ILL in IA
- Iowa City
This is better then a telenovelaThis guy has a ton of stuff about Louisville and Bowen - https://twitter.com/JasonRileyWDRB
This is better then a telenovelaThis guy has a ton of stuff about Louisville and Bowen - https://twitter.com/JasonRileyWDRB
That is good stuff. I'm curious why no UofL coach has been arrested.This guy has a ton of stuff about Louisville and Bowen - https://twitter.com/JasonRileyWDRB
Auburn is not an Adidas school, so I doubt there will be any repercussions for them related to this.I would be SHOCKED! if Auburn were involved in any shady dealings.
It reads like they haven't actually handled any of the money in what I have read. Would this keep them legally clean to the FBI? NCAA is different I know.That is good stuff. I'm curious why no UofL coach has been arrested.
Auburn is not an Adidas school, so I doubt there will be any repercussions for them related to this.
makes me wonder if any of this had to do with a former recruit not faxing his LOI to Groce and going with UL instead ?
I suppose I'm a little confused about this, both not being a lawyer, and the fact that this has been going on for literally decades. Why the crack down now? Where are the big boys? I suppose it could just be chance that the agents they caught were not associated with any blue blood program.
Maybe the "big boys" are better at cheating too.
makes me wonder if any of this had to do with a former recruit not faxing his LOI to Groce and going with UL instead ?
I suppose I'm a little confused about this, both not being a lawyer, and the fact that this has been going on for literally decades. Why the crack down now? Where are the big boys? I suppose it could just be chance that the agents they caught were not associated with any blue blood program.
Anyway, can someone explain the quid pro quo here? Is it as simple as:
Agent steers player to certain college, giving "enticements/bribes" to asst coach, and as a public employee this is illegal.
College agrees to steer player back to agent/shoe company.
I think its a much more likely story that Blue Bloods dont need to pay one and dones less than a tenth of a years NBA salary to come and play there.
How about paragraph 65(a)? In February 2017, Evans wanted money from the adviser in order to pay a high school recruit (actually his mother) who had previously given a verbal commitment.
The good news is that there's absolutely nothing implying that Underwood knew of any of this. As someone else mentioned, the adviser specifically stated in a recording that they needed to work through Evans rather than Frank Martin because head coaches make too much money and it's too risky for them.
I suppose I'm a little confused about this, both not being a lawyer, and the fact that this has been going on for literally decades. Why the crack down now? Where are the big boys? I suppose it could just be chance that the agents they caught were not associated with any blue blood program.
Anyway, can someone explain the quid pro quo here? Is it as simple as:
Agent steers player to certain college, giving "enticements/bribes" to asst coach, and as a public employee this is illegal.
College agrees to steer player back to agent/shoe company.
Some very interesting and amusing stuff here. (Who knew Chuck Person was named after Chuck Connors?) and who is Coach 2?
https://twitter.com/AdamHSays/status/912681457574977536
I think its a much more likely story that Blue Bloods dont need to pay one and dones less than a tenth of a years NBA salary to come and play there.
Louisville coach Rick Pitino was asked about Bowen's commitment in June.
"We got lucky on this one," Pitino said. "I had an AAU director call me and say, 'Would you be interested in a basketball player?' I said ... 'Yeah, I'd be really interested.' But [Bowen and his people] had to come in unofficially, pay for their hotels, pay for their meals. So we spent zero dollars recruiting a five-star athlete who I loved when I saw him play. In my 40-some-odd years of coaching, this is the luckiest I've been."
It is very important to realize that even though Evans only worked directly for BU for one year, they were both assistants under Martin at KState during '11-'12 and then at SC during '12-'13.
I've heard rumors that BU isn't afraid of getting his hands dirty. The only thing that tempers my concern that BU will be implicated is the fact that if the feds continue to investigate this, LOTS of coaches will be calling lawyers eventually.
Oh boy oh boy. Maybe OSU is the New Illinois snake bitten program. Feels good to have gotten rid of that
Doubtful. That recruit grew up a UL kid and seemed to have an emotional connection. Then again, anything shady at UL wouldn't surprise me...
You ever heard of jinxing something?
If this does go down (which it looks like a lock at this point), I find it hard to believe BU isn't affected someway by this news, whether it be official or negative recruiting against him.
You ever heard of jinxing something?
If this does go down (which it looks like a lock at this point), I find it hard to believe BU isn't affected someway by this news, whether it be official or negative recruiting against him.