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Do you think it was going on 10 years ago?This has been going on for a long time.
Hard to imagine much fall out.
I do not know when the alleged dishonesty started but the report (FBI I think) was a year or two agoDo you think it was going on 10 years ago?
The Athletic reported that Wildcats women's swimming and diving coach Augie Busch also is charged with a head coach control violation.
Just reacting to your “this has been going on for a long time” comment.I do not know when the alleged dishonesty started but the report (FBI I think) was a year or two ago
They have plenty of due process. That’s never been the issue. What they lack from an enforcement standpoint are effective methods in which to consistently gather relevant and accurate information. When some parties can’t be compelled to spill the beans, piecing together the puzzle is extremely difficult.The NCAA, like the entire collegiate/university atmosphere...lacks due process. It's a kangaroo court. It's days are limited. History will judge the institution harshly.
When some parties can’t be compelled to spill the beans, piecing together the puzzle is extremely difficult.
Gambling at Rick’s?A cynic might suggest that this is willful blindness -- kinda like the enforcement of PED policies by MLB and other major professional sports organizations...at least in the past.
You think that McGwire, Sosa, and Bonds are juicing? The hell you say! Shut up, they're giving baseball fans want they want to see!
The NCAA, like the entire collegiate/university atmosphere...lacks due process. It's a kangaroo court. It's days are limited. History will judge the institution harshly.
The FBI has and will fix that issue for them.
NCAA investigations are so poorly executed the exposure is spectacular which is why you see few sanctions where they are most needed. The schools need to act rather than the NCAA and exposure is mitigated...see Pitino.
Mmm, but let's not forget that the FBI has a jurisdiction that is strictly limited to violations of federal law. It's not the FBI's job to enforce the NCAA's rules and policies for them.
But I don't think we're watching actual incompetence at work here. I think we're watching people protecting their golden-egg laying geese -- and I don't just mean their blue chip programs.
Courts are limited by jurisdiction. The FBI is not. They can investigate any violation of law they see fit.Mmm, but let's not forget that the FBI has a jurisdiction that is strictly limited to violations of federal law. It's not the FBI's job to enforce the NCAA's rules and policies for them.
But I don't think we're watching actual incompetence at work here. I think we're watching people protecting their golden-egg laying geese -- and I don't just mean their blue chip programs.
Courts are limited by jurisdiction. The FBI is not. They can investigate any violation of law they see fit.
Is there any hint of a federal law violation in the NCAA NOA? Not what they’ve already addressed in the Book Richardson matter, but the separate NOA involving the U of A program?Courts are limited by jurisdiction. The FBI is not. They can investigate any violation of law they see fit.
OK. But what I was trying to say — maybe poorly — is that they’re obviously not going to get into (non-criminal) violations of NCAA rules.
I haven't read the NOA, so I don't know.Is there any hint of a federal law violation in the NCAA NOA? Not what they’ve already addressed in the Book Richardson matter, but the separate NOA involving the U of A program?
I would have thought that before Person, Richardson, and the rest. But the FBI are certainly capable of turning things that seem non-criminal into criminal investigations when they feel like it.OK. But what I was trying to say — maybe poorly — is that they’re obviously not going to get into (non-criminal) violations of NCAA rules.
But they seem to have a limited appetite for stuff like this. Breaking NCAA rules and violating the law are typically different things.I would have thought that before Person, Richardson, and the rest. But the FBI are certainly capable of turning things that seem non-criminal into criminal investigations when they feel like it.