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Ray Small tells all: Ex-Buckeye says he sold memorabilia, some players don't 'think about' rules

meisel.14@osu.edu and oldham.29@osu.edu

Published: Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Updated: Saturday, June 16, 2012 00:06

ray small

Courtesy of MCT

Ohio State's Ray Small (82) out runs the Wisconsin defense for a touchdown on a kick-off return in the third quarter of their NCAA college football game at The Ohio Stadium, Saturday, October 10, 2009, in Columbus, Ohio.


Ray Small saw it all – and did most of it, too – during his four years suiting up in scarlet and gray.

Small told The Lantern on Wednesday he profited off of memorabilia while at Ohio State, adding that some student-athletes "don't even think about (NCAA) rules."

"I had sold my things but it was just for the money," Small said. "At that time in college, you're kind of struggling."

Small, who played receiver at OSU from 2006-2010, capitalized on the Buckeyes' success during his college career.

"We had four Big Ten rings," he said. "There was enough to go around."

Small said he sold the rings to cover typical costs of living.

"We have apartments, car notes," he said. "So you got things like that and you look around and you're like, ‘Well I got (four) of them, I can sell one or two and get some money to pay this rent."

The wheeling and dealing didn't stop with rings. The best deals came from car dealerships, Small said.

"It was definitely the deals on the cars. I don't see why it's a big deal," said Small, who identified Jack Maxton Chevrolet as the players' main resource.

The Columbus Dispatch reported on May 7 that OSU was investigating more than 50 transactions between OSU athletes and their families and Jack Maxton Chevrolet or Auto Direct.

Representatives for Jack Maxton Chevrolet did not return repeated requests for comment.

NCAA rules prohibit student-athletes from benefiting from the sale of their merchandise. Small said he wasn't the only one.

Ray Small interview with The Lantern by The Lantern OSU

"They have a lot (of dirt) on everybody," Small said, "cause everybody was doing it."

Although he understands how athletes are easy targets for getting deals, Small said anyone can take advantage.

"(People say) ‘Oh you got a deal, it's because you're an athlete,'" Small said. "Playing for Ohio State definitely helps. But I know a lot of people that do nothing and get deals on their cars."

The Lantern obtained a police report from shortly after 2 a.m. on Sept. 18, 2007, when Small was arrested for a misdemeanor charge of driving with a suspended license. According to the report, Small was driving a 2007 Chrysler 300 that he told the officer he had just purchased. The vehicle had a dealer plate on it instead of a temporary tag.

Police then received a call from Aaron Kniffin later that morning, wanting to know why the car had been impounded. Kniffin, a salesman at Jack Maxton Chevrolet, told the officer the dealership "gives a lot of coaches and faculty cars and that Mr. Small's family is purchasing the car," according to the report. Kniffin told the officer that paperwork for the car had not yet been worked out.

On Dec. 23, the NCAA suspended quarterback Terrelle Pryor, running back Dan Herron, receiver DeVier Posey, offensive lineman Mike Adams and defensive end Solomon Thomas for five games for selling memorabilia and receiving discounted tattoos from Eddie Rife, owner of Fine Line Ink tattoo parlor. Linebacker Jordan Whiting earned a one-game ban.

OSU handed coach Jim Tressel a five-game suspension and $250,000 fine for failing to report the players' actions.

Malcolm Jenkins, who played cornerback for OSU from 2005-2008, said the tattoo violation was overblown.

"The tattoo thing is whatever. It's not that big of a deal, but it's one of the dumb rules that the NCAA has," Jenkins told The Lantern on Wednesday. "I don't see what advantage getting free tattoos has to a university to be a violation, but it's whatever. It's in the rules, so it's whatever."

Small said he isn't surprised players couldn't resist the temptation of discounted tattoos.

"If you go in and try to get a tattoo, and somebody is like ‘Do you want 50 percent off this tattoo?' You're going to say, ‘Heck yeah,'" Small said.

The NCAA's notice of allegations sent to university President E. Gordon Gee on April 21 details the infractions that the six aforementioned athletes committed. It also lists a seventh violator, noted under letter "g" in its document. The NCAA accuses that player of having repeated interaction with Rife for a year-and-a-half.

Small said he didn't know much about Rife or Fine Line Ink.

Among the items this mystery player sold to Rife was a 2010 Rose Bowl watch for $250. However, Small, defensive end Rob Rose and running back Bo DeLande were suspended for the 2010 Rose Bowl for a "violation of team rules."

According to athletic department spokesman Dan Wallenberg, that means Small didn't receive a watch.

"Postseason awards are limited to student-athletes who are eligible to participate in such contests under NCAA and Big Ten Conference regulations," Wallenberg said Wednesday in an email to The Lantern.

Rife declined The Lantern's request for an interview.

