<blockquote><div class="name-said">AuUrsinae;682475 said:</div><hr>Someone should start a poll on this question. Who was responsible for calling the code red against Oregon last yr?. If it was on Tosh, then his true color showed last yr(so this should be no surprise), but then it was fashionable to write it off as gamesmanship.<br /><br />Now if it was JT, then it shows "his" lack of character and class to let Tosh take the blame for the fiasco(ie-trip and push under public transit). Perhaps subconsciously, Tosh wanted to get back at the institution and person responsible for his humiliating situation last year. <br /><br />I would guess 2/3rd of the people on here think it was JT who called for the code red.<hr></blockquote><br /><br />You need an option for "insignificant lack of character." Boundaries get pushed in sports. They get pushed in recruiting (*ahem*), they get pushed on the field. There are truly dirty things, like head-hunting a team's best player, or paying a runner $25,000. There are dirty things that are accepted, like holding on every play or the stuff that goes on in the pile. Speaking of ways to buy time, there are things that seem dirty but have been around for so long that they aren't, like taking a knee for two straight minutes rather than actually playing football, icing a kicker, etc. Within each of those, there're also degrees of difference. Cal's ~3 questionable injury timeouts in the entire game didn't cause us to shut down your offense. ASU's NINE freaking injury time-outs (was it 5 or 7 in the first half?) were really, truly ridiculous. Chase Thomas was just as blatant as Tipoti was in the Stanford game. If one of those Stanford or ASU coaches got hired tomorrow, no one would bring up their ethics. The only reason Oregon makes this an ethical issue for Cal is that analysts spent the next week dissecting the (entirely legitimate) ways that we shut down your O.
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