Re: Bribery Scandal - FBI Probe - Book Richardson Involved
Posted: Thu Sep 28, 2017 8:53 pm
I still don't understand why people thought big things were going to happen today.
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The sooner things happen, the worse they will be.Longhorned wrote:I still don't understand why people thought big things were going to happen today.
I would like to believe that boosters aren't that naive.CalStateTempe wrote:I'm gonna be equally upset if it is some ninny grey hair boosters who believe in integrity of the game Santa Claus that are putting pressure on the ad to ditch miller without know all the facts.
Man is a witch if he brought in romer as a contingency plan.
This is where east coast bias will help us. Zona isn't a program "they" want to make an example of. Louisville was ripe for the picken, and Pitino is the scalp of this scandal (hopefully, if it's contained, as much is at stake so good probsbility the powers that be contain this)NYCat wrote:This could mean he's done this weekend or sometime relatively soon or after the NCAA does it's thing year(s) down the line. (The NCAA won't decide anything anytime soon)
Probably the latter. There's no proof Sean did anything or is implicated in anything right now. I doubt Arizona people or boosters want him gone, it will outside (possibly nationally) pressure. It would be ridiculous to fire him before anything is proven.
Arizona could be made an example. #1 team headed into the season and an asst coach gets busted. HUGE spotlight. Especially if the NCAA wants to feel big and important.
Louisville's blatant incompetence won't cover for us, eventually that pressure will shift to the next big fish, which is us. Since no other schools have come out.
Possibly, that was Ed Schillings pull though, so that probably follows him to IndianaChooChooCat wrote:Or Wilkes.MrBug708 wrote:Howland was definitely dirty at the end and it didn't save him. I can't imagine Alford' s charm pulled in Looney
make the thread, you are about as high profile as anyone here.CalStateTempe wrote:That's a great thread idea...
Bosy Billups wrote:This is where east coast bias will help us. Zona isn't a program "they" want to make an example of. Louisville was ripe for the picken, and Pitino is the scalp of this scandal (hopefully, if it's contained, as much is at stake so good probsbility the powers that be contain this)NYCat wrote:This could mean he's done this weekend or sometime relatively soon or after the NCAA does it's thing year(s) down the line. (The NCAA won't decide anything anytime soon)
Probably the latter. There's no proof Sean did anything or is implicated in anything right now. I doubt Arizona people or boosters want him gone, it will outside (possibly nationally) pressure. It would be ridiculous to fire him before anything is proven.
Arizona could be made an example. #1 team headed into the season and an asst coach gets busted. HUGE spotlight. Especially if the NCAA wants to feel big and important.
Louisville's blatant incompetence won't cover for us, eventually that pressure will shift to the next big fish, which is us. Since no other schools have come out.
Then no one is the answer. Arizona, Miller, Romar, Alford, UCLA....all part of the same hypocrisy. It's so disingenuous for coaches of the top 50 programs in the country to act as though there are no extra benefits provided to recruits. Yes, it's a tired argument that, "everyone does it." But they do. And it's done by creating insulation between the program, the money and the recruits. So Dick Vitale or anyone else can't with a straight face tell me that Mike Krzyzewski, Roy Williams, Bill Self, Sean Miller, Tom Izzo and Jim Boeheim are any different from each other.Gilbertcat wrote:My fear is Romar pulled in a lot of top kids in his day. I don't assume he is clean and it's dangerous to assume he is the answer.
Who wants all the dominos to fall? That's where this fantasy ends. The Feds could give a crap about, let's face it, scums hustling a few bills. They DO care about Adidas and the big fish targets.LBdCactus wrote:Bosy Billups wrote:This is where east coast bias will help us. Zona isn't a program "they" want to make an example of. Louisville was ripe for the picken, and Pitino is the scalp of this scandal (hopefully, if it's contained, as much is at stake so good probsbility the powers that be contain this)NYCat wrote:This could mean he's done this weekend or sometime relatively soon or after the NCAA does it's thing year(s) down the line. (The NCAA won't decide anything anytime soon)
Probably the latter. There's no proof Sean did anything or is implicated in anything right now. I doubt Arizona people or boosters want him gone, it will outside (possibly nationally) pressure. It would be ridiculous to fire him before anything is proven.
Arizona could be made an example. #1 team headed into the season and an asst coach gets busted. HUGE spotlight. Especially if the NCAA wants to feel big and important.
Louisville's blatant incompetence won't cover for us, eventually that pressure will shift to the next big fish, which is us. Since no other schools have come out.
While I appreciate the spin here, your logic is exactly why they would drop the hammer. Their logic = hit em hard, no one cares about those programs out west, keep focus off east teams.
I think all of this is beyond that thinking anyways. It is too big to ignore, and eventually the people who start flipping will give up someone at the blue blood programs. All the dominos fall at that point, and that is beyond the control of the NCAA as long as the feds are involved.
Sleep tight.
