I had to read it twice.. but according to a report on Yahoo Sports Mr. Bush's Heisman Trophy he won in 2005 maybe taken away, which would be the first for any athlete in the award's 75 year history.
Sources close to the Heisman Trust state that after serious NCAA violations from Reggie's alma mater it looks as though he would not have been eligible to receive the award. The investigation is not over as of yet but will be finished soon enough. The same sources report that Bush's Heisman could be taken away from him by the end of the month.
I know I am shocked as well o_O.
MeaLee
Read the full story after the jump
VIA Yahoo Sports
The Heisman Trophy Trust is expected to strip former University of
Southern California star running back Reggie Bush of college football’s
top honor by the end of September, sources told Yahoo! Sports.
Bush would become the first player in the 75-year history of the
award to have the trophy taken away. The NCAA found major violations in
the Trojans’ football program in June and levied serious sanctions
against the school.
Two sources close to the Heisman trust said the body’s investigation is coming to a close, and will ultimately concur with the NCAA’s determination
that Bush was ineligible during his Heisman-winning season in 2005.
Because of that independent conclusion, sources said the trust will
relieve Bush of the award and leave the honor for that season vacant.
The sources said Bush met with Heisman representatives last month at the
New York law offices of Emmet, Marvin & Martin. The sources would
not reveal details of that meeting.
Bush, now a standout with the Super Bowl champion New Orleans Saints, could not immediately be reached for comment.
The Heisman trust has been conducting its own independent inquiry
into Bush’s eligibility since the NCAA ruled in June that the USC star
had committed multiple violations by accepting cash, gifts and other
impermissible benefits while playing for the Trojans. Yahoo! Sports
first detailed the extra benefits
in September 2006. In its findings, the NCAA retroactively ruled Bush
ineligible for part of the 2004 season and all of 2005. The NCAA also
ordered the USC program to remove all references to Bush from its
sporting venues and promotional materials and vacate his statistics from
all games in which he was ineligible.
In July, incoming USC president C.L. Max Nikias announced that the
university would be returning its copy of Bush’s Heisman to the trust,
stating the Trojans would honor and respect athletes who “did not
compromise their athletic program or the opportunities of future USC
student-athletes.” New USC athletic director Pat Haden followed up in
August, stating during an interview with the Dan Patrick radio show that
Bush should also voluntarily return his Heisman.
While others pressed for a swift decision, the trust opted for a
patient, meticulous effort. Sources said the trust did its own detailed
investigation over the past three months, using a litany of resources
and reviewing its information against the NCAA’s findings. The trust
also offered Bush a chance to impact the decision.
The process apparently came with considerable debate – in part
because of the trust’s quest for due process, but also because of the
unique nature of the decision. Never in the history of the award has the
trust been forced to retroactively rule on the eligibility of a past
winner. That reality, along with the NCAA’s findings, created a tangled
knot of deliberation regarding the trust’s place in the role of
enforcement. Sources said the prominent issues discussed included
accountability, on-field vs. off-field conduct, implications of
retroactively stripping an award and possible impact on future athletes
and the NCAA.
Two factors outweighed all others, sources said: The Heisman ballot
necessitates candidates be in compliance with NCAA bylaws and concern
over the Heisman’s reputation in the wake of the NCAA findings against
Bush.
The status of USC’s 2004 Bowl Championship Series national title
remains to be determined. BCS officials are awaiting the NCAA’s ruling
on the Trojans’ appeal of the June finding.
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
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