FULMER CUPDATE: THE DEAD FINANCE YOUR SUBWAY RUNS EDITION
When a teammate dies tragically in an accident, you mourn. You listen. You hold those around you close and share the unbearable pain of loss. You take one of the dead people’s credit card and use it to buy shit for six months. You get arrested for it when the parents notice their dead daughter has been buying stuff for six months despite being dead.

Jamar Hornsby: creative financing available.
Jamar Hornsby of Florida followed this unique plan for mourning the loss of a teammate and a Florida student closely enough: somehow, after the death of Florida walk-on Michael Guilford and Florida student Ashley Slonina in a motorcycle wreck in October 2007, Slonina’s credit card ended up in the hands of Hornsby, who then revered the memory of the young lady by purchasing goods on the credit card for six months. Slonina’s parents finally noticed recently, and an investigation led to the beyond-classy Hornsby.
OS: Extra icing, please thank you very much life?
Life: Three scoops coming up, sir.
The card abuse started Oct. 13, 2007, the day after the girl’s death, according to court records and involved a BP gas card.
Ah, thanks life. You never force us to make things up, instead just giving us real and improbably terrible things. Hornsby is charged with credit card theft and fraudulent use of a credit card, which we imagine are both felonies. That’s three points times two for each felony charge plus the bonus point for using a dead girl’s credit card the day after she died and with one bonus point for it being a Florida Gator and therefore homer-shameful to us personally, and we take that to eight points for Florida, putting them on the big board in a fashion so tacky no amount of exponents can cover it.
Oh, and you there, we’ll say it for you “WAAAAAAHHHH you’re giving Florida points because you want to win.” Mr. Astoundinglystupidworth, if using a dead girl’s credit card the day after she died only gets two bonus points we should consider ourselves lucky for only getting eight points. Redux: you don’t want to win this thing. It’s not good. Perhaps that’s a point worth repeating from time to time: it’s not good to win the Fulmer Cup. It’s not good to win the Fulmer Cup. By the way, it’s not good to win the Fulmer Cup. For further reference, see: “Fulmer Cup: not good,” or the Wikipedia entry “Fulmer Cup: Bad.”
Extra fun update! How did Hornsby get the card? Simple. He took it when he was helping clean out the apartment with Joe Haden the day after the card owner died. Ashley Slonina. Joe Haden’s girlfriend. The dead one. Oh, Jebus this is sad.












75
If a guy makes a mistake, does that make him a bad person? No. Any disciplinary action is going to be a result of what I find out on the legal side of it. We’ve just got to fix a problem. It could be worse. I could give you the names of some schools that are really struggling. The Gators aren’t. We only recruit the top 1% of the top 1% at Florida. Did I mention that Tim Tebow does missions?
Comment by Urban Meyer — May 9, 2008 @ 6:14 pm
74
OK, some people make a stupid, evil decision one time. For this they deserve to be put away for life if the facts so warrant. However, at the same time it is usually one action often without real planning, which in at least some cases they show remorse over.
However, when someone intentionally does something illegal 50, 60, 70 times, it adds another dimension to the whole thing. While the crime itself may be much less offensive than some others for which football players have been charged, the fact that it was done repeatedly can raise it to almost that level.
Comment by Steve — May 9, 2008 @ 6:07 pm
73
71,
I agree.
Comment by socalbryan — May 9, 2008 @ 4:31 pm
72
While this is extremely creepy and strange, my gut instinct tells me it’s somehow not near the same level as a rape or shooting, which does harm to humans. I’m sure the parents are mortified, but they wont be covering the bill. Hornsby = Creep x 10, but it still is just money. Just saying
Comment by Clever Moniker — May 9, 2008 @ 4:30 pm
71
#69 - the moral outrage over this is completely over the top.
Take a look at the Fulmer Cup entry on this site when a BC football player broke into an apartment and forcibly raped someone. Do you see anything close to what’s on this post? I don’t.
Which crime would you say is worse? While using a dead person’s credit card is reprehensible, it’s not even in the same ballpark as rape. Maybe it’s because no one cares enough about BC, or rape isn’t as unique of a crime, I don’t know. But from the posts here, you would think Hornsby committed a more heinous crime.
