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Aug 28, 2014
8:29:06am
None of us are qualified to judge this. We do not know
... exactly how serious the violation was, or what any player's attitude is about it.

On the other hand, when Bronco sits in the home of any athlete and lets him and
his parents know that BYU follows a strict honor code that the athlete will be
expected to follow as a condition for the schollie, it boosts his credibility if
he follows through on his word.

One of Bronco's themes is that BYU is a great place for some athletes who
wish to have good preparation for life in a tough world. Most of these
athletes won't go pro, so they need to be prepared for a world that doesn't
coddle them like they were coddled in high school.

I wouldn't be surprised if one or more of those suspended see action
in the 2nd half, depending upon the seriousness of his infraction.

Discipline should be kept private for obvious reasons. That means that
fans will rarely have a true picture of what went on and why in a given
case of discipline

It's not our business. We want the athlete to learn and move on,
but that's tough to do if the coach does not respect the confidentiality
of discipline.
BurbankCoug
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BurbankCoug
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8/28/14 7:58am
8/28/14 9:24am

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