I’d say the 6 schools would be Auburn, LSU, Kansas, Arizona, Oklahoma State, and USC. These 6 more or less gave the middle finger to the whole situation, while we cleaned house.
Cleaning house probably won't do much for you with the NCAA except showing that you've determined there were indeed infractions. There has to be a deterrent for the institution. Otherwise every school would turn a blind eye to cheating until caught, then just fire everybody, hire another big name coach and go on down the road.
I’d say the 6 schools would be Auburn, LSU, Kansas, Arizona, Oklahoma State, and USC. These 6 more or less gave the middle finger to the whole situation, while we cleaned house.
At this point I’m basically like “fu@k it”. What was revealed was that all major recruiting was a sham and the NCAA knew that. We obviously weren’t good at it but we were the one program that cleaned house. Not sure who they plan to talk to at the university. Fortunately they won’t find anyone that was connected.
Re-read my earlier post. 1. It shows you've determined internally that there were infractions, and 2. It won't get you out of trouble with the NCAA
You are in denial, my friend. Louisville was on probation and there is tape of a Louisville coach in a Vegas hotel with an envelope of cash saying "We have to keep this on the downlow because we are on probation." Yes Louisville cleaned house and yes the NCAA may give some credit for that - but I would not expect this. Louisville self-admitted, self-imposed, and completely cooperated with the stripper thing - and 2 FF's and a title were taken away. By firing everyone, all Louisville did was self-admit again for this Adidas thing.
Trust me, I hope that I am wrong, but nothing I'm seeing gives me any hope here. We have to enjoy this coming season, it may be the last good one for a while.
Regarding the “completely cooperated” point ... you may think we did ... but we did NOT. We fought the NCAA when we discovered that they were going to make an example of Pitino (with probably a year long ban) for turning a blind eye to what happened. And the NCAA at that point said okay ... if you want to play it that way, you can keep your coach, and we’ll punish your program instead by requiring you to vacate every win that your ineligible players played in.
Regarding the “completely cooperated” point ... you may think we did ... but we did NOT. We fought the NCAA when we discovered that they were going to make an example of Pitino (with probably a year long ban) for turning a blind eye to what happened. And the NCAA at that point said okay ... if you want to play it that way, you can keep your coach, and we’ll punish your program instead by requiring you to vacate every win that your ineligible players played in.
I don't recall it that way. I recall Jurich claiming "we'll own up to it" when the news first broke. I recall hiring that jack ass NCAA compliance "expert" Smrt to navigate us through the choppy waters. I recall self imposing a post season ban. All of these were done in the name of cooperation. And they did suspend Pitino (5 games.)
They won't need to. There is sworn testimony and apparently a tape with pretty damning evidence. Compare that evidence to the evidence for the ho's - Katina's book "written" in a wire notebook that was obviously scribbled together one afternoon.
Again, I would absolutely LOVE to be wrong and will take no pleasure in saying "I told you so" if I'm right.
I feel the folks posting here believing the hammer is about to drop are more right than wrong. It doesn't matter to the NCAA that UofL cleaned house. They will want to make a statement so they'll destroy the Cardinals basketball program as much as they can. Once the hammer drops, we'll probably see the defections that zipp has been hoping for.
In the future all we have to do is say that anything we did for our athletes we did the same for the rest of our student body.
FWIW, I expect additional scholarship reductions (four total, 2 each over 2 years) and 5 more years of probation. One additional postseason ban is also possible, but I do expect the NCAA to make the point that they decided against the “death-penalty” for repeat violator offenses committed by UofL coaches due to UofL’s immediate firing of the coaches and athletic director.
I’m not expecting any additional vacation of wins, but that might change in the unlikely event that the investigation uncovers any evidence that VJ King was ineligible due to being paid by either Adidas or UofL coaches.
Probation simply means that the basketball coaches get additional NCAA compliance training, that the NCAA follows up with the program annually to check that they are in compliance, and that any minor or major infractions committed during that time are penalized more harshly.
As long as you are following the rules during that period of time, it will have no visible impact on the program.
Avenatti is a conman and a liar. I wouldn't expect much from him. He'll be in prison soon enough.I don’t care if the ncaa just wants us to sign a paper promising to be nice, we need to fight them, bro. They’re unethical sacks of crap that need to be disbanded.
If they go at us and not everyone else that’s been named, there has to be a fight, bro.
Bet all this shit quietly fades away once Avenatti outs Duke.
How so?If anyone knows about conmen and liars, it’d be a member of the BBN, bro.
The info he has released was already known. He won't have anything of substance on anyone, perhaps hearsay and innuendo but nothing solid.Him being a con man doesn’t mean the evidence he has is not true. He is in trouble for extortion not for presenting false information.