Wait, will the Feds go after Baylor?
mazzag[IMG said:
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Good Aggie Hunting said:
Soooo....
https://www.reddit.com/r/CollegeBasketball/comments/72u1wi/is_texas_ams_2015_recruiting_class_suspicious/
Correct. AAU historically is a well-respect sports organization for swimming, basketball, wrestling, track & field.basic8 said:Technically, I think AAU is Amateur Athletic Union, a real organization. summer Basketball that is in these cross hairs is not AAU sponsored. Just was always called "AAU ball", and still is in conversation, etc.bobinator said:
"AAU" in and of itself isn't a problem. AAU is actually really bad at branding apparently, because that's another false target like the NCAA.
This situation arose in basketball because pro basketball players are worth A LOT of money, a lot of kids who want to play pro basketball don't have any money, and it's relatively cheap for someone with a lot of money to fund them.
And you've set up a system where there is no free market. You can't just simply pay the best players for being the best players until they're 19-20 years old.
So you have a false market, with a lot of money in it, and that money is going to go somewhere. So it's going toward influencing the players. It's going to people around them, their coaches, their "handlers," or whoever who, in a lot of cases, don't have any money themselves. How can they refuse it?
But again, getting the best players together in the summer to play against each other isn't in and of itself a problem.
Gassing up on their way from Houston to Waco.10thYrSr said:
Football board says FBI mobile command is in CS
Bunk Moreland said:mazzag[img said:
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"and the FBI is... Moving on!"
Let's hope they didn't catch Stansbury doing things while he was here.davidhouse said:
A group of FBI agents ate lunch in College Station today
davidhouse said:
A group of FBI agents ate lunch in College Station today
10thYrSr said:
Football board says FBI mobile command is in CS
Quote:
Creating false invoices for Adidas to pay
Quote:
Survive and advance
91AggieLawyer said:
That's how t.u. used to keep ahead of the NCAA. They hired Butch Worley, NCAA enforcement director, in 1987. That was right around the time SMU got clobbered and also around the time t.u. was having NCAA problems of their own involving Butch Hadnot et.al. Somehow that major infraction brought 2 years of probation (that got reduced to 1) and no TV or bowl bans, or scholarship reductions. We got all 3 a few years later with a totally fabricated "lack of institutional control."
I'm still pissed off about how all that went down.
monarch said:
The players and their parents who accepted the money are just as culpable. These people know accepting money in this fashion is illegal and against NCAA reg's.
The IRS will jump in and collect taxes off the money.
Where did the Adidas guy get 100,000.00 to spread around? Petty cash box in the office? Has anybody asked that question yet?
Agreed. College basketball programs generate so much money to help fund other programs and entire athletic departments. Take UK for instance, if the "hammer" ever came down on UK, it might potentially disrupt the economy for the entire state. Thats an extreme example, but the point still stands. There won't be widespread changes or programs getting a "death penalty". NCAA basketball will move on, with maybe a few more restrictions/guidelines, but nothing more in the grand scheme of things.bobinator said:
I still haven't seen anything that's convincing me that this is changing anything long term.
It is better than doing nothing. Ultimately I do think you have to make radical reforms like get away with the 'one and done' system and let the people who don't give a flip about school just go pro out of high school. Otherwise, you go to college for 3 years minimum.bobinator said:
I still haven't seen anything that's convincing me that this is changing anything long term.