Bowen sold in a tight market.Spaceman Spiff wrote:
That was what struck me as odd. Quinerly was 4-5 spots lower than Bowen, so i figured if Bowen was getting 100, Quinerly would have been 60-75 at least and the 15k was a weird amount.
You know, new news needs to break soon or I'll just go nuts.
Yea, Jude La Cava sticking his head out all the way from the nineties to try to get a damn headline.TJATUA wrote:Is that Jude La Cava? He said something along the lines of "we'll know something w/in 24-48 hours."Olsondogg wrote:Got a text saying local PHX sportscaster saying miller doesn’t last the weekend
Lol, poor miller fanboy, you are so lost. this must really be tough for you. Pages later in the thread you're still confused if Quinerly was paid 15k or more than 15k. It says right in the complaint per the Star, dumbass:Spaceman Spiff wrote:You literally appear to have no idea how the FBI investigation went.RiseAndFire wrote:Important clarification re Quinerly many seem to be missing.97cats wrote: what did Quinerly get -- 15k
not the standard amount
the plot thickens...........................
The complaint says Richardson needed another$15,000 to secure the player, who Dawkins identified as a "top point guard in the country," according to the complaint.
ANOTHER $15k. The extra $15k was just to put the recruitment over the top and lock it up. He was paid far more before the 15k was paid.
that also means Book's cut for Quinerly was far more than the paltry $5k figure ppl are using. And odds are the FBI didn't just happen to stumble upon Books scheme the very first time he ever engaged in it. He'd been funneling all kinds of east coast recruits to miller for years: Parrom, Momo, Sidiki, Lyons, Rondae, Kobi, Rawle
There was, but Seth Rich didn't have time to leak it before he was murdered.NYCat wrote:There better not be a ledger/black book out there somewhere. Or on a computer
I'd love to hear your thoughts on that.Chicat wrote:I figured you had something more as far as the criminality with this scandal than the idea that the FBI's investigation isn't over and your own hurt feelings.
I was mistaken. And I think you've mistaken what is illegal and what is against NCAA regulations.
So, I conclude that anyone who participates in payments to athletes or their representatives 1) causes thereby to make the athlete ineligible, and therefore 2) defrauds the athlete's university.EVANS, RICHARDSON, BLAND, DAWKINS, and SOOD, and others known and unknown, participated in a scheme to defraud University-2, University-3, University-4, and University-5 by facilitating and concealing bribe payments to prospective and current student-athletes at those universities, and/or their families, including by telephone, email, and wire transfers of funds, among other means, thereby causing University-2, University-3, University-4, and University-5 to provide athletic scholarships to student athletes who, in truth and in fact, were ineligible to compete as a result of the bribe payments.
I see how you could conclude that. I also know you'd have to build 10 more federal prisons to house everyone you see as guilty in this because they played some tangential role in players who should be paid getting some money from shoe companies and agents.pc in NM wrote:I'd love to hear your thoughts on that.Chicat wrote:I figured you had something more as far as the criminality with this scandal than the idea that the FBI's investigation isn't over and your own hurt feelings.
I was mistaken. And I think you've mistaken what is illegal and what is against NCAA regulations.
Here's part of what Book's indictment saysSo, I conclude that anyone who participates in payments to athletes or their representatives 1) causes thereby to make the athlete ineligible, and therefore 2) defrauds the athlete's university.EVANS, RICHARDSON, BLAND, DAWKINS, and SOOD, and others known and unknown, participated in a scheme to defraud University-2, University-3, University-4, and University-5 by facilitating and concealing bribe payments to prospective and current student-athletes at those universities, and/or their families, including by telephone, email, and wire transfers of funds, among other means, thereby causing University-2, University-3, University-4, and University-5 to provide athletic scholarships to student athletes who, in truth and in fact, were ineligible to compete as a result of the bribe payments.
I had the same thought...SunnyAZ wrote:I agreed reading the title then disagreed when I read the OP.If we are paying the players we are doing god's work.
I can tell you that the local media are chomping at the bit here and are praying that 97cats is right and Miller doesn't survive this.Chicat wrote:"Sean Miller went to work today" is really worthy of a whole article?
The media has already run out of things to talk about obviously. Wouldn't the article-worthy story be if he didn't show up?
I think you nailed it. Bowen played the open market where he was all that was on the market. As far as Quinerly goes sometimes kids just really want to go to a school regardless, but still get paid a little something out of good faith. Poor kid.YoDeFoe wrote:Bowen sold in a tight market.Spaceman Spiff wrote:
That was what struck me as odd. Quinerly was 4-5 spots lower than Bowen, so i figured if Bowen was getting 100, Quinerly would have been 60-75 at least and the 15k was a weird amount.
You know, new news needs to break soon or I'll just go nuts.
By the time he was making his rounds, he was the only elite wing left on the board. Remember we lucked out with the late Akot reclass. Post-draft, a few teams had a clear hole at wing and were thirsty for a fix. Price goes up.
