Column: Reggie Bush’s deserved Heisman Trophy shouldn’t overshadow his troubled Trojans legacy…
Bill Plaschke (LA Times) — The rules have changed. The landscape is different. The shunning became silly.
Reggie Bush deserves to have his Heisman Trophy back, and it’s good that the folks from the Heisman Trust finally came to their senses Wednesday and handed it back over.
But can we please slow down with the victory lap?
I wrote last summer that Bush deserved to have the trophy returned because, by today’s college sports salary standards, he never did anything wrong. This was a common-sense transaction, nothing deeper, nothing more.
I never guessed the decision would be met with such unwarranted hubris.
Bush issued a statement filled with talk of ‘’vindication” and claiming that this absolves him of all wrongdoing.
This absolves him of nothing.
Jennifer Cohen, the USC athletic director, issued a statement praising Bush for his “utmost resiliency and heart.”
Resiliency in the face of … what exactly? His poor decisions that led to the demolition of a historic football power?
Everyone, please, just stop.
One can surely celebrate the return of the Heisman without treating Bush like a freed hostage. One can certainly recognize the misguided mishandling of his Heisman without forgetting that, in a different era, he didn’t deserve it.
Reggie Bush is not a victim. The fact that he has regained a piece of hardware produced by his amazing football skills doesn’t change the fact that — based on rules of a different era — the NCAA determined he broke those rules.
After the NCAA ruled he brazenly disregarded its now-antiquated rules, its committee on infractions sent USC into a dark hole from which it has never emerged.
Bush’s alleged acceptance of rent-free housing for his parents and $300,000 from two sports agents led to NCAA sanctions that ran the football program into the ground.
In the 14 years since the Bush investigation essentially burned down Heritage Hall, the Trojans have never regained national prominence. They have yet to play for a national title. They have one major bowl win. They have gone through six coaches. They have endured controversy and scandal and general chaos.
By losing 30 scholarships and being placed on two years’ probation, they fell behind the rest of the college football world and have never been able to catch up.
Meanwhile, Bush scurried away from the smoking wreckage with an 11-year, $63-million pro career and a since-ended national television gig.
He’s never apologized for anything. He’s never accepted responsibility for his role in the probation. He has seemingly never once thought of all the overmatched young Trojans who were beaten down for the last decade because the program had been stripped of its foundation.
One could, and should, argue that the historic NCAA sanctions were rash and radical and wrong and regrettable. Because the NCAA no longer has any power, it will never again punish anyone like it punished USC.
Nonetheless, at the time, the punishment was real, and Bush’s involvement in it was real bad, and for everyone to ignore that is to disrespect all the lives that were forever changed by his actions.
“I want to make it abundantly clear that I have always acted with integrity and in accordance with the rules and regulations set forth by the NCAA,” Bush said Wednesday in a statement. “The allegations brought against me were unfounded and unsupported by evidence, and I am grateful that the truth is finally prevailing.”
One problem. The Heisman Trust president never said anything about Bush’s innocence.
“We considered the enormous changes in college athletics over the last several years in deciding that now is the right time to reinstate the Trophy for Reggie,” said Michael Comerford, president of the Trust.
In other words, it’s not that Bush didn’t break the speed limit, it’s that the speed limit has changed. And indeed, judging by today’s high salaries for top college football players, Bush was actually severely underpaid for his efforts.
But that doesn’t change the fact that, at the time, he was still receiving extra benefits when players weren’t supposed to receive extra benefits. The rules stank, but the rules were the rules, and everyone knew them, and Bush allegedly broke them, and no shiny trophy is going to change that.
In her statement, Cohen welcomed Bush as a returning hero, saying, “He has displayed the utmost resiliency and heart throughout this process and is so deserving of every accolade and trophy he’s ever received.”
Hmmm. One wonders if Bush had displayed less resiliency and heart during the process — and actually cooperated — would USC would have been dinged so badly?
Lincoln Riley got it right in his statement because he stuck to football. Goodness, let’s also not forget, Reggie Bush was really good at football, the best college running back I’ve ever seen, and I’m not alone.
“Reggie’s reintroduction to the Heisman family is a special moment for every person that has been associated with USC football,” Riley said. “We are thrilled that Reggie’s athletic accomplishments as one of the greatest to ever play the game can officially be recognized. For a long time, the Heisman and USC have been synonymous, and being able to acknowledge all eight of our winners is extraordinary.”
So go ahead, Trojans, celebrate this like the football victory that it is. Make a big deal about retiring the number 5 and draping it across the Coliseum end zone seats. Roar for him as he leads the Trojans out of the Coliseum tunnel for this fall’s home opener against Utah State.
It’s a good thing that Reggie Bush will finally be allowed to officially take his place in Trojans history.
But, like the running back himself, that history swerves, and spins, and can be tough to tackle.
latimes.com
___________
TrojanDailyBlog members — We always encourage you to add factual information, insight, divergent opinions, or new topics to the TDB that don’t necessarily pertain to any particular moderator post or member comment.
