Joe Mixon STILLWATER, OK – NOVEMBER 28: Running back Joe Mixon #25 of the Oklahoma Sooners rushes against the Oklahoma State Cowboys in the third quarter at Boone Pickens Stadium on November 28, 2015 in Stillwater, Oklahoma. (Photo by Tom Pennington/Getty Images)

Oklahoma Sooners running back Joe Mixon was made available for questions to the media for the first time since his arrival to the school Tuesday during the College Football Playoff Media Day, and reporters looking to talk to him were slightly handicapped by the school.

Reporters were apparently told that non-football questions were strictly forbidden:

In case you are wondering, the non-football questions that would be asked of Mixon revolve around an incident where Mixon punched a female Oklahoma student in the face.

The police affidavit said the victim suffered, “a fractured jaw, fractured cheek bone, fractured sinus, and fractured orbit which caused a hematoma on the left eye.” The incident allegedly was started after Mixon used a homosexual slur towards a friend of the victim.

The incident was caught on surveillance cameras in the restaurant (the video was eventually destroyed), which happened near the Oklahoma campus. As a result, Mixon was suspended for a year from the program.

Mixon reached an Alford plea deal. By doing so, Mixon maintains that he is innocent but allowed the court to pronounce him guilty, acknowledging that sufficient evidence exists for a jury to find him guilty of his crime.

From USA Today’s George Schroeder:

Asked if he had “any regrets at all to anything,” Mixon said: “No.” When asked if he had wanted to answer questions related to the incident, he said, “No,” and added: “Not here.”

The College Football Playoff requires all players be made available to the media, which is why this has been the first time that Mixon had to face reporters all season.

Mixon did not budge on the football-related questions only policy when pressed:

However, it apparently wasn’t Oklahoma’s doing – someone at the Orange Bowl apparently got a little too aggressive.

This is a pretty horrible look for whoever decided to put the kibosh on questions about the incident.

About Harry Lyles Jr.

Harry Lyles Jr. is an Atlanta-based writer, and a Georgia State University graduate.

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