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121 comments

Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 14:26
this is the Lanterns 15 seconds of fame....GET OFF CAMPUS
JP
Thu May 26 2011 14:21
Bob, there is no whistle-blowing going on with this article. It's simply reporting the same stuff that's already been reported multiple times. That's my only gripe with it. People are acting as if this is groundbreaking news. It's the same news we've been hearing for 5+ months. The only thing new is Ray Small's name being added to the list of ex-players who have confirmed what we already knew. This article didn't break any news, nor did Ray Small. That's my only gripe.
John, OSU Student
Thu May 26 2011 14:17
How stupid is the lantern? Why are they making even more news for espn to run with? There is absolutely no reason for this, it helps no one. I am often ashamed of the Lantern and the way they represent OSU, and this is no exception.

OSU journalism student - Congratulations to these two who are bringing more shame to the football team and YOUR university for their 5 minutes of fame. Journalism is a complete joke and reporters are the biggest hypocrites ever.

Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 14:17
Any scUM fan posting is a joke, when webber is allowed on campus then talk,r.robinson is close 2 serving federal time,and don't even talk about players selling drugs on campus. Ray small isn't a good source for the latern 2 b asking any questions, go find out what his suspensions were all about the latern,really you print a story from a known pot-head?? REALLY???? Everybody's doing it ray?? He chose not 2 listen when the were explaining the rules but now everybody's doing it.
Bob
Thu May 26 2011 14:15
Those of you bashing The Lantern for reporting this need a refresher on what journalism is. I would want my school paper to blow the whistle on anything wrong going on at my campus. From an NCAA violation to a professor stealing office supplies, it doesn't matter. If these kids want to be successful journalists and work in a field that is extremely difficult to sustain a career, they need clips like this to build a portfolio. I'd rather have my school paper exposing the dirt so it can be cleaned up. Being a fan of a dirty program means you support the dirty behavior. Bravo Lantern staff. Job well done.
Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 14:09
Funny you say this article pissed off most of campus but it's most of campus who claims the FB players are spoiled rotten. Can't have it both ways. Now did you mean most of campus is p@ Ray Smalls sold the program down the drain because his daddy had to realize his son is an idiot??? You know us parents refuse to believe our kids are failures. ALWAYS someone elses fault.....Smalls daddy should have called Preacher Daddy Newton who would have advised him to get his kid in a gym and win every d@ award...oh tell your son to play dumb while you manipulate behind the scenes! hahahaha
Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 13:51
Well for 1 it's easier to be a top notch football when you ignore the rules.... and 2 if EVERY program is doign this kind of stuff how come when the NCAA investigated Michigan they only came up with a few hours of extra stretches.
3 if you want to know why the latern journalists are printing this , it's because people care about it.
Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 13:49
This article just pissed off most of campus. Obviously not members of buckeye nation writing this story.
JP
Thu May 26 2011 13:45
Journalism student - As far as "putting down" the writers of this article, I've done no such thing. My only opinion has been that nothing new has been broken on this particular topic in quite some time. That would include this article.

If I'm missing the big blockbuster that came out of this article, then please clue me in. From what I can gather, it would appear the only new item is that a new player has confirmed what other players have already confirmed previously.

And as much as it may shock you, yes, even ESPN reports redundant information. They do it all the time. Hey, did you hear that baseball players used steroids 10 or 15 years ago? If not, just wait. ESPN will discover some anonymous leaked drug test from 2001 implicating someone we all assumed was juicing anyway. And then it'll be the lead on SportsCenter for 6 straight days.

Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 13:41
I agree with the comment below that students deserve the better seats, but not all alumni are sitting on the 50 yard line. I graduated 30 years ago, and 9 times out of 10 I'm either way up in the south stands or north end zone (C-deck in the corner behind one of the entrance towers).
And regarding this article and the situation that our football program is in (whether Ray Small is truthfull or not), we've got problems that need to be straightened out. I hope the NCAA enforces their rules to all NCAA affiliated schools and not just our program.
OSU journalism student
Thu May 26 2011 13:27
JP - it isnt a big deal to be featured on Outside the Lines? which is the best investigative journalism sports program on TV today.