Comment by Brian O'Blivion — May 9, 2008 @ 4:29 pm
70
Wonder what Jamar scored on his SAT … “tree fiddy”?
Comment by mastergator — May 9, 2008 @ 4:19 pm
69
#44 explain to me how the moral outrage meter is running a “little high” for Mr Tales From the Crypt?
Stealing from the dead, not to mention your teammate’s deceased girlfriend. Think about it.
Comment by Joe — May 9, 2008 @ 3:25 pm
68
That, friends, is a scumbag.
Comment by EufaulaPete — May 9, 2008 @ 3:23 pm
67
According to the Gainesville Sun, he used the credit card a total of 70 times over a 6 month period - 33 of those times occured while he was home in Jacksonville. He had been previously suspended 5 games for selling his student tickets. That was on top of the deferred prosecution for the assault. I guess he needed the money. Since it was a fleet card, I can only suppose that is how he got away with it so long. It is tragic for the family to be victimized again (after their daughter’s death)….and probably the end for him.
Comment by hobeg8r — May 9, 2008 @ 3:22 pm
66
This stuff happens. No big deal. She wont have to pay for it.
Comment by Bob Red — May 9, 2008 @ 3:03 pm
65
Two notes —
(1) He rang up $3000 on a BP Gas Card in six months. Wow.
(2) Even with his hair up like it is in the photo, how’d the hell did he pass for being a girl named Ashley Slonina?
Comment by Turf — May 9, 2008 @ 2:28 pm
64
If true (and I can’t see how it wouldn’t be true) this is embarrassing beyond words. What kind of low life character would do something like this?
Comment by V — May 9, 2008 @ 2:19 pm
63
Wow and his major was… Social & Behavioral Sciences.
Sounds like a great program…
Comment by Jonathan — May 9, 2008 @ 2:10 pm
62
An uncomfortable, disgusted rimshot to #27….What’s in your wallet?
I think this is the creepiest thing since that bunch who decided not to bother fixing the crematory.
Comment by Because They Can — May 9, 2008 @ 2:03 pm
61
Extra fun update actually makes me feel sick.
Comment by Erik — May 9, 2008 @ 1:52 pm
60
Some people have absolutely no class.
Comment by Ellis T. Jones, III — May 9, 2008 @ 1:43 pm
59
#44
Pants, you fuckin’ slay me. +!
Comment by NativeSon — May 9, 2008 @ 1:43 pm
58
Bama’s back!
http://blog.al.com/spotnews/2008/05/ua_football_walkon_charged_wit.html
Comment by sonofsamford — May 9, 2008 @ 1:37 pm
57
This guy was a five star recruit on scout and a four star on rivals. UGA was among the many programs that offered Him, Richt dodged a bullet on this one, along with Josh Jarobe.
Comment by shane — May 9, 2008 @ 1:34 pm
56
I’d sit him out for a half…let him think about it.
Comment by Bobby Bowden — May 9, 2008 @ 1:34 pm
55
A nomination for giving him the Ellis T. Jones Award now. He may not end up with the most points, but the individual achievement will not be matched short of a hit on a pregnant girlfriend.
Comment by ChemE93 — May 9, 2008 @ 1:31 pm
54
Another sign of what high gas prices will drive a lawya to do.
And while I agree it is reprehensible, the moral outrage meter is running a little high in here.
Comment by zzgator — May 9, 2008 @ 1:31 pm
53
That’s almost as bad as those kids that were just arrested for digging up a dead body, removing the skull, and using it as a BONG. No really, it’s true; check the news.
How did he get her credit card?
Comment by socalbryan — May 9, 2008 @ 1:29 pm
52
That’s almost as classy as getting thrown out of a nightclub for repeatedly showing your ass to the bouncer.
Comment by King Coeckman — May 9, 2008 @ 1:05 pm
51
#49, StageCoach
My initial fear is that his career, somehow, isn’t over. I’m still in fanshock. hobeg8r at #50 is easing my mind.
Comment by Allahver Fist — May 9, 2008 @ 12:53 pm