Learning more about Derek (Show Me the Money) Harmon, I am souring on this young man thinking he could be trouble wherever he lands even though he is a talented D-tackle. If he is such a great player that his agent demands top shelf NIL money, then recommend he becomes a free agent in the NFL and let his agent take care of him. If LR does sign him, I would have him sign a document that he does what the coaches tell him no matter what his agent says. If he refuses to sign such a document, then wish… Read more »
The NIL is all about Show Me The Money, isn’t it? Sad, but true. That’s CFB now, unfortunately. The good old days are gone for good. Until USC gets fully back on its feet again with elite prep recruiting in the trenches (both sides), we have to gamble with overpaying in the NIL portal — just to get solid players, not busts like we’ve seen at USC lately. And USC football is coming off an absolute lead balloon season, with both ND and UCLA (neither that good at all by the way) literally kicking our butts down the street. If… Read more »
Michigan St. DT Derek Harron was supposedy spending Thurday with LR & staff? What if anything became of that? Repoerts say he is the gem of the Portal pertaining to DT.
USC Football Spring Transfer Portal Tracker: Latest entrant CB Ceyair Wright Departures (7): IOL Jason Zandamela DB Tre’Quon Fegans DL Isaiah Raikes DL Stanley Ta’ufo’ou OL Cooper Lovelace DL Deijon Laffitte CB Ceyair Wright Wright — CLASS: 2021 RANKING: Four-star; No. 78 nationally, No. 7 CB USC CAREER: The former Top 100 prospect was a big local signing for the Trojans in the 2021 class. Wright broke out as a redshirt freshman, playing in 14 games and starting 11 at CB. He finished the season with 28 tackles, an INT and two pass breakups. Wright’s starting role was more of a rotation by… Read more »
“…the NCAA determined…”. That’s my real heartburn with the whole thing, and knocks the legs of Plaschke’s stool out from under him.
When the flimsiness of the evidence specifically against Reggie is considered, along with who actually got the benefit, and as compared to what other universities had done against much stronger evidence, the sham is obvious, and I have loathed the NCAA ever since. It would be somewhat satisfying if Paul Dee were still around to see his self-important kingdom reduced to ashes. Never in the history of college sports has the punishment been so overfitting of the crime.
But the rest of the Pac-12 was really happy about the horrendous injustice inflicted upon USC. That’s when I turned on and against the Pac-12.
In the end, USC got the brutal last laugh, even if it took too long. Revenge is a dish best served cold, which is how it came down.
I will be making a trip to a south Florida graveyard someday when I find out where Paul Dee is planted. I will forward the location to everyone so that you too can have the opportunity to piss on Fat Paul’s grave, as I myself intend to do.
Doc, I would be happy to join you. Whenever she finally dies I will be among the first in line to piss on Honoi Janes grave also.
Sounds like a TDB Road Trip!😄
Plaschke as a sports writer has his ups & downs maybe due to his conscience of sports writing. He can be holier than though and he can be an enemy’s best friend. As to his attitude towards Bush, maybe he has targeted him as a “representative” of how college athletes held their hands out for things being a celebrity or their parents taking financial advantage of the notoriety of their child which is what happened down in San Diego with the Bush family. How may athletes got away with things even worse than what reportedly happen to Bush? Yesterday was… Read more »
It only makes sense that one of the worst sportswriters ever, who is a moral and mental midget, works for an absolutely horribly leftists paper.. I hope before too long, both the Times and Plaschke are only distant memories, never to be heard or seen.
Pardon me, but I now realize that it has been weeks since I have reminded everyone that parasite plaschke is the most worthless tool on the the most worthless newspaper in the US. I will try to be better at bringing this up more frequently.😀
My only objection ATL is that it is the same thing as announcing the sunrise every morning!!!
The first 14 players selected in the Draft play offense
Six QBs
Four OTs
Three WRs
One TE
Let’s Get Ready To Rumble
Colin Cowherd says he might wear nail polish on Monday in celebration of Caleb Williams getting picked #1. Love this stuff!
I always wondered why Bush gave the trophy back or why the Heisman Trust wanted it, unless it was to please the ncaa. The Heisman is won on the field of play, and Bush earned it, being one the best of all time. Now that he has it people like Plashke need to be quiet and lets let thing settle a bit. We are in a new time, things are way different now, and it is not the same college ball we all grew up with.
To me it doesn’t matter that its a different age in CFB. We had out program set back significantly – we’re STILL working to recover. Why? Because, after breaking the rules nobody (including me) cares about, Reggie decided to call Lloyd Lake’s bluff on exposing the whole thing instead of just paying Lake the $300,000 that Reggie agreed to pay him in his crappy backroom deal. His buyer’s remorse was very expensive to USC and its fans. Reggie never apologized for that. You are not entitled to buyer’s remorse if you deal in the shadows with felons. Now, Reggie is… Read more »
As in most situations, nobody’s perfect, just like Reggie in this long-running fiasco. Reggie received illegal benefits. I think if he were smarter and less selfish and egotistical, he would have definitely acknowledged some of this, apologized, and tried to significantly help USC on his way out. But he didn’t, and he hurt a lot of innocent people. He became Mr. Stonewall even though nobody believes he’s fully innocent here. At least I certainly don’t. His forever more penalty? He’ll never win back all the respect he would have deserved as a USC football player and person. I’m glad he… Read more »
I agree Allen. I’ve always hoped that Reggie would have publicly apologized for his receiving illegal benefits. I truly believe it would have helped USC and now be nearly forgotten. I always tried to separate Bush the person from Bush the football player. As a football player, he earned the Heisman and should have never given it back. Now he has it back and that’s a good thing. As a person, he will never earn my respect and I will always resent him for setting USC football back for so many years.
