There were many — myself included — who felt that Jim Tressel‘s two-game punishment didn’t really fit his NCAA bylaws crime of covering up and/or lying about information regarding impermissible benefits a handful of his players may have received.
As it turns out, Ohio State was fully prepared to drop a heavier hammer on their beloved head football coach.
Mark Schlabach of ESPN.com is reporting that the school was considering stronger sanctions against Tressel, including withholding the coach from both spring practice and summer camp in addition to the suspension and a fine. Those sanctions were detailed in the initial self-report document sent to the NCAA, which also mentioned suspending Tressel “from coaching several games”, not the couple that he was officially hit with.
“This letter will review the institution’s inquiry and also define the corrective and punitive actions, which include suspending him from coaching several games during the 2011 football season, reducing his salary, and precluding Coach Tressel from having any involvement with spring practice or summer camps in 2011.”
An OSU spokesperson told Schlabach that the original self-report “outlined the scope of options that Ohio State considered but the specific sanctions are the ones outlined” in the final document sent to the NCAA.
“This letter will review the institution’s inquiry and also detail the corrective and punitive actions, which include suspending him from coaching two games during the 2011 football season and reducing his salary,” the official OSU report to the NCAA read.
While Ohio State ultimately decided to “lessen” the sanctions placed on their coach, Tressel still has the NCAA to deal with. Suffice to say, the governing body of collegiate athletics likely won’t be wearing the same kid gloves.


