Hold The Mayo: A second USC OJ gets busted…
May 13, 2008Long held rumors about thousands of dollars being lavished upon USC star basketball player OJ Mayo were corroborated this week by an alleged confidant of Mayo. According to this informant, who spoke with ESPN’s Outside The Lines program recently, Mayo received the sum of money during his high school and college career in exchange for a verbal agreement to be represented by Bill Duffy Associates, a West Coast based sports agency, upon turning pro. Though this is alarming, Mayo is not the first USC superstar to run afoul of NCAA recruiting rules; just two years ago, Heisman trophy winner Reggie Bush was accused of having received more than $300,000 in gifts and cash while at USC. Bush, it seems, was amply punished by having to sit through endless re-runs of “Keeping Up with the Kardashians”, but Mayo’s punishment, if any, is yet to be determined, and given that he is turning pro, may be irrelevant anyway.
These revelations are just the most recent in a disturbing trend in college sports that puts winning before academics, pride, and integrity; well, actually, the more disturbing part is that most fans are in favor of it as long as their team wins. I can’t tell you how happy I’d be to see some stud running back with a 1.5 GPA in high school and three illegitimate kids driving around South Bend in a new Escalade. I guess one could say this emphasis on winning at all costs has echoed the American sentiment of immorality in an age of Enron, Tyco, and whoever decided it was ok to put Jamie Lynn Spears on magazine covers. And with that, I’ll attempt to summarize the brief history of recruiting and academic violations in college sports…
Euthanizing the Mustangs - SMU gets the death penalty, 1987: Though the SMU football program had already been on probation as early as 1985, a revelation of 21 players being paid up to $61,000 by boosters caused the NCAA to take decisive action; they decided to force the storied program to cancel the 1987 season and most of the 1988 season, as well basically tell all the players who didn’t receive any money to get lost. SMU later renewed its program, though to significantly less fanfare, and its main achievement in the time since has been the establishment of the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library on campus (The first Presidential library to include only children’s books and military strategy memoirs).
Shaq goes Hollywood (for the first time) - Blue Chips, 1994: Filmmaker William Friedkin, previously known for his work on The French Connection, set out to produce an expose on the lack of ethics in college sports, but inadvertantly exposed only the lack of ethics in Hollywood, by casting such thespians as Shaquille O’Neal and Penny Hardaway in key roles in this film. The film centers on Coach Pete Bell’s (Nick Nolte) efforts to win over talented recruits who would otherwise be paid top dollars by competing programs, only to resort to the same sordid tactics himself. Moviegoers, however, are more likely to remember the film for its cameos, including a youthful Rick Pitino, an animated Dick Vitale, and a non-chair throwing Bobby Knight.
The laziest Kat since Garfield - AIDS Awareness Day in Columbus, 1998: Buckeyes star linebacker Andy Katzenmoyer, the previous year’s Butkus Award Winner, is barraged by media members who have discovered his fall schedule includes such intellectually stimulating courses as Golf, AIDS Awareness, and Music Appreciation, and that he needs a 2.0 GPA in those classes in order to remain eligible to play football, presumably in a late season bowl game. Katzenmoyer, confident in his ability to cruise through those courses, basically gives the media the old “wait and see”, and though it appeared at the time he was referring to his academic skills, later years showed this statement to be nothing short of prophetic, revealing his belief that Maurice Clarett’s OSU exploits would render him only the second biggest jackass to grace the horseshoe in history.
For the Second Time in as many years, there is a problem of Chads - This Time in Corvallis, 2001: Fresh off a 41-9 thrashing of Notre Dame in the Fiesta Bowl, Oregon State Wide Receiver Chad Johnson found himself with an interesting conundrum. He really had no place to be. Confused? Not as much as Chad was in class that previous fall. You see, Chad Johnson, in the fall of 2000, began playing football at Oregon State University after having spent the last two seasons playing Junior College Football. He had also flunked out of several junior colleges previously. For those who are unfamiliar with the term, Junior College Football isn’t like Junior Varsity football, it’s more like junior varsity intelligence and work ethic. Anyway, unscrupulous coach Dennis Erickson recruited the flamboyant speedster to Oregon State, where Johnson allegedly did not attend any classes during the fall semester. Of course this deviates from everything the NCAA stands for, but because of systematic lags in the system, by the time he would have been suspended for this infraction, he had already declared for the NFL draft. The rest is history they say, and surprisingly, the signs he often pulls out after scoring touchdowns are usually spelled correctly. However, I don’t think we should expect the same kind of autobiography that his cousin Keyshawn produced any time soon.
