WSU Cougars football team leads nation … in arrests

KitsapGuy

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:thfight7:

PULLMAN, Wash. - The numbers are in and America’s most-arrested college football program is none other than Pullman’s Washington State Cougars.

Former San Jose Mercury News reporter Mike Rosenberg did the number-crunching and found that there were 918 reported arrests (and criminal citations) of Division I college football players over the last five years. That’s good for an average of about one every other day.

Then, just to be thorough, Rosenberg compiled a top 25 list of which schools had the most players arrested in that same time frame.

Rosenberg found that WSU was, in fact, No. 1, pulling away from some stiff competition to the tune of 31 arrests in that five-year sample. The University of Florida made a run at the top spot but came up well short with 24 arrests, while Georgia (22), Texas A&M (22) and Oklahoma (21) rounded out the top five.

The University of Washington Huskies weren't one of the top 25.

To be fair, these numbers don’t reflect the severity of the crimes, meaning that at least some of those arrests could have been for fairly innocuous offenses.

Even so, WSU has just 18 wins in those five years, meaning the Cougs are one of the few teams to have more players arrested than games won. Their 18-31 win-to-arrest-ratio is also easily the most lopsided of any of the qualifying schools.

That’s what we call a dubious distinction.

http://www.komonews.com/news/local/WSU- ... 30601.html
 

El Caliente

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In other words, WSU is the only University holding its players accountable. As an LSU/BYU/Michigan fan (went to school at 2 of the 3), its crazy how players are held above the law/rules, all in the name of sports.
 

dutchcoug

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Ah, nothing like extremely flawed data. Anyone that's ever lived in Pullman knows, the Pullman PD is out to bust College students for anything they can. Mostly MIP's (which if you ever went to college, it's a laughable thing to get busted for). Unlike other schools, we aren't in a big city with actual crime and the university doesn't protect players from the law (sweep things under the rug). If you actually looks at the list of crimes, most are petty stuff that any college student could be busted for. The more serious stuff, the player was probably kicked off the team.
 

seahawk2k

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A lot of these incidents are of the minor variety. Pullman PD believes that by busting college students for MIP's and such that they are less likely to commit more serious crimes later. Whether one agrees with that philosophy is up for debate. A previous post was accurate, no one is "protected" in Pullman.

Since Leach took over, the number of incidents, even minor incidents have been cut down dramatically. More severe incidents result in immediate removal from the team. The team's academic success has gone up and the crime has gone down.

Not nearly as concerned with this as I would be if Wulff was still firebombing the program.
 

Seahawks1983

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KitsapGuy":1f9c653e said:
:thfight7:

PULLMAN, Wash. - The numbers are in and America’s most-arrested college football program is none other than Pullman’s Washington State Cougars.

Former San Jose Mercury News reporter Mike Rosenberg did the number-crunching and found that there were 918 reported arrests (and criminal citations) of Division I college football players over the last five years. That’s good for an average of about one every other day.

Then, just to be thorough, Rosenberg compiled a top 25 list of which schools had the most players arrested in that same time frame.

Rosenberg found that WSU was, in fact, No. 1, pulling away from some stiff competition to the tune of 31 arrests in that five-year sample. The University of Florida made a run at the top spot but came up well short with 24 arrests, while Georgia (22), Texas A&M (22) and Oklahoma (21) rounded out the top five.

The University of Washington Huskies weren't one of the top 25.

To be fair, these numbers don’t reflect the severity of the crimes, meaning that at least some of those arrests could have been for fairly innocuous offenses.

Even so, WSU has just 18 wins in those five years, meaning the Cougs are one of the few teams to have more players arrested than games won. Their 18-31 win-to-arrest-ratio is also easily the most lopsided of any of the qualifying schools.

That’s what we call a dubious distinction.

http://www.komonews.com/news/local/WSU- ... 30601.html


That data counts tickets and citations as "arrests."
 
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