http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=4487563
Saw the headline and thought Rodriquez got religion and knowing he he had a ill gotten win was asking the Big Ten to do the right thing and overturn the biased calls that gave Michigan a victory.
I was wrong. He justs wants the Big Ten to punish other players that commit penalties that the refs never saw.
Yo, Rich, how about calling on the Big Ten to have honest refs that call the game impartially.
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=4487563
Saw the headline and thought Rodriquez got religion and knowing he he had a ill gotten win was asking the Big Ten to do the right thing and overturn the biased calls that gave Michigan a victory.
I was wrong. He justs wants the Big Ten to punish other players that commit penalties that the refs never saw.
Yo, Rich, how about calling on the Big Ten to have honest refs that call the game impartially.
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=4487563
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -- Michigan coach Rich Rodriguez says he will ask the Big Ten to punish any player for a non-football act after the conference suspended Jonas Mouton for punching a Notre Dame player.
Mouton did not play Saturday for the 25th-ranked Wolverines in their 45-17 win over Eastern Michigan.
Rodriguez insists there's no room in the game for throwing punches, adding that Mouton understands he hurt his team. Rodriguez says he told commissioner James Delany he will tell the Big Ten to hold other players to the same standard as it did Mouton for non-football acts such as his jab.
Rodriguez says what Mouton did wasn't malicious and shouldn't be compared to Oregon's LeGarrette Blount's punch against Boise State that led to his coach suspending him for the season.