybe Urban Meyer was recruiting more thugs than normal, or maybe the coaching staff allowed the nigs to act as nigs for playing well . . . or maybe local whites just aren't as tame as elsewhere in the country.
"people need to educate deyselves - dis is terrble"