This is a another thing to add to the portfolio for meisel and oldham...keep putting them down while you aren't on espn...practically every sane mans dream

Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 13:25
Issues tobe cleaned-up with the program, but "They explain the rules to you, but as a kid you���re not really listening to all of them rules,���...and...."you don���t even think about the rules. You���re just like ���Ah man, it���s cool." You take it, and next thing you know the NCAA is down your back.��� Gee, Ray, wonder why the NCAA is down your back...just doesn't make sense does it? So you take it, know that you're breaking the rules, and then go public with it. Ray is exactly the person and student-athlete we thought he was.
Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 12:48
The pressure to fill those seats with big money ticket holders is circumventing the ethics of collegiate sports. The old alumni butts could just as easily sit near the top of the stadium at a discount price. What a shame the students who bust their keisters in class are relegated to the worst seats ! This is their team, made up of fellow students, not professionals. This is only a game, played by big kids---not that important. Visit someone in the James, see what is really important. P.S. Go Bucks ! Big Bucks !
buckeye sigh!
Thu May 26 2011 12:29
oh how the glass horseshoe has turned. will you forfeit all games since 2007? the NCAA has to make an example of osu if they flaunt it in their faces. your Nuts if you think otherwise. GO BLUE!
Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 12:20
Good job Lantern. I'm sure Lantern employees receive death threats and hate mail. Buckeye Nation is one ignorant group of people.
The program went to the crossroads when it couldn't beat Mich. It struck a deal. Now it's time to pony up.
Kudos to the real Buckeye fans. The ones who actually hold degrees from the school. The ones who are actually and honestly facing the truth and wanting something done about it.
Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 12:17
"There's a lot of people here dogging The Lantern, and I wonder why they aren't dogging the TEAM instead?"

Totally agree. It's not The Lantern's fault the football players are doing this stuff. If the players didn't break rules, they wouldn't have to report on them breaking rules. Unfortunately, OSU students and fans are an embarrassment because they can't even think logically. Why they're all so quick to defend their precious football team who's embarrassing their program on a national level is beyond me.

Brett Winner
Thu May 26 2011 12:17
No, sir. Every program is corrupt and has these kind of things going on. If you think they don't than you are a plain idiot. The difference between our program and their program, is that ours has two power hungry journalism students who think they are going to make it big time by trying to bring down the program.

You say that players are going out buying iphones and blackberry's and nice clothes. If I looked at my phone, I have a blackberry. If you look in my closet, I have some pretty nice clothes that I wear out. SO why is it a big deal if these players have those kinds of things. Is it because most grew up in an urban neighborhood, and you know that they couldn't possibly afforded it? With all the perks that these players get, they also put in a hell of a lot of time into perfecting their craft. How many students can say they go to school and also work a full time job? Not that many. These players go to school (albeit, maybe get some help) but they also put their heart in souls to practice/workouts/games and devote a ton of time to football that so many of us love to brag about and enjoy each and every friday. And your telling me that if they get a discounted tattoo thats wrong? That if someone loans them a car or gets them a discount on it thats wrong? These players aren't running around with millions of dollars by any means. They bring so much to the university, but god-for-bid, if they get any kind of perk, then they are breaking a rule and making the program a corrupt program.

You can talk all you want about how OSU has a corrupt program and all these players get all these things just b/c they play football. Step into their shoes, where free and discounted things are thrown at them numerous times a day. If someone were to tell you that they would get you 50% off of a car, would you take it? I think so.

Your backing your fellow journalism students like you should, but before you bash the team, step into their shoes for a minute and see what they go through every day, with people throwing gifts and money at them.

Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 12:13
If one more jealous untalented Osu student whines about how the athletes get all this free stuff while they struggle I will scream. The FB players are out of control but the soccer, lacrosse, volleyball etc. kids have talents and used them not to graduate with any debt. Be careful with that jealousy because if it were your sibling on one of the teams (not FB) would you be jealous or supportive????? I remember hearing kid whining at orientation "Athletes here are treated like Gods!" I thought "Sounds like you couldn't do anything with a ball and is jealous!!!!" Congrats to all those non revenue no media attention getting Osu student athletes who won B10 and NCAA titles this year!!! Some of us haven't got caught up in Tresselgate!
JP
Thu May 26 2011 12:08
OSU journalism student - wow, bigger than Cam Newton and Reggie Bush combined? That's an awfully bold statement..and um, ignorant.

And really, who cares if ESPN and CBS are reporting this story? Does that suddenly mean this story breaks any new ground? No. They report redundant news all the time. Be smarter than that.

Anonymous
Thu May 26 2011 12:05
@Clint-AMEN! I wonder does Mr. Smalls realize how bad this makes him look as well. So my career and grades tanked so NOW I want to be honest??? Lets see, if he was next to Heyward on the Steelers roster would he have been so willing to throw Osu under the bus? I'm not saying he lied because it's apparent these kids need to taught the word "student" instead of "star" athlete!!!! Mr. Smalls just put the nail in his NFL coffin which after reading ESPN article sounds like several NFL teams already banged nails in that coffin! hahahaha Tressel doesn't need to be fired nor did The Lantern do anything wrong but write a GREAT article. I know several athletes in other Osu sports who are glad this finally blew up in the FB players faces. Now those egomaniacs can realize what a mess GREED caused. I want to chat with these parents to find out why they need to live off their "college" kids???? Actually this is starting to sound like a lie as well unless mommy and daddy have tattoos....




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