Categories: NCAA Football

NCAA Shop selling autographed Reggie Bush photo from vacated game

Former USC Trojans runningback Reggie Bush was forced to give back his Heisman, USC had to vacate wins, and the program had to deal with probation and scholarship losses all because of the NCAA’s ruling on Bush’s case.  Yet, the NCAA finds it completely acceptable to sell an autographed photo of Reggie Bush from one of those wins that was vacated.  They’re charging nearly $180 for the photo from the 2005 Orange Bowl slaughtering of Oklahoma, which USC won 55-19.

Here’s some NCAA logic for you: they can punish a former player and a school for that player’s actions and force the school to disassociate with said player, but they can still make money off an autographed photo of that player.  Good job NCAA, your stupidity knows no bounds.

Update: Bilas forces NCAA to shut down its sale of player jerseys on its website.

[LBS]

Related: Jay Bilas rips NCAA for selling jerseys associate with players

diehardsport

Recent Posts

Former Michigan Coach Hired By Notre Dame To Join Staff

While no longer on Michigan's staff, Brian Jean Mary, who served as LB coach over…

2 months ago

No. 1 Player In Michigan Could Be Heading Elsewhere, Trending To Top B1G Program

Ranked as the No. 1 player in the state for 2027, Dakota Guerrant, an elite…

3 months ago

Michigan Tending To Land Specialist After Change In Recruitment

With the Wolverines losing place-kicker Micah Drescher after he asked out of his NLI, Michigan…

3 months ago

Michigan Primed To Land Multiple Top 2026 Recruits Upcoming?

While Michigan looks primed to land elite WR/DB Salesi Moa tonight during an announcement, the…

3 months ago

Michigan Loses Out On Transfer Portal Target From A Rival

While paying Michigan a visit during the transfer portal window, former Michigan State DB Justin…

3 months ago

A Former Michigan Player Looks To Be Trending Towards An Ohio State Transfer

While it appeared that Michigan was surging for former DB Cam Calhoun, who of recent…

3 months ago