šŸˆ Les Miles is a joke - Jeremy Hill back on team

http://www.shreveporttimes.com/article/20130806/SPORTS0402/308060018/Glenn-Guilbeau-LSU-tailback-runs-free-returns-team?gcheck=1 :dazed:

If you watch the video of the punch, Hill looks much more guilty than former LSU quarterback Jordan Jefferson, who was charged with felony second degree battery for kicking a man already down in 2011. Had Hill’s victim not been able to take the punch like Rocky, Hill may have been charged with a felony, too.
But Blaize went to work. First, she got Hill’s probation revocation hearing moved up from Aug. 16 to Monday, which was scheduled for just a status conference concerning Hill. But Monday also just happened to be the first day of football practice at LSU. Court dates are often moved, any lawyer will tell you. Moved back,not up. The prosecution was apparently not prepared for this. District Attorney Hillar Moore said Sunday that he didn’t expect anything more than a status conference. Next thing you know, another judge from the LSU alumni center sentenced Hill to probation instead of jail for the third time in 18 months.


So...What's really most important in Red Stick? If you ever wondered why so many people are cynical about star athletes and celebrities, ^^^ here's your sign.
 
http://www.nola.com/news/baton-rouge/index.ssf/2013/08/johnny_manziels_crimes_are_app.html
This is the dirty truth of the game we zealously ove.
Johnny Manziel, the Texas A&M quarterback known by most as Johnny Football, may lose his NCAA eligibility because he allegedly had the gall to profit off his name following last season's Heisman Trophy-winning campaign. NCAA investigators are combing the wasteland known as A&M's campus looking for evidence that Manziel earned $7,500 for signing autographs. The university has hired lawyers, who assuredly will earn far more than $7,500, to also look into the allegations. And ESPN's reporters are trampling every blade of sacred, Aggie-dedicated grass, breathlessly reporting the quarterback's every movement.
Some 370 miles to the southeast, in Baton Rouge, Jeremy Hill, the much-touted sophomore tailback, faces no such scrutiny, despite pleading guilty to his second crime in three years. Hill, as we all know by now, viciously cold-cocked some 20-year-old kid outside a campus bar in April. There was a brief suspension, but that ended the instant Hill -- already on probation for a sex crime committed during his senior year in high school -- got a stern lecture from the judge, but avoided jail time. Since orange didn't become the new purple for Hill, the talented runner is back at practice, pounding out punishment to would-be tacklers, his eligibility intact. There's no NCAA investigation. The only lawyer belongs to Hill. And ESPN is nowhere in sight.
 
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