Bowen's commitment made Sportcenter. Kobi too. Quinerly? Too early. No tease.
That makes sense to me anyways.
ChooChooCat wrote:I can tell you that the local media are chomping at the bit here and are praying that 97cats is right and Miller doesn't survive this.Chicat wrote:"Sean Miller went to work today" is really worthy of a whole article?
The media has already run out of things to talk about obviously. Wouldn't the article-worthy story be if he didn't show up?
Another reminder: Book Richardson was offered by Louisville to be an assistant for more money than Arizona was paying him, but he was loyal to Sean Miller very likely due to the scenario Longhorned just outlined.Longhorned wrote:Reminder: A fan website that lost its press credentials was kept away from McKale in the interests of the program. Against the interests of the program, Book Richardson secretly took money from that website in exchange for information at the expense of the program. After he got caught, Miller allowed him to stay for years.
The players loved him. He had New York connections. We all know he wasn't the only available assistant coach with lovability and regional connections, but I guess Miller thought that was worth the risk.
While you are absolutely 100% correct on this, the last point doesn't work for your overall point, because this whole thing didn't start officially until this summer, so his influence (if he had any or even chose to utilize it) wouldn't have come into play until this year's group.ZONACAT wrote:RE: Quinerly. If Book was crooked enough to take a bribe, it's plausible he was crooked enough to keep the entirety of it. Unless the FBI somehow tracked Book personally handing a family member the money, it's all talk but it was a way to solicit quick money from the financial advisor.
Which brings me to my next thought, what if Book was actually attempting to play the financial advisor? This random FA is paying 5k a month for influence, but "influence" doesn't guarantee results. Book could have gotten a year or two of stipend before the FA realized he himself was being played. What could the FA do at that point? Agents try this all the time and it doesn't necessarily guarantee the player actually becoming a client. Ryan Leaf did this. Arizona just had multiple guys in the draft and this FA didn't get one.
I would also argue, with how nonchalant Book was about initially meeting and quickly agreeing a deal with this financial advisor, that this wasn't Book's first rodeo and he had likely been skimming agents and financial advisors for years.ChooChooCat wrote:While you are absolutely 100% correct on this, the last point doesn't work for your overall point, because this whole thing didn't start officially until this summer, so his influence (if he had any or even chose to utilize it) wouldn't have come into play until this year's group.ZONACAT wrote:RE: Quinerly. If Book was crooked enough to take a bribe, it's plausible he was crooked enough to keep the entirety of it. Unless the FBI somehow tracked Book personally handing a family member the money, it's all talk but it was a way to solicit quick money from the financial advisor.
Which brings me to my next thought, what if Book was actually attempting to play the financial advisor? This random FA is paying 5k a month for influence, but "influence" doesn't guarantee results. Book could have gotten a year or two of stipend before the FA realized he himself was being played. What could the FA do at that point? Agents try this all the time and it doesn't necessarily guarantee the player actually becoming a client. Ryan Leaf did this. Arizona just had multiple guys in the draft and this FA didn't get one.
I’d agree with you in this situation.Longhorned wrote:One rule in life is that nothing suddenly changes overnight. No use weeping over something that was lost gradually and then finally a long time ago. No point in wanting to hold onto things.
That is so weird to me. Why? Miller is the best thing to happen to uofa bb since lute retired. He's a class act and represents the university and city well. Is it just the "if it bleeds it leads" mentality? I dont get why the animosity.ChooChooCat wrote:I can tell you that the local media are chomping at the bit here and are praying that 97cats is right and Miller doesn't survive this.Chicat wrote:"Sean Miller went to work today" is really worthy of a whole article?
The media has already run out of things to talk about obviously. Wouldn't the article-worthy story be if he didn't show up?
That is so sad to hear. Makes me dislike book even more.ChooChooCat wrote:As far as Quinerly goes sometimes kids just really want to go to a school regardless, but still get paid a little something out of good faith. Poor kid.
Sounds like your alluding to what I suspected. Book rolled on miller.Longhorned wrote:Reminder: A fan website that lost its press credentials was kept away from McKale in the interests of the program. Against the interests of the program, Book Richardson secretly took money from that website in exchange for information at the expense of the program. After he got caught, Miller allowed him to stay for years.
The players loved him. He had New York connections. We all know he wasn't the only available assistant coach with lovability and regional connections, but I guess Miller thought that was worth the risk.
ChooChooCat wrote:Wow that was a mic drop if I've ever seen one.
Well, who's fault might that be? You have been in the face of dissent--big time, and for years.Olsondogg wrote:I’d agree with you in this situation.Longhorned wrote:One rule in life is that nothing suddenly changes overnight. No use weeping over something that was lost gradually and then finally a long time ago. No point in wanting to hold onto things.
However, your life is gonna be shocking if you think your rule is correct. My life has literally and suddenly changed overnight on a few occasions. So your rule is complete shit.