Paul Hornung Presents: Words Of Wisdom
January 20th, 2012 . by adamnPaul Hornung, ND’ original “golden boy”, is the namesake for college football’s newest honor: “most versatile player” (a player that can help their team the most in a large variety of ways).
Hornung is one of college football’s all-time greats (think the original Rocket Ismail, plus he could throw, and play defense), the only player special enough to win the Heisman on a losing team, so his name belongs right up there with the Biletnikoffs and Nagurskis.
However, he might have even more fame for the statement “ND must lower admissions to get the black athlete and win”. Technically, he may be right on lowering admissions, he just made the mistake of using the qualifying term “black”. (That’s what we call racial profiling.)
So, occasionally in his honor, the Blarney will bring you Hornung’s Words of Wisdom, or technically true statements that are worded wrong, or perhaps show some type of prejudice/political incorrectness.
Paul Hornung’s Words of Wisdom For 01-20-12:
“Stud cornerback recruit Yuri Wright from national power Don Bosco Prep is under fire for his Twitter comments. The thought was that he would be an Michigan/ND/Rutgers battle royale (and the kid has unbelievable physical tools), but it seems like his comments have already cost him his shot at Michigan, and also got him dismissed from Don Bosco today. Hopefully, the comments don’t take away any more opportunities. Look, kids NEED to understand that posting their thoughts on social media has repercussions. You are inviting the world to get a clearer image of who you are as a person, and sometimes, that is not such a good thing (There is a reason we all have the ability to carry on an inner-monologue–others do not need to always know what we are thinking!). I won’t kill the kid, he is seventeen, and doesn’t have the best support system (based on his Twitter comments of not having family support at the U.S. Army Bowl). Hell, maybe he was auditioning to be a comedian or earn a guest spot on Jersey Shore (hence the emphasis on pus…umm…I mean female anatomy comments)–a guy can dream, right? But, the fact is he is a high profile player being recruited by institutions that don’t like to look bad (and Yuri’s comments make an institution of higher learning look bad, trust me on that). If Yuri was an ordinary kid that nobody paid attention to–no harm, no foul. He is not. He is a public figure that chose to make himself even more public. He chose to seek more attention–and he got it. That’s what social media does. Michigan and Don Bosco didn’t like the extra attention and extra insight on Yuri Wright. He paid for it. Now he knows what social media can do to an image. Hopefully, the lesson isn’t too costly.”