My
dictionary defines the word scandal as “an action or event regarded as morally
wrong that causes general public outrage,” but one has to strain to see those
elements in the latest college-sports episode involving the arrests of 10 men
accused of running a ring to bribe basketball recruits. At best, the moral part
of the question is, uh, questionable, and the outrage has been muted if there’s
been any at all. As has become increasingly clear to anyone who’s been paying
attention, it simply describes business as usual in an enterprise that rivals
few in this land for corruption and hypocrisy.
I and
others have been railing for years (decades!) about the failings of college
sports, to no avail. They only get worse as the money pot grows and our
institutions of higher learning twist themselves out of shape to grab their
share of it. Coaches and administrators turn blind eyes to the offenses going
on under their noses and lie about their knowledge when they’re exposed. It’s
part of their jobs.
The main victims are the so-called
student-athletes who fuel the beast and, mostly, are discarded when they’re of
no further use. The joke in communist Russia was that the people pretended to
work and the state pretended to pay them. In college sports the athletes
pretend to go to school and the schools pretend to graduate them.
What’s different about the current
matter is its scope and specificity. Scooped up in a federal probe announced last
Tuesday in New York were assistant coaches at four top-flight hoops
schools—Arizona, Auburn, Oklahoma State and Southern California-- two employees
of the international shoe company Adidas, two financial advisers, a players’
agent and (!) a custom tailor. Making a long story short, it’s alleged that
Adidas and the other business types funneled money to the coaches to pay basketball
prospects to attend their schools and, later, turn their representation over to
them when (if) they turned pro. I’m really interested to know how the tailor figured
into this. Are new suits that expensive these days?
Prosecutors said the three-year FBI
investigation that led to the charges is continuing and that their net probably
would widen in the weeks ahead. That was clear from the inclusion in the arrest
documents of two more schools that were described but not named, but were named
later as the U’s of Louisville and Miami. It was alleged that basketball
prospects or their families received upwards of $100,000 each from Adidas, et
al, to enroll there. Rick Pitino, the Louisville coach with a long and sordid
rap sheet, was placed on “administrative leave” by the school on Wednesday, so there
should be more from that quarter. It also was reported that employees of Nike,
another big shoe company, have been subpoenaed, opening another avenue of
inquiry.
Legally speaking this is serious
stuff, with violations of U.S. bribery, conspiracy, honest-services fraud and
wire-fraud statutes involved. One piece I read said that if convicted of all
charges the coaches could face maximum sentences of 80 years in prison. For men in their 40s or 50s, as the coaches
seem to be, those are life sentences, the fed-max they’d get for murder. If
nothing else that should encourage them to make nice with the prosecutors as
the case unfolds.
Really, though, it should be asked
who the immediate victims are. They certainly don’t seem to be the willing
companies, which regard the bribes as seed money. The public universities for
which the coaches worked also deserve no pity because their athletics-first
practices created the situation that nurtured the mess. In Arizona, where I
live, legislative penury long has starved public higher education, causing
tuition at Arizona State University to more than triple in the last 15 years, but
the school still has found $300 million to renovate its football stadium.
One of the prosecutors interviewed
on TV likened the accused conspirators to a pack of coyotes yipping and nipping
at befuddled recruits, but the comparison rang false. That gang didn’t want to
eat the kids, it wanted to take them out to dinner, and who could blame them
for accepting? Remember that an athlete taking money to attend a college might
violate NCAA rules but it ain’t against the law. A stigma may attach but basketballers
Chris Webber and Marcus Camby and football player Reggie Bush took illicit
money and went on to have lucrative pro careers, with all attendant honors.
The idea that big-time college basketball and
football recruiting involves only the kids and their parents, and maybe a
high-school coach, is way out of date. Today the scene is a swamp in which
agents’ runners, “street” agents, club-team coaches and their sponsors (mainly
the shoe companies) and all sorts of hangers on also swim, and the coach that
can’t navigate it doesn’t last long. Word travels fast in that milieu and exchanges
of money don’t stay secret long.
The probe is sure to enliven the “just pay
‘em” crowd, which believes that salaries for college athletes would solve all
problems. I don’t buy that on a number of grounds. Making the kids employees
would further devalue whatever the educational side of their scholarships is worth,
and if $100,000 is the going rate to rent a blue-chip hoops recruit for a year
or two, the price tag would be very high. Too, making people richer doesn’t
make them less greedy, so under-the-table deals would continue. One of the assistant coaches named in the
action, Chuck Person of Auburn, had a 14-season NBA career (1987-2001) in which
he earned about $23 million, and his Auburn salary was reported at $240,000 a
year, so he’s hardly on the dole.
American college sports are like
such other corrupt enterprises as the Olympics and international soccer in that
they are inundated with money and poorly prepared to deal with it, either philosophically
or organizationally. Billions of dollars are raining in from TV-rights sales,
gate receipts and shoe-company largess, and plenty of people have their hands
out to get some of it, one way or another.
Surveying the perennially graft-ridden Chicago
political scene, the late newspaper columnist Mike Royko wrote that instead of “Urbs
in Horto” (meaning “City in a Garden”) Chicago’s Latin motto should be “Ubi Est
Mea?”, for “Where’s Mine?” The same goes for our college sports.
2 comments:
Almost, but not quite as bad as the Trump administration. Morally bankrupt.
Really good article.
Post a Comment