Cheating allegations are always being made in college football. Whether it’s illegal recruiting or illegal scouting tactics, there’s always a headline. As of now, the University of Colorado is pointing fingers, claiming that the University of Oregon used unauthorized access to both its practice video and data service.
Of course, Colorado believes that Oregon used these tactics before the two teams squared off last year, and Oregon won 42-6.
This now means that everyone has to have their opinions about the accusations and whether or not they might be true.
“Haha give me a break… I hate Oregon but they could have shown up half drunk without any game film and still beat the breaks off the CU Fluffs,” said one comment.
“Lmao this is beyond desperate. I promise Oregon didn’t need tape Colorado never should have been on the same field,” said another.
“How embarrassing for Colorado that this story got it. Oregon spanked them so bad that they thought the Ducks had to have been cheating….only for them to later determine they just suck that bad,” added a third.
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“This is the same team with the prized QB who walked off the field at halftime against WSU. Colorado is a joke and had 0 chance against Oregon, let alone WSU,” continued a fourth.
It’s become very obvious that the general public does not believe Oregon cheated to beat Colorado and rather just outplayed them.
University of Colorado’s Video Provider, Catapult, Says Video Was “Not Compromised”
If cheating occurred, Catapult, the team’s video provider, assures us it was not from their end.
“We conducted a thorough investigation into reports of unauthorized access to Colorado’s football video footage last season,” a Catapult spokesperson said, according to Front Office Sports. “We can confirm that the security of our systems was not compromised during the investigation.”
Of course, though, there are many other ways for a team to get its hands on an opposing team’s practice videos.