Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks

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paultzman

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Re: Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks
« Reply #180 on: November 03, 2017, 03:32:16 PM »
Individuals involved in the college basketball fraud and corruption case will be formally indicted next week. The men expected to be indicted are as follows:

Auburn Tigers assistant coach Chuck Person
Arizona Wildcats assistant coach Emanuel “Book” Richardson
Oklahoma State Cowboys assistant coach Lamont Evans
USC Trojans assistant coach Tony Bland
Adidas executive James Gatto
Adidas executive Merl Code
Former NBA agent Christian Dawkins
Financial adviser Munish Sood
Florida-based AAU coach Jonathan Brad Augustine
Former NBA referee Rashan Michel

Foad

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Re: Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks
« Reply #181 on: November 03, 2017, 05:46:22 PM »
Individuals involved in the college basketball fraud and corruption case will be formally indicted next week. The men expected to be indicted are as follows:

Auburn Tigers assistant coach Chuck Person
Arizona Wildcats assistant coach Emanuel “Book” Richardson
Oklahoma State Cowboys assistant coach Lamont Evans
USC Trojans assistant coach Tony Bland
Adidas executive James Gatto
Adidas executive Merl Code
Former NBA agent Christian Dawkins
Financial adviser Munish Sood
Florida-based AAU coach Jonathan Brad Augustine
Former NBA referee Rashan Michel


Thank goodness no head coaches are dirty.

Re: Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks
« Reply #182 on: November 03, 2017, 05:48:50 PM »
I feel bad for Tony Bland known him from my cousin since I was 15.

Foad

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Re: Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks
« Reply #183 on: November 03, 2017, 06:03:46 PM »
I feel bad for Tony Bland known him from my cousin since I was 15.

I feel bad for Ted Bundy. I don't know him, but I feel bad for him. Not for all the lives he's ruined, but because of our personal connection.

redslope

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Re: Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks
« Reply #184 on: November 03, 2017, 08:43:54 PM »
Individuals involved in the college basketball fraud and corruption case will be formally indicted next week. The men expected to be indicted are as follows:

Auburn Tigers assistant coach Chuck Person
Arizona Wildcats assistant coach Emanuel “Book” Richardson
Oklahoma State Cowboys assistant coach Lamont Evans
USC Trojans assistant coach Tony Bland
Adidas executive James Gatto
Adidas executive Merl Code
Former NBA agent Christian Dawkins
Financial adviser Munish Sood
Florida-based AAU coach Jonathan Brad Augustine
Former NBA referee Rashan Michel


Thank goodness no head coaches are dirty.
Who knows what an indictment will do to loyalty.  Prosecutors will go after small fish to get them to turn on the big ones.  Looking at hard time can loosen lips.

Re: Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks
« Reply #185 on: November 03, 2017, 08:45:05 PM »
Individuals involved in the college basketball fraud and corruption case will be formally indicted next week. The men expected to be indicted are as follows:

Auburn Tigers assistant coach Chuck Person
Arizona Wildcats assistant coach Emanuel “Book” Richardson
Oklahoma State Cowboys assistant coach Lamont Evans
USC Trojans assistant coach Tony Bland
Adidas executive James Gatto
Adidas executive Merl Code
Former NBA agent Christian Dawkins
Financial adviser Munish Sood
Florida-based AAU coach Jonathan Brad Augustine
Former NBA referee Rashan Michel


Thank goodness no head coaches are dirty.

I know.  It's a cruel joke.

goredmen

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Re: Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks
« Reply #186 on: November 08, 2017, 04:29:19 PM »
Per Mark Schlabach

Auburn men’s basketball coach Bruce Pearl is refusing to cooperate in the school’s internal investigation into his program, and university officials have advised him that his job is in jeopardy if he doesn’t, sources told ESPN on Wednesday.

Re: Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks
« Reply #187 on: November 08, 2017, 04:39:49 PM »
Per Mark Schlabach

Auburn men’s basketball coach Bruce Pearl is refusing to cooperate in the school’s internal investigation into his program, and university officials have advised him that his job is in jeopardy if he doesn’t, sources told ESPN on Wednesday.
Bruce Pearl? No? Absolutely shocked! School is greasy grimy and at fault for hiring this beyond shady character.

TONYD3

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Re: Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks
« Reply #188 on: November 08, 2017, 04:56:41 PM »
I feel bad for Tony Bland known him from my cousin since I was 15.

