Sports | Sports Illustrated Series of Scandals Led to Fall of Ohio State's Tressel Resigned Jim Tressel been applauded for 'integrity' By Matt Cantor Posted May 31, 2011 9:06 AM CDT Copied Ohio State students Matt Parker, left, and Curt Stine hang a sign on their porch near campus, in support of Ohio State coach Jim Tressel, Monday, May 30, 2011, in Columbus, Ohio. (AP Photo/Terry Gilliam) Ohio State’s vaunted football coach Jim Tressel resigned suddenly yesterday, and a new Sports Illustrated story may explain why. The piece on Tressel details a “pattern” of broken rules under his coaching, all amid much praise from other football heavyweights for his “steadiness” and “integrity.” The latest crisis occurred when it emerged that players were trading team merch for tattoos, which Tressel initially said he knew nothing about before admitting he had long known—echoing his response to a series of earlier infractions. Among SI's findings: In the mid-1990s at Youngstown State, Tressel said he wasn’t aware that a school trustee gave one of his players a car and $10,000; court documents later showed Tressel had told the player to meet with the trustee. An OSU player close to Tressel in 2003 also scored some money, but the coach said he didn’t know of any rule-breaking. Soon after, a booster gave another player $500, and though the booster had faced a probe in another incident, Tressel said he knew nothing of it. Click through for more on Tressel’s career. Read These Next JD Vance can't possibly be happy about how this interview went. Pedophile rock star killed by fellow inmates. In speech to Knesset, Trump ad-libs a pardon request. This is what happens when you lose control of a plane refueling hose. Report an error