Spaceman Spiff wrote:dmjcat wrote:ChooChooCat wrote:dmjcat wrote:ChooChooCat wrote:Quite frankly DMJ you have no fricken idea what will mean diddly squat and what won't to the NCAA. They are a kangaroo court and make shit up as they go along. Also the NCAA is much more concerned with player eligibility than holding coaches and institutions accountable. I can literally cite dozens of cases that proves your take on that wrong. Also Rawle never got paid by Dawkins, so there's nothing there, but smoke and dust.
And neither do you.
You are right about the Kangaroo Court.........which is exactly why nobody should get excited about this class until the smoke from the Book trial clears and the class actually shows up on the UA campus next August.
I obviously know more than you if you genuinely think the NCAA's goal is to police their institutions over player eligibility. Jahvon Quinerly is eligible and Brian Bowen is not. That matters whether it hurts your agenda or not.
If people want to enjoy a win let them and screw off. If things go sour we'll cross that bridge when we get there.
I'm perfectly fine with folks enjoying a recruiting win. I'm happy too.
But if other folks choose to acknowledge reality (our assistant coach on tape talking $$payoffs$$) then you need to screw off.
Being on tape talking payoffs is not something the NCAA sanctions. Giving payoffs is. Book talked paying Quinerly. Quinerly is eligible, which he would not be if the NCAA could prove Book followed the words with pay.
Spiff,
The only group of people that think that the UA is going to walk away clean are UA message board posters. Every legal opinion that I have seen believe that we are going to get whacked. This article by a Louisville newspaper is a good read:
https://www.courier-journal.com/story/s ... 724487002/" target="_blank
Although no Cardinals coaches were charged in connection with the case and witnesses testified that former head coach Rick Pitino was unaware of the scheme, Louisville attorney Keith Poynter said he thinks the guilty verdict worsens the outlook for Louisville basketball.
Philadelphia attorney Matt Haverstick told the Courier Journal he believes the convictions increase the likelihood that the NCAA will elect to punish any individuals or institutions it finds responsible for taking part in the scheme.
Related: University of Miami redacted from federal college hoops indictment
"I think the NCAA is going to take a pound of flesh after this," Haverstick said. "The NCAA, if nothing else, loves to portray at least the illusion that it's a tough enforcer. I don't know how, in light of someone at trial acknowledging rampant rules violations going on in the NCAA, the NCAA can't react to it. What will interest me is what programs will be attacked and, conversely, what programs will get left alone?"
New NCAA guidelines revealed in August do not give the organization subpoena power, but it is free to use information from a courtroom, government agencies or other third-party investigations to supplement evidence gleaned from its own investigation.
The NCAA remains on hold until the next two trials are complete; however, Haverstick said the criminal conviction handed down Wednesday suggests the NCAA will be prone to issue harsher penalties, if for no other reason but to "save face."