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?FLORIDA FOOTBALL My statement was made in January 1989, after the semester had ended, after the Sugar Bowl had been played and after Deion Sanders had left school. Sanders had complied fully with NCAA rules regarding eligibility, and that was the point of my quote—our athletic director handled NCAA rule compliance. The academic issue was handled by the office of the dean of undergraduate studies, and Sanders received the full penalty—a failing grade for those courses he didn't attend during the fall semester. Before his senior year, he had a good class attendance record and was in good standing academically. Obviously Sanders felt publicity would do more for his pro salary negotiations than would paying attention to school work. By that fall he had, in fact, signed a pro baseball contract and was no longer on athletic scholarship. It is inappropriate to blame universities for the way professional athletics and the sports media react to talented athletes. We and the Florida university system have now eliminated the loophole, which still exists in the NCAA rules, that made Sanders eligible for postseason play despite his poor academic performance during the previous term. We will continue to put our academic mission above our interest in fine intercollegiate athletics. ? TOLEDO'S LOSS (CONT.) Looney's article on the firing of Dan Simrell says if Toledo had held Bowling Green with 20 seconds to go, it would have won the Mid-American Conference and gone to the California Bowl. Well, it didn't. Looney also talks of Simrell's record and of Toledo's finishing tied for second when it was picked to finish sixth, and how that was not enough to save his job—with good reason. Three years ago Toledo was picked for first and finished seventh. Simrell's record for the last three years was 15-17-1. That is not good enough. Simrell is a nice guy, but he knew what was required of him this season and he did not meet the criteria. His dismissal is a far cry from college football at its worst, as Looney contends. Most of Toledo rallied behind a friend, and that speaks well for the city. It also appears that most of Toledo is afraid of change. It's a good thing that Al Bohl is not. ?THE NFL'S STOP 10 ?NO CANADIENS
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