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ex-Miami/ex-Louisville LB Willie Williams (official thread)

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/sports...ns/wednesday/sports_04be34b7a0e6017900bb.html

It's not UM's job to save star recruit

By Dave George, Palm Beach Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 7, 2004

All or nothing, the gift of a prized athletic scholarship or the loss of a promising young life to the ravages of the streets. That's the way the Willie Williams story is being sold. It's convenient that way, but not completely honest.

Honest is saying that anyone with the good grades and test scores that Williams earned at Miami's Carol City High School has the maturity, the discipline, and most importantly, the responsibility to look out for himself.

What came out of a Fort Lauderdale courtroom Tuesday was well short of that.

A circuit judge pronounced that Williams, a Parade All-America linebacker signed but not yet accepted by the University of Miami, is not "a lost cause" despite his 11 arrests in the space of five years. Immaturity is the major factor here, said the judge, and Williams' lawyer quickly tossed another log on the brushfire of rationalization, saying that the poor kid's probation-busting problems during a January recruiting trip to Florida "stemmed from the fact that he was given liquor."

Paul Dee, the athletic director at Miami, offered less insight into the situation but plenty of action. "Now that Willie Williams' legal issues have been ruled upon by the courts," Dee said in a one-sentence statement, "the formal application process for determining his admission status to the University of Miami will begin."

Not exactly a green light for Williams to join Larry Coker's football team this fall, but the kind of yellow that very few people hesitate to run.

College football programs are built on great talent, which means that coaches and administrators alike will bend backward for great distances to get it. They'll see a skunk of a blue-chip prospect and call him a playful otter. They'll see a huge, honking risk of a scholarship offer and call it a golden opportunity, knowing that boosters would roast them alive for playing it safe.

If Miami should have known about Williams' long rap sheet, so should Florida have known before inviting the 6-foot-2 linebacker with the NFL potential on a campus visit. And if FSU fans are getting a kick out of all this ethical shaking and baking, remember how Bobby Bowden once prayed that Peter Warrick would be charged with a misdemeanor rather than a felony for his part in a retail theft scam so that the former Heisman Trophy candidate could get back on the field quicker.

"Boys will be boys," Bobby said at the time, "and some of them seem to find more adversity than others."

So that's how it works, huh? Some young people find flowers as they walk across a meadow and others, darn the luck, find something they really wish they hadn't stepped in, again and again and again.

Well, I'm not buying it. The University of Miami does not exist as a halfway house between the juvenile justice system and the NFL. There is no obligation there to save Williams from himself, or to save society from Williams. Tom Osborne already tried that self-serving argument years ago with Lawrence Phillips at Nebraska and it's just as distasteful today.

If Williams really is going to be a Hurricane, there should be weightier conditions than Dee's previously compiled list, which includes 50 hours of community service, mandatory study hall and a dire warning not to mess up again.

He should be told, by Coker, that he absolutely will not play as a true freshman. That's a reasonable probationary period and a dose of discipline for both player and coaching staff. A stiffer option, though less realistic, would be shipping Williams off to a junior college for two years of seasoning, with the future offer of a Miami scholarship as a reward for good behavior.

Nate Harris is proving the potential value of that tactic. He had it all, then he had nothing, and now he's on the verge of having it all again.

A highly prized linebacker at Miami Edison, Harris was a member of the Hurricanes' signing class of 2002. He blew it big time shortly thereafter by getting involved in an armed robbery in Liberty City. Miami revoked his scholarship offer, demonstrating the distinction between violent crime and discharging a fire extinguisher as a prank, which was one of Williams' January offenses. Harris dealt with the consequences of his action, doing six months in a disciplinary boot camp as part of a plea bargain, and is playing now at Dodge City Junior College in Kansas.

One season down and one season to go before Harris gets out of Dodge, at which time Nick Saban, coach of the BCS national champion LSU Tigers, has indicated he may offer the detoured Miamian a scholarship.

Williams has yet to show that much commitment to his own future. Miami should be far more careful of its own reputation, so long on the mend.
 
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Willie Williams Out 2 Months

Had knee surgery today. Now he has plenty of time to study.



Miami's Williams sidelined with knee injury

August 25, 2004

CORAL GABLES, Fla. (AP) -- Miami freshman linebacker Willie Williams will be sidelined at least two months after having surgery Wednesday to repair a torn ligament in his right knee.

Williams, widely considered the nation's top prep defensive player, injured the knee in a pileup near the end of practice Tuesday. He had surgery to repair the lateral collateral ligament in his knee.

Although the 6-foot-2, 230-pound Williams has looked sharp this fall, he wasn't going to be allowed to play for at least the first month of the season while he ``proves himself academically.''

Williams has been under intense scrutiny since he signed with Miami in February and it was revealed that he had an extensive criminal record. He pleaded no contest earlier this summer to two separate charges stemming from his official visit to Florida and was placed on probation.

He must follow a strict set of rules to remain a student and keep his scholarship.

Updated on Wednesday, Aug 25, 2004 5:15 pm EDT
Williams Out With Knee Injury
 
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Willie Williams Accident

http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/bowls04/news/story?id=1953618

Associated Press
Miami linebacker Willie Williams and defensive back Rashaun Jones escaped injury Sunday when Williams lost control of his vehicle while driving to join the Hurricanes for bowl preparations in Atlanta.
The crash happened about two hours south of Atlanta and Williams and Jones eventually reached the team hotel, athletic department spokesman Mark Pray said.

"They're fine, which is the important thing," Pray said. "They were somewhere in Georgia, there was ice on the roads and Willie started hydroplaning."

Pray said no tickets were issued, but Williams' truck was heavily damaged. Sleet and freezing rain were blamed for many accidents on Georgia roads over the Christmas weekend.

No other details of the crash were immediately available.

Jones is a regular on Miami's special teams, and is expected to play in Friday's Peach Bowl against Florida. He has recovered two blocked punts this year for Miami, including one for a touchdown against Wake Forest.

Williams, the once-heralded recruit whose enrollment at Miami was threatened by his lengthy arrest record and who will not play this season because of a knee injury, resumed practicing last week, Pray said.


Williams has been scrutinized since he signed with the Hurricanes and his history -- including theft and burglary arrests dating back to 1999 -- was revealed.

He pleaded no contest over the summer to two separate charges stemming from last year's official recruiting visit to Florida and was placed on probation. A university panel ultimately recommended that Miami admit Williams, provided he followed a strict set of rules to both remain a student and keep his scholarship.

School officials have said Williams is adhering to all university conditions, including enhanced academic standards and ones regarding his behavior on- and off-campus.
 
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"Don't worry guys....I'm OOOOTAY"
img7086531.jpg
 
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Didn't all the Miami posters tell us that most of WW's arrests were for stealing food? Maybe he should've just sold his truck for food money. Or maybe he didn't have the truck back then *wink*

I bet there are a bunch of Cane fans waiting for this investment to pay off.
 
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