May 11, 2008

More Smoke at USC as Mayo Implicated

It seems players are choosing USC for more than the exposure. A former friend of O.J. Mayo's, Louis Johnson, is alleging that Mayo accepted $30,000 in cash, as well as numerous gifts, from Bill Duffy Associates in exchange for a verbal agreement that BDA would represent Mayo during his pro career.

These allegations are similar to those that continue to dog Reggie Bush, whose parents were allegedly the beneficiaries of an interest-free loan while Bush played football at USC with the understanding that Bush would select New Era Sports and Entertainment (not the hat makers) as his representation.

The good news for USC, though, as far as NCAA sanctions are concerned, is that the university was not implicated in either set of allegations. If a coach or athletics department were complicit in such arrangements, even the death penalty would be on the table. That's especially true given the repeated nature of the conduct and the fact that it spans multiple sports. However, it is possible that the NCAA will eventually decide there is enough smoke to impose "lack of institutional control" sanctions on the university as a whole, or on specific programs.
SPACER

These aren't the first allegations involving USC. In 2005, immediately before the legendary USC-Texas Vince Young Rose Bowl, star alumnus linebacker John Papadakis ('71) was caught influencing recruits at his Greek restaurant. As a former player, he is not allowed to contact recruits. If that name looks familiar it's because his son Petros Papadakis hosts Pros v. Joes on Spike.

Of course, in February 2007 Reggie Bush was again on the violation radar after USC recruit Joe McKnight made press conference comments indicating he was influenced to choose USC by Bush. Again, that would be a violation.

blahblahblah The type of "assisting the runner" the NCAA is known to overlook

In Matt Leinart's senior year the groupies got to be too much for Leinart's dad to handle, so he moved his son into a $3,866/mo downtown L.A. apartment. (Classes? We don't need no stinking classes!) That's fine, as Leinart is allowed to be the object of his father's bounty. What isn't fine is that Dwayne Jarrett lived with Leinart. Leinart paid $500/mo, Jarrett paid $650/mo, and Mr. Leinart paid the remaining $2700 or so. Reportedly Jarrett and Leinart shared the apartment equally, making Jarrett the improper cash beneficiary of Mr. Leinart's. No one is alleging that Mr. Leinart had any intention of breaking NCAA rules, but it is another incident that points to "lack of institutional control." To make matters worse, or at least further show Bob Leinart's naivete, Mr. Leinart has stated that Jarrett would have to repay over $10,000. Oh, excuse me Mr. Leinart, we didn't realize you had just made an interest free loan to Dwayne Jarrett. That's MUCH better.

And lastly, not all vioations are created equally. This one just goes to show what happens when the 10,000,000 candlepower NCAA searchlight is on your school. Last month, at the USC Spring Game, USC's compliance department noted that an outside stadium vendor was selling t-shirts declaring "Viva Sanchez!". This is, of course, a violation because it is using an NCAA athlete's name for profit. Anyone who went to a Division I college knows that these t-shirts are made by enterprising students all the time (Bruce "The Hurricane" Perry, Lamont for Heisman, etc. etc.).

(On the other hand, it is refreshing to read something about Sanchez that doesn't include him raping a chick or hurting himself.)

blahblablahblah Willisms gives the USC scandals some perspective
SPACER
All told, the violations are piling up and the NCAA is likely going to have to take action just so they can be justified the next time they destroy a middling program like Iowa State or DePaul. The Reggie Bush issue is particularly hard to stomach, because the NCAA really doesn't want to strip USC's championship (yes, singular) or put pressure on the Downtown Athletic Club to rescind Reggie's Heisman. The course of conduct justification, on the other hand, is wonderfully convenient for the NCAA because they can punish USC for "lack of institutional control" as a whole and not focus on any one violation. I foresee this working out as a backdoor deal relatively soon.

12 Responses:

michael said...

Blah blah blah, blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah, blah blah blah blah; blah blah blah blah.

Oh yeah, and exactly which championship are you considering not to be valid? The Associated Press, which has been crowning national champions for 45 years? (I think they have two of these recently, actually.) Or the BCS, around for a decade? (One of these.) I know you went to public schools in Maryland, so I will do my best to give you the benefit of the doubt, but your math seems a bit fuzzy to me.

Thomas said...

Very interesting string of infractions when viewed collectively. But for whatever reason, I just don't think the NCAA wants to attack a bellcow. If USC was Southern Colorado instead of Southern California, I bet the NCAA would not hesitate to enforce rules and appropriate punishment.

Fair is fair, and if the NCAA wants to be fair, we'd see another SMU this decade. One can only hope.

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Doug said...

Oklahoma fans are kind of sick of the USC / Reggie Bush thing getting strung out as long a it has. OU discovered the wrong-doing of Rhett Bomar and the other guy taking money from the car dealership (a few thousand dollars). They immediately kicked them off the team. They reported the offenses to the NCAA. And in response, the NCAA wants to strip our team of victories in one of the seasons. Now all of this comes out about USC, but the NCAA continues to drag it's feet and make no comment. Where is the equality in that?

Rhapsode said...

The NCAA doesn't care about equality. It cares about money. As long as USC and Pete Carroll keep winning the PAC-10 and competing for national titles, USC is fine. The NCAA will continue to profit from major market football success and sell TV rights and merchandise at ever increasing prices.

One more thing, have you noticed how all of these scandals were discovered by national media outlets? The local papers (LA Times, Daily News) have full access to USC athletics but they never seem to notice anything wrong. Only Yahoo Sports and ESPN have ever suspected that there was something funny happening at USC.

Anonymous said...

I live here in Oklahoma and I'm getting tired of the OU fans comparing the Reggie Bush deal to the Bomar deal. First of all, I'm not making excusses for USC (I could care less about what happens to the program). The fact is Bomars deal was all about an OU booster and the Bushs deal was all about an agent. Big Red has been a known booster and employer for OU football players for a long time. I'm not saying Stoops should have known, but someone within the university should have known. Please OU fans get over the butt kicking you received from USC and move on.

J-Red said...

Michael,

As you know I only recognize BCS Championships because the major football conferences, one of which counts USC as a member, decided that would be the official championship. If Hawaii or Boise State or Fresno State had been named the AP Champion, I'd be more likely to accept the concept of a "co-champion". As it is, the AP Championship is won in the newsroom and the BCS Championship is won on the field.

J-Red said...

As for the comparisons to OU, I see it this way. Whenever you self-discipline for a definite violation you do something that makes us lawyers cringe--admit guilt. That gives the NCAA the green light to dole out discipline. The school did the hard part. In short, being honest and forthcoming, as schools are "required" to do under NCAA rules, increases the likelihood of punishment but decreases the likelihood of the severe punishment that would come if the NCAA discovered a cover-up.

Of course, as one commenter noted, there's a big difference between agents and boosters, in that boosters are agents of the school while agents definitely act against the school's interests on a regular basis.

KGoon1590 said...

The O.J. Mayo evidence is simply damning. I'm amazed that this is only the first of the 08' class that we've uncovered recruiting scandals about.

michael said...

J-Red...do you consider all 45 years of AP National Champions to be void and invalid, or just the last ten? Ya know, just so I am clear and all...

J-Red said...

The last ten, since the major conferences sat at a table and agreed upon the way to select a champion.

I'm quite sure you don't think there were four national champions in 1994, 1990, 1984 and six in 1981. That's how it would be if we cared about everyone who declares a national championship. See here, and that's from the NCAA officially.

Dean said...

Petros Papadakis also happens to host the worst show in sports talk radio out here in Southern California. Nails on chalkboard annoying that boy is.

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