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Comments
He was arrested for speeding? Are you kidding? The Athens PD hasn't changed in 60 years.
When you're that young you don't think about dying. Even after the horrific crash that killed Willock and LeCroy, someone still isn't getting the message. I'm not going to be a hypocrite and say I didn't do the same thing when I was younger.... BUT.... We knew not to do it in an area saturated with police or in residential areas... The players ought to know they're high profile; when they go out in public people know them.... So do the police... There is no hiding... As Junior Brown crooned in the song "Highway Patrol" - "If you wanna race then get on a race track..." Come on guys let's use a little commonsense going forward...
UGA needs to build a **** and race track so they aren't on the street. Send them to driving experience at Atlanta Speedway. This is what happens when NIL money happens 20 year old kids and buying a car with 750 hp a formula for diaster. To REALLY get their attention take away their scholarship and let them pay for their classes, food, housing and all the other perks that they are getting. GET OFF THE STREET before someone else gets really hurt or killed. Wake Up DAWGS.
Road Atlanta is less than 45 min away, someone please put a partnership deal together with Michelin so these young people can learn to drive fast cars and do their racing on a track and not the roads.
The ACCPD has a history of arresting people for traffic violations that would get a citation just about everywhere else in the state. Like, they arrest people for driving on an expired (not suspended) driver's license.
Interesting idea but teaching them to drive faster, more safely, will inevitably spill over to street driving. The "discipline" being meted out internally is obviously not working.
If burying your friend and teammate doesn't make an impression I don't know what will. Making an example of someone might. Booting a very high profile offender off the team might send the message to everyone that this must stop. .
Dadgum, y'all. Another one?!
I think this is where it's going. Death of teammate and various internal discipline isn't getting the message across to these young men. Time to make an example of someone. I disagree with kicking this guy off, simply because he didn't get advance warning of this particular punishment. But deal harshly with this young man, internally, and make it perfectly clear to everyone on the team: the next person to gets charged with reckless driving is off the team, no questions asked.
I like this idea. You lose your scholarship for the year but can stay on the team. Make it a financial punishment rather than ruining their life.
If they have the NIL to buy these expensive cars, they can pay for a year of college.
What was the speed limit on this stretch of Atlanta Hwy. The reckless driving charge seems to be only because of the excessive speed, because it doesn't say he was not racing, driving while impaired, or driving without a license. So it seems he was in-fact actually arrested for speeding.
Very congested, and busy road in Athens to be clocked at 90 mph. Those saying it's the ACC Police Departments fault for arresting him are funny (ANYWHERE, 45 mph over the speed limit will get You arrested, and a good possibility You lose your license for being a " super speeder".) If you think an offense like this is minor, you are clueless.How would you feel if he killed your kid because he was double the speed limit on a very busy road at rush hour? That's what I thought..
This isn’t the product of any one racial culture. Street racing and excessive speeding are on the rise and have become popular among young people from all ethnic backgrounds. Hate to say this, but, for reference, see Chandler LeCroy.
Edit: The comment to which I was replying has been deleted. Probably a good move. 👍
Very true and very well spoken
"This isn’t the product of any one racial culture."____@Hemingwey
I tend to agree with you...but, how would we know, if we're not allowed to talk about it. Lol
IMO...if you're gonna post something that represents a racial connection to a social Fad or activity...you need to provide some evidence or it can be viewed as just another ignorant stereotypical comment, that doesn't move the conversation forward one iota.
With valid evidence, a strategy can be formulated, that addresses the root cause of the problem. Maybe...or, maybe it doesn't matter...which is where I stand.
That being said...when I was growing up in SE Ga., back in the 70's...the white guys raced the muscle cars and the black guys raced motor cycles. I don't really know why. It wasn't discussed and it didn't much matter. Lol. That's not to say we didn't have some "cross-mojination" (bikes against cars). Lol
One of my best friends, rebuilt a Mustang Mach II that could blow the doors off of anything on the road. He wound up working for a NASCAR racing team, as a pit mechanic and raced occasionally. Mostly dirt tracks and Enduro-Races. That's the type of racing that was popular, at the time.
The stuff they're doing today with these "souped up tanks", is beyond racing. It's foolhardy. Those vehicles aren't designed to handle those speeds in a turn. If you hit one small hump in the road...you could wind up in the trees.
Supposedly, the team is being educated to these facts. But...ARE they? What are they teaching them? What is the curriculum being taught? Whatever it is...it doesn't SEEM to be having the desired effect.
I can't get over the fact, street racing in Georgia has become "a thing"...again! But, back in my day...we had enough sense to do it where we didn't put innocent people "at risk". Doing it without spotters in a populated area or on a street/road with traffic is selfish and disrespectful.
And, that's what alarms me, most. The complete disregard for Public Safety and self-preservation.
This unfortunately is a real thing and has been. It is so very wierd since other schools seem to have more influence on their local pds. In Athens it is opposite.
Regardless, maybe it might make sense not to give out sports cars to all the incoming players. Just a thought.