AdaSooner
Admin Emeritus
- Joined
- Oct 23, 2008
- Messages
- 16,090
- Reaction score
- 64
The fact that a booster provided a small amount of money to OU basketball players is old news. The result of the NCAA's findings and that OU acted properly by returning the money as soon as the violation was discovered, which resulted in a minor penalty is current news. You would never know that if you picked up this morning's Oklahoman and saw the headline:
"Oklahoma basketball: OU booster provided money to basketball players."
http://newsok.com/ou-booster-provided-money-to-basketball-players/article/5399905
In contrast to that article, let's take a look at the headline on the same story the Tulsa World ran yesterday:
"OU basketball extra benefits case closes with minor penalty."
http://www.tulsaworld.com/sportsext...cle_55d69877-86c6-5a3c-aa77-26a4b6b788f5.html
One newspaper's story is factual and current. The other may be, too, except it uses a headline designed to sensationalize the story and to make it look like the OU basketball program is guilty of a cover up, not that the NCAA essentially cleared our coaches and players of a scheme to pay players.
Shame on you, Ryan Aber! If your editor is guilty of choosing a headline like the one in my morning newspaper for you, he should be equally ashamed.
"Oklahoma basketball: OU booster provided money to basketball players."
http://newsok.com/ou-booster-provided-money-to-basketball-players/article/5399905
In contrast to that article, let's take a look at the headline on the same story the Tulsa World ran yesterday:
"OU basketball extra benefits case closes with minor penalty."
http://www.tulsaworld.com/sportsext...cle_55d69877-86c6-5a3c-aa77-26a4b6b788f5.html
One newspaper's story is factual and current. The other may be, too, except it uses a headline designed to sensationalize the story and to make it look like the OU basketball program is guilty of a cover up, not that the NCAA essentially cleared our coaches and players of a scheme to pay players.
Shame on you, Ryan Aber! If your editor is guilty of choosing a headline like the one in my morning newspaper for you, he should be equally ashamed.