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Words examined but truth hard to come by in Manti Te’o hoax

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(MCT) — Confused and staggered teammates rallied to his defense Thursday. The father of a man believed to be at the epicenter of a puzzling hoax asked the public not to pass judgment.

And Manti Te’o remained sequestered at a Florida training facility while questions swelled about a fictitious girlfriend, her fabricated death and the tales he told about it.

A day earlier, Notre Dame said its former captain and Heisman Trophy runner-up was the victim of a “very elaborate, very sophisticated hoax” in which Te’o was made to believe he had an online girlfriend who died of leukemia in September. Those on the team and close to it suggested in various ways that this was a one-sided sham.

“Absolutely it seemed real,” former Irish receiver John Goodman, who played all four years with Te’o, told the Chicago Tribune on Thursday. “It was real. If you watch his interviews — if he’s that good of an actor, then Hollywood better be giving him a call. But obviously Manti is like the rest of us. It was real in the locker room, real on the field, and that’s what I know of it.”

Te’o’s words in 2012, meanwhile, were reconsidered and parsed thoroughly. Just two days after Notre Dame says the hoax became apparent to him Dec. 6, Te’o referred to his girlfriend and her death at a media session before the Heisman ceremony.

“I worked with Relay for Life stuff,” Te’o said Dec. 8 when asked what charity work he had done in the past year. “I really got hit with cancer. I don’t like cancer at all. I lost both my grandparents and my girlfriend to cancer.”

In California, the father of the man described by Deadspin.com as the mastermind of the prank took to Facebook to call Te’o “an amazing role model” and asked the public to let him pursue his dreams.

Titus Tuiasosopo did not mention his 22-year-old son Ronaiah, the alleged architect of the hoax. But he thanked people for the support shown to his “aiga” — the Samoan word for family — since the story broke.

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