I feel bad for Ted Bundy. I don't know him, but I feel bad for him. Not for all the lives he's ruined, but because of our personal connection.
Foady u are only a tough guy (super villain) on the internet. I assume you are a big pussy in real life.

QuanMan

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Re: Corruption Probe in the Recruiting Ranks
« Reply #189 on: November 08, 2017, 05:36:53 PM »
1988-89:

Pearl/Thomas incident[edit]
During the 1988–89 basketball season, Pearl, then an assistant coach at Iowa, was at the center of a recruiting scandal involving Illinois. Both Illinois and Iowa were recruiting Deon Thomas, a top high school player from Chicago. Pearl lost this recruiting battle when Thomas committed to Illinois. Thereafter, Pearl called the high school student and recorded a phone conversation with Thomas, which may have been illegal depending on where Pearl originated the call. (Illinois requires prior consent of all participants to monitor or record a phone conversation according to Ill. Rev. Stat. Ch. 38, Sec. 14–2; however, Iowa, where Pearl was coaching at the time, only requires one party's consent to record a phone conversation.) During the conversation, Pearl asked Thomas if he had been offered an SUV and cash by Illinois assistant coach Jimmy Collins, and Thomas seemed to indicate that he had. Pearl then turned over copies of the tapes to the NCAA, accompanied by a memo describing the events. During the subsequent NCAA investigation, Thomas denied the allegations and said the story was false, that he was agreeing with Pearl only to try to get rid of him. Thomas later passed a polygraph test in which he denied Pearl's accusation of Illinois's offering cash and a car. The NCAA did not find Illinois guilty of any wrongdoing relating to Thomas's recruitment, finding that the purported evidence provided was not "credible, persuasive and of a kind on which reasonably prudent persons rely in the conduct of serious affairs."[3] However, since the investigation uncovered other violations, including Illinois's third major violation in six years, the NCAA cited Illinois with a "lack of institutional control" charge and implemented several recruiting restrictions and a one-year post-season ban.

When Pearl and Collins were both head coaches for four years in the Horizon League, the two men never engaged in the traditional postgame handshake, reportedly due to lingering feelings over the incident. When Thomas was asked about forgiving Pearl in a 2005 interview, he was quoted as saying, "It's hard to forgive a snake."[4] Thomas went on to become the University of Illinois's all-time leading scorer.

*Subsequent 15 year ban amongst major D1 coaches and AD's schools followed, which kept him away from major programs.*

2008:

NCAA investigation[edit]
In the summer of 2008, Pearl invited high school junior Aaron Craft and members of his family to a cookout at his Knoxville home while Craft was on an unofficial visit to Tennessee. At the cookout, Pearl said that Craft wasn't allowed to be there under NCAA rules, but encouraged all those in attendance not to tell anyone about it. When the NCAA began an investigation of the affair, Pearl not only lied about the cookout, but also told Craft's father to lie as well.[9]

On September 10, 2010, Pearl acknowledged the violations in the Craft affair, and also admitted lying about it to the NCAA. As a result, Tennessee imposed sanctions on Pearl and his entire staff including $1.5 million in salary reduction over the coming five years and a delayed retention bonus. His off-campus recruiting was also restricted completely from September 4, 2010 to September 23, 2011.[10] On November 20, 2010, the SEC ordered Pearl to sit out Tennessee's first eight SEC games.[11]

After finding out about additional NCAA violations, as well as a violation of the school's substance abuse policy by a player, Tennessee fired Pearl on March 21, 2011—three days after the Vols' blowout loss to Michigan.[12][13][14] On August 23, 2011, Pearl was given a three-year show-cause penalty for lying to the NCAA, effective until August 23, 2014. This meant that the sanctions imposed on Pearl would remain in force if he was hired by an NCAA member school within that period. Specifically, he was prohibited from engaging in any "recruiting activities", which meant he could not contact recruits, although he could evaluate talent during that period. If a school chose to hire him and challenged the NCAA restrictions, it had to appear before the NCAA Committee on Infractions and "show cause" for why the sanctions imposed on Pearl should not follow him to that school.[9] In imposing the penalty, the NCAA said that Pearl's lies turned what would have been a minor case into a major one.[15] His assistant coaches were also given one-year show-cause orders, in effect until August 23, 2012.


2017-18: ?

The question is, when will this guy ever be permanently banned from the NCAA?
« Last Edit: November 08, 2017, 05:38:02 PM by QuanMan »
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