Don’t believe everything you read on the Internet.

Earlier this week, it was revealed that the person behind @ClutchLikeMJ on Twitter, also known as ‘Ryan’ to Florida fans, is an impostor whose web of lies and pattern of deceit finally caught up to him.

The man behind the Twitter account with 10,000 followers which was used for sourcing insider information about Gators football on a subscriber basis was outed on Wednesday:

‘Ryan from Destin, Florida’ was actually Neil Cool according to Facebook digging, and he used photos from another person who lived in Ohio that was unaware his likeness was being used across social media.

Can you follow this? Another instance of a catfish, a term relating back to the popular MTV program that outed social media users posing as other people.

After he was discovered, Cool posted the following message on Twitter which was later deleted:

“First and foremost I want to apologize for deceiving all of you. I will address this further at a later date, but I wanted to let you know that everything you read tonight is true. I won’t go into detail about why I did what I did. The personality behind the account is real. I may not have been forthcoming about my appearance and name, but everything else is true.”

Cool denies stealing nearly$50,000 from fans and subscribers who paid for insider information to the Florida football program. Several players were also duped and pushed the narrative during the time Cool was ‘Ryan’.

For more than a year, Gator Gang was popular message board where fans went to read Cool’s thoughts and secret info.

During a radio interview Wednesday night, Cool admitted to being fake and tried to clear the air a bit:

“A little bit of it got to my head, just like it would anybody. I mean, you have 10,000 followers following you, wanting to know what you know,” he said. “But the information that we posted in the forum was always legit. I mean, as you know, I’ve had some good stuff.”

(h/t @SportingNews)