šŸ“” Auburn's Bruce Pearl symbolizes the rot in college athletics - USA Today

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Opinion: Auburn's Bruce Pearl symbolizes the rot in college athletics

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Bruce Pearl could outlive a cat.

Just one of his run-ins with the NCAA would have been enough to torpedo the career of pretty much any other coach. There was the secret taping of a recruit to try and bust a rival. There was the barbecue with recruits, at his house, which he made worse by lying about afterward and encouraging his assistants to do the same. There were the assistants caught up in FBI investigations.

Yet here Pearl is, not only still employed, but back in the Sweet 16 for the first time in almost a decade. With Auburn, no less, which doesn’t remotely resemble the kind of backwater school where most disgraced coaches have to go to find redemption.

But that’s Pearl. There is no jam too big for him to escape, no sin too grave for him to be forgiven. Somehow, he’s managed to turn sleaze into an attribute.

ā€œCoach Pearl is enthusiastic and, as welcoming and exciting as he is, he’s been a tremendous blessing for the Auburn family,ā€ Auburn athletic director Allen Greene said last year.

Mind you, Greene made those comments after Auburn had fired one of Pearl’s assistants, Chuck Person, and suspended players Austin Wiley and Daniel Purifoy for their roles in the FBI investigation into college basketball corruption. This is not to be confused with the corruption investigation that resulted in the suspension of another Pearl assistant, Ira Bowman, earlier this month.

But, hey, how about those SEC titles and improved attendance!

ā€œIt's not a cesspool. There are some things that are wrong with it, things that take place that are inappropriate. That's the business of college basketball,ā€ Pearl said Thursday when asked about the state of the game. ā€œThe reason why the NCAA is involved in this is because it's their job to monitor. It's their job to enforce. It's their job to encourage people to work hard, to do it the right way and not allow some of the other things to seep into the business because of the business and the money and the pressures.

ā€œSo again, it's part of the process. The question is, what do you want to focus on? We need to continue to work to keep it clean, but we need to understand all the good that's being done.ā€

It’s hard to take any of that seriously, listening to Pearl and his three coaching cohorts at the Midwest Regional. Every program here is tarnished in some way, an apt, if not uncomfortable, representation of the game today.

Like Pearl, Houston’s Kelvin Sampson has a show cause penalty on his resume, punishment for hundreds of impermissible calls to recruits while he was at Indiana and Oklahoma. North Carolina has acknowledged that some of its athletes took sham classes, but dodged severe NCAA sanctions by saying it couldn’t be a violation because the bogus classes were available to all students, possibly the most novel defense ever for an institution of higher education.

And while John Calipari hasn’t personally been tied to any violations, his Final Four appearances with UMass and Memphis were later vacated.

ā€œWhether it was going on or not, we'd all be naive to think it was not,ā€ Sampson said when asked about the perpetual stains on college basketball.

Part of the reason Pearl has survived for so long is that he talks a better game than almost anyone. As shrewd and calculated as he is charming, he can deflect from his flaws and failings so effectively you almost forget they existed.

Take Thursday, when he somehow turned a question about his exile from college basketball into a humble brag about being a civil rights champion.

ā€œThat was a fight that I was fighting for many years in the '70s and the '80s when I was a young coach, because there was a lot more segregation, there was a lot more racism, antisemitism. It still exists, but worse then,ā€ Pearl said.

How exactly that worked when Pearl, who turned 59 on March 18, didn’t even graduate from Boston College until 1982, I’m not quite sure. Nor do I understand how Pearl squared his passion for social justice with his criticism of Colin Kaepernick for the NFL protests – protests designed to call attention to systemic racism and economic disparity.

But I digress …

The power brokers in college athletics – athletic directors, school presidents, powerful alums – love to claim the moral high ground. In their minds, they are molding the lives and characters of young men and women. The billions that come with it are simply a lucky happenstance.

No doubt Pearl has touched lives and helped many young men along the way. But at what cost? Bottom line, he has survived scandal because he wins. There's something to be said for that but, as we're reminded constantly by guys like him, the game is supposed to be about more than just winning and losing.

Unless that's all a fraud, too.
 
Maybe it's apropos that Pearl is taking on Roy Williams's North Carolina basketball team. You know the blue team that had systematic cheating and falsifying grades for the longest but the NCAA couldn't be bothered. I would argue that college basketball is a cesspool and Will Wade, Bill Self, Bruce Pearl, Sean Miller, coach K and a host of others implicated in buying players says as much.

I would also argue that part of that cesspool resides with the NCAA and the corrupt nature in which they choose their next victims and how they implement their inconsistent brand of punishment. Much like who survives the transfer portal to play immediately, it reeks of biased human fallacy.
 
There's no bigger booger among them.

TitanTiger (AU)
All-American
I wish I could blast the same response to every nitwit reporter pushing this "Pearl is slimy" narrative:

1. Yes, Pearl had a recruit (not "recruits") over to his house for a cookout, which was a minor violation. His main sin was lying about it and trying to get the kid and his family to do so too. It was wrong and he paid for it. It's not the worst thing anyone's ever done and doesn't automatically make him slimy.

2. Yes, the tattling on Thomas and U of Illinois was unprofessional. It was also 30+ years ago and he and the people involved have reconciled and moved on.

3. Nothing Chuck Person did helped Pearl or Auburn in any way. Actually he was undermining Pearl and Auburn in that he was trying to push kids already on the roster toward leaving as early as possible for the NBA and to sign with a particular financial advisor. Neither Pearl nor Auburn gained any advantage from this - it in fact would have hurt them had the players left early.

4. The Ira Bowman situation at Penn was just discovered and then only because of an investigation into a completely unrelated matter involving someone else. Penn literally just found out about it and by then Bowman had been at Auburn for a year. How exactly would Pearl or Auburn know about it when they hired him? And again, nothing about this gained an advantage for Penn, Pearl or Auburn.

I get that college basketball is a mess when it comes to recruiting, AAU, the shoe companies, etc. But this Pearl bash plays very fast and loose with the facts to paint a picture that isn't accurate.
 
Bruce Pearl's team just smoked the #1 seed for the second blowout in a row among basketball bluebloods. I mean they dismantled NC in the second half. Even NC couldn't run with these guys. The makeup of this team and maturity makes you believe they are capable of cutting down the nets.
 
So, Jim is upset. Is it because he feels the attention today needs to be on the tournament? Or, is it because a national writer comments on things a guy that covers the team should have been covering all along?

Personally, I sense a lot of self-righteous indignation.


 
He is 7-6 against the likes of Grant and Johnson. Bury us? I am not sure of that but I will say the team he has this year would bury many folks the way they have been playing. They look unstoppable at times.


I'm projecting future value. When the barn puts the second 5 in the game these days they have the same team. Pearl, like Saban, brings in unique players that let him excel at what he wants to run. And probably was the reason I was most disappointed in Avery. Not much chemistry.
 
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