Bishop Sycamore firmly cemented themselves as a school that will be talked about for years to come after they defrauded ESPN to appear on a television broadcast.
The little known Ohio-based school were blown out 58-0 in a nationally televised game Sunday by opponents IMG Academy and have been faced with widespread criticism. The ESPN commentary team quickly noted the mismatch in what was a one-sided affair and became concerned for player safety.
“We regret that this happened and have discussed it with Paragon, which secured the matchup and handles the majority of our high school event scheduling. They have ensured us that they will take steps to prevent this kind of situation from happening moving forward,” ESPN said in a statement.
On Tuesday, Bishop Sycamore announced that they had parted ways with head coach Roy Johnson, who was said to have an active warrant for fraud. Later that same day, Ohio governor Mike DeWine tweeted that he was “concerned by the recent reports and questions raised about Bishop Sycamore” after being briefed on them.
The team’s new coach, Tyren Jackson, is grown tired of the hoopla and addressed the controversy and asked that the media “stop slandering” his student athletes.
“I wasn’t gonna say anything but I’m gonna go ahead and address it now,” Jackson said on social media.
Click on ‘Follow Us’ and get notified of the most viral Football stories via Google! Follow Us
“All the accusations and all the allegations against our program at Bishop Sycamore are completely false. Completely false. There’s no way we frauded anybody.
“We didn’t do anything negative. We did nothing but put kids from all over the country that play at high levels… we put them on national TV on the biggest stage to play at a high level. That’s all.
“Now, had it been a little more cleaner or had it been a little bit look like we actually look like we actually belonged out there (against IMG Academy), then maybe we wouldn’t have this narrative. And that’s up for us to fix and that’s up for me to fix.
“So yes, I see all the allegations and I see the stuff. I see all the slander and yes, I’m putting my name on it because, at the end of the day, coming from where I come from, the humble beginnings I had – we all got pasts, man.
So a man’s past is his past. But as far as the program, these kids, these young men – it’s my job now, as the head coach, to make sure that you have more information given to you and provided to you about us so we don’t never had this problem again.
“The only reason everybody has something to say is because of the way it looked, and that is on us, as a culture and as a top-down organization, and we will fix that, but stop slandering these kids.
“Stop making these kids feel less than what they are. Stop making these kids go home and question if they’re good enough or if this stuff is legit. It’s legit.
“They’ve been here with us the whole way through. Just stop. Worry about yourself and check yourself before you can ever worry about another man.”