Analyst: Colorado football GA Warren Sapp shouldn't be around college-aged children
Colorado football GA Warren Sapp shouldn't be around college-aged kids due to his criminal past -- this, at least, according to Mike Farrell Sports' Scott Salomon.
"Sapp's problems with women are well-archived," Salomon prefaced before saying, "Following the 2015 Super Bowl in Arizona, Sapp was arrested for assault and solicitation of a prostitute which ultimately cost him his on air job at the NFL Network. Months later the former Miami Hurricane was arrested for allegedly assaulting his girlfriend in an altercation in a Las Vegas hotel that spilled over to her residence.
"Sapp avoided jail time in both instances after his lawyers worked out a plea deal that kept him out of the slammer. I cannot think of any valid reason why a collegiate head football coach that would hire a person with Sapp's criminal credentials, and no coaching record to speak of, to work around college-aged children. They might be tall and might be in their teens, but they are still children."
Colorado football GA Warren Sapp has every right to be a coach
Salomon has been one of Deion Sanders' staunchest critics -- who can forget the prediction of "Prime Time" turning into Slime Time, something Deion Sanders Jr. bookmarked on X -- and unsurprisingly provided a black-pilled perspective on the Sapp hiring.
Truthfully, while Sapp's arrival is one that comes with plenty of controversy, it's not something that should prevent him from being a coach. Hell, if Sapp is someone who shouldn't be around college-aged kids for what he's done years in the past, then a higher percentage of coaches than most would realize should also be out of a job by that standard.
That standard just isn't held to anyone else besides Coach Prime and the Colorado coaching and support staff he surrounds himself with in Boulder.