FSU benches QB for a half-game

Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston, last season’s Heisman Trophy winner, will not play in the first half against Clemson on Saturday after he was heard making “offensive and vulgar” comments about women on the school’s campus Tuesday.
Florida State quarterback Jameis Winston, last season’s Heisman Trophy winner, will not play in the first half against Clemson on Saturday after he was heard making “offensive and vulgar” comments about women on the school’s campus Tuesday.

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- Jameis Winston will be a spectator in the first half of Florida State's showdown against Clemson on Saturday after making "offensive and vulgar" comments about women -- the latest in a growing list of poor decisions the quarterback has made off the field.

Florida State interim President Dr. Garnett S. Stokes and Athletic Director Stan Wilcox announced in a joint statement Wednesday that the quarterback also will undergo internal discipline but did not provide details of the punishment.

Several students tweeted that Winston stood on campus Tuesday and shouted a lascivious comment about female anatomy that may have derived from an internet meme.

Winston, 20, addressed his inappropriate comments before Wednesday's practice at his weekly news conference, saying that he had to "tone it down."

The Heisman Trophy winner has made similar comments after previous incidents, but Florida State seems to be growing less tolerant of his discretions.

While playing for the Seminoles baseball team last season, he was suspended for three games and completed 20 hours of community service after acknowledging he stole $32 worth of crab legs from a local grocery store in April. Before the football season, he said he had matured and learned what it takes to be a leader and that understood he needed to be more careful in his personal life.

The school president and AD admonished him Wednesday for doing just the opposite.

"As the university's most visible ambassadors, student-athletes at Florida State are expected to uphold at all times high standards of integrity and behavior that reflect well upon themselves, their families, coaches, teammates, the department of athletics and Florida State University," their joint statement said. "Student-athletes are expected to act in a way that reflects dignity and respect for others."

Winston's latest incident comes when Florida State is under scrutiny.

The university is under investigation by the Department of Education for the way it handles reports of sexual assault, including a case involving Winston. The investigation was prompted by a complaint from an FSU student who says Winston assaulted her in 2012.

State Attorney Willie Meggs declined to press charges against Winston last fall.

A lawyer for the woman said the university is currently conducting its own investigation of that incident.

Winston has had other run-ins with police since enrolling at the university.

Police questioned Winston and other FSU players in November 2012 after 13 windows were broken at an apartment complex near Doak Campbell Stadium after an apparent BB gun battle. That same month, Winston and teammate Chris Casher were held at gunpoint by campus police for hunting squirrels. The two told police they were shooting squirrels with a pellet gun along a bike trail. Police were also called after a Burger King employee called to complain that Winston was stealing soda.

Winston was not arrested in any of those three incidents.

The Heisman Trophy winner gave a statement Wednesday in which apologized for the lewd comments.

"I just want to apologize to my university, my coaches and my teammates," the statement read. "I'm not a me person, but in that situation it was a selfish act. That's not how you do things."

Florida State Coach Jimbo Fisher called Winston's remarks about women "derogatory."

"It's not something we want or we're indicative of and it's not a good decision," said Fisher, whose top-ranked Seminoles host No. 22 Clemson on Saturday in an Atlantic Coast Conference showdown. "It was something that has to be addressed. "You can't make certain statements that are derogatory or inflammatory in any way toward any person, race, gender.

Fisher athletes such as Winston are always going to be under more scrutiny for what they say than others.

"That's just the nature of the business of who you are and what you are," Fisher said. 'That's the situation it is, and you have to understand that."

Winston's behavior could not only affect his future NFL draft stock, but possibly his status as a student.

He could be removed from school pending the outcome of the investigation into whether he violated the school's code of conduct policy stemming from the sexual assault accusation. Winston has repeatedly indicated there was a strong chance he could return for another year of college football, but this latest incident could change that.

Saturday's game is a rematch of a game that put Winston in the national spotlight last season. Winston threw for 444 yards and three touchdowns and ran for another score as Florida State defeated the Tigers 51-14 en route to a national championship.

"I want to be out on the field with my team, but I did something, so I have to accept the consequences," Winston said. "I'm going to apologize to my team. We're not going to think about that, because we don't think about negative things. We're going to think about moving forward and winning the game."

Sports on 09/18/2014

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