I used to believe as you Rock and put it all on Reggie. I recently ready that Reggie tried to settle with Lake in 2006 but Lake wouldn’t accept it. Instead, Lake filed a lawsuit in 2007 against Bush to punish Bush publicly and bring the NCAA down on him and USC. Sadly I have been trying to find where I read that but can’t. Ugh! Anyway the way I see it, Lake make a deal with Reggie’s stepdad. Reggie’s parents got the benefit of the free rent and money not Reggie. Reggie didn’t know of the deal till later… Read more »
That’s the part of all this I have the hardest time. How could PC/The University have prevented what happened over 60 miles away one evening where a parent takes advantage of their child’s notoriety financially and even the child may not have known this was happening until it was too late? Reggie has always made it known he never accepted a play for pay penny from anyone. How many athletes have and never got caught? Or their parents? Why don’t you write about that Bill Plaschke?
Lake was scuzzy, but Reggie should have known that, if you lay down with dogs, you wake up with fleas. Regardless of what happened afterwards, Lake’s big reveal of their secret arrangement followed Reggie’s failure to return the $300,000 that Lake had given him when Reggie reneged on the shady deal. Even if it was a shakedown, you lay in the bed you made to avoid hurting the university. Reggie failed one of PC’s golden rules — “protect the team.” Yes, others were partially to blame, but Reggie has walked around playing victim from the begging while NOT answering the… Read more »
Reggie fleeced Lake. Ya, you’re a big victim Reggie. Be happy you got your Heisman back, the one you voluntarily gave back even though you pretend you’re totally innocent. Like what foolish idiot would ever do that? I’m glad Reggie can hold his Trophy again. He certainly earned it on the field, without question. He was a human highlight film. Let bygones be bygones. But I’m much happier for the USC football program and our legendary, storied status in the sport than for Reggie. Reggie never lifted a finger to help Todd McNair or USC football when the crap hit… Read more »
Lamont Butler, 6-2 205, point guard for SDSU has entered the portal looking for better NIL. Can Muss get him on the bus? House of Victory make an offer.
Coveted/elite MICH ST DL transfer Derrick Harmon (6-5, 320, Detroit) is visiting USC today per 247Sports.
PFF rated Harmon with the sixth-highest overall grade and the fourth-highest run defense grade among BIG interior defenders last season.
Matt Zenitz — Sources say Harmon will follow up with a visit to CU this weekend, before tripping to MIA on Monday.
Pete Nakos @PeteNakos
USC redshirt frosh DL Deijon Laffitte (6-2, 305) has entered the transfer portal On3sports has learned.
USC’s six spring departures show our clear and persistent need to rebuild the trenches
IOL Jason Zandamela
DB Tre’Quon Fegans
DL Isaiah Raikes
DL Stanley Ta’ufo’ou
OL Cooper Lovelace
DL Deijon Laffitte
Plaschke has it a bit backwards. Lloyd Lake (convicted felon) made a deal with Reggie’s parents for free rent and cash in exchange for a future marketing deal with Reggie. His parents got the benefit not Reggie. Todd McNair showed neither he nor USC knew of the deal done in San Diego. When Reggie decided not to do business with Lake he offered to pay Lake back in full. Lake refused and sued, to make a big name for himself and punish the Bush family. It took McNair 10 years to clear his name and punish the NCAA. It would… Read more »
Plaschke is not a well liked writer and there is a reason why. Because of him I would never buy the LA Times. He attacks players whether it is right or wrong. He just wants to think of himself as king of the hill.
You never see a reasonable article from this guy.
He is probably the most disliked sports writer in LA.
Plaschke makes Scott Wolf look like Pulitzer material. He either has inside information or is ignoring evidence that has been substantiated. It’s like the guy running for president who’s trying convince the country that his predecessor tried to have Americans inject bleach. The assertion is a complete twist of the actual account, but was first put forth by a comedy show. Too many people buy the bilge.
I have always felt that Reggie did a tremendous disservice to USC and Todd McNair by his non-cooperation. It is extra annoying when he pretends HE never broke any rules. McNair and USC got a BS railroad job, but Reggie could have made it more difficult for the NCAA to do that if he owned up but said he and his family acted on their own and actively hid it from USC. So I generally agree with Plashcke here (a rarity!). Reggie’s legacy will remain complicated for me, but he certainly earned that Heisman and it never should have been… Read more »
It’ll be interesting to see Pete Carroll’s eventual response to Reggie’s victory here, though I’m sure it won’t tell us anything that we haven’t already heard dozens of times.