Tag Archive | Notre Dame

What Goes Around, Comes Around

by Cheval John

Everyone were captivated by the courageous will of Notre Dame’s Manti T’eo to play through adversity.

T’eo led the Irish defense on a run toward the BCS National Championship Game in Miami Gardens, Florida where they eventually lost to the eventual champion, Alabama Crimson Tide.

Many gained respect for T’eo after hearing about his trial due to the death of his grandmother in September.

They were even more fascinated with the fact that he had fell in love with a girl online named Lennay Kukua, who apparently “died of leukemia within two weeks of his grandmother and how he was able to move on and play extremely well to the point that he was one of the three finalist for the Heisman Trophy.

T’eo thought that he lost the girl of his dreams.

But he and everyone was in for a rude awakening.

According to Deadspin.com, “Kennay Kekua” does not exist and that her death from leukemia was allegedly a hoax.

The report indicates that someone made up this “Kennay Kekua” and conspired with others to deceive T’eo into believing that she was real.

Jack Swarbrick, vice president and director of athletics at Notre Dame said that T’eo is the most honest person that he ever met and that the perpetrators knew that he was an easy target because of his trusting demeanor.

He called this a tragedy and that “The single most-trusting human being he’s ever met will never be able to trust in the same way again.”

The pepetrators are really the most sickening human beings on the face of this earth because they aimed at a person who lost a person that was very dear to him and used that for their twisted joke.

They were not sensitive to a guy, who is one of the most respected players in college football, but played with his feelings in order to just get a “laugh.”

In reality, the perpetrators are just a bunch of morons who think that they can do this sought of thing and get away with it.

What they don’t realize is that nothing can be hidden anymore and that they will get caught either for their “joke” and will have to suffer the consequences for their role in creating this fictious “woman.”

Like the saying goes, “What goes around, comes around.”