A Webb of Lies - The Michigan Scandal, 2002: Former Wolverine Star Power Forward Chris Webber, a member of the Fab Five, was charged with lying to a grand jury in connection with allegations that he had received improper payments from Michigan boosters, to which he later confessed in something of a Clemens-ian fashion. The Wolverines were, as a result, stripped of their 1992 and 1993 Final Four Appearances, and were forced to dissociate from Webber for a period of ten years, rendering the Fab Five meaningless in the annals of college basketball, though they are still notorious in pop culture for convincing scrawny white kids from the suburbs to wear baggy shorts and forget how to count.
There’s no Bail in Baylor - 2003: An array of unfortunate, and ultimately tragic events befell the Baylor basketball program in 2003. On July 25 of that year, junior forward Patrick Dennehy’s body was found near Waco, Texas, having been killed several weeks earlier by teammate Carlton Dotson, who was later found incompetent to stand trial for his crime. In light of Dennehy’s death, NCAA officials were more concerned that he had transferred to the school without a scholarship and taken part in basketball practices. It was later determined that Coach Dave Bliss had paid part of Dennehy’s tuition during his time at Baylor, as well as having turned a blind eye to failed drug tests and academic improprieties for a handful of student athletes. The NCAA came down with all its might; it informed the perennial Big 12 doormat that it would reduce scholarships and take away non-conference games, much to the chagrin of national powerhouses that were looking for a gimme win over a major conference opponent in the early season.
If yo ho only know - Da Seventh Flo’ Crew, 2003: This wasn’t really so much a recruiting or academic violation as it was a violation of the rules that govern decent society, and while it pales in comparison to some of the other things Miami’s been accused of over the years, it’s certainly worth discussing. For those who don’t know, the 7th Flo’ Crew was an underground rap group composed of University of Miami football players that recorded a wildly offensive, nine minute track that detailed their sexual exploits on campus. It was actually reasonably well and professionally produced, unusual given that it was alleged to have been produced in a dorm room. However, those who might be offended by this track should have been warned by the disclaimer at the beginning, uttered by the presumed leader of the pack, “Marvelous”… “This Song in its entirety, is not meant to disrespect any women, in its entirety … (laughter) … aight, you know what I mean, bring the track”.
A No Show Job Tony Soprano would be proud of - Oklahoma, 2006: Quarterback Rhett Bomar, who had emerged late in the previous season as a viable candidate to lead the Sooners back to national prominence, was suspended indefinitely from the team during the summer of 2006 after coach Bob Stoops determined that he received almost $18,000 in unearned pay from a local car dealership owned by a Sooners fan. Stoops, it was revealed sometime later, was alerted by the dealership’s payroll accountant, who believed that Rhett Bomar was actually a ghost employee, as no parents would be cruel enough to name their child Rhett.
Good thing they didn’t give him probation; he wouldn’t have lived through it to learn his lesson - 2006: Mark Mangino, savior of the Kansas Jayhawks football program and real big man on campus, came under fire when five of his players were found to have received answers to correspondence course exams from graduate assistants. The violation went largely unnoticed, as it was not until the next season that the team rose to prominence. Further, they were not deemed corrected until only recently, as Coach Mangino originally interpreted “lack of institutional control” to be a jab at his immense weight.
And you thought your sociology final senior year was tough - the FSU Music History Debacle, 2007: Prior to Florida State’s 2007 Music City Bowl against Kentucky, it was revealed that as many as 36 Seminoles (the players, not the Indians) received answers to a Music History Exam during the Fall 2007 semester, causing the team to be without numerous starters and untold gang fight fodder for the upcoming game. Though the irony in missing the Music City Bowl over a Music History Final is undeniable, the most amusing part of the whole experience came in the form, not surprisingly, of Head Coach and noted curmudgeon Bobby Bowden’s response to the issue, “We can’t afford any injuries” (no, seriously, I’m not clever enough to make that up). Though I would expect nothing less from the school that hosted Wyatt “Jesus” Sexton and Chris “If you consider throwing 4 interceptions in a game handicapped, then I was allowed to park there” Rix, Bowden just keeps making Joe Paterno look like a scrappy, young, charismatic coach.