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Basketball corruption could upstage SEC Media Days
Not knowing doesn't mean coaches are innocent in the eyes of the NCAA anymore.
Mark Gottfried didnāt know.
Had no idea.
Not one clue.
His assistant coach at N.C. State went rogue, and landed a recruit with cash, and Gottfried was just the unassuming head coach of the N.C. State basketball team. Thatās what he told his new employer anyway before being hired at Cal State-Northridge. They believed him.
And even if Gottfried knew about the illegal recruitment of Dennis Smith back at N.C. State, then there wasnāt any solid proof of it. No one could pin anything on him.
Earlier this week, the NCAA said it didnāt care about his plausible deniability, and charged Gottfried with āviolation of head coach responsibilitiesā in a notice of allegations to N.C. State that claims both Gottfriend and the N.C. State athletic department failed to properly monitor the basketball team back in 2015. N.C. State made the official notice of allegations public on Wednesday. They stem from the 2018 federal corruption case that concerned several other universities, including Auburn.
More notices of allegations likely are coming, and Auburn should be nervous. The NCAA made one thing perfectly clear this week. It is coming after the head coaches.
Coach Bruce Pearl was in a similar position to Gottfried after the corruption case that found former Auburn coach Chuck Person guilty of accepting bribes to steer Auburnās players to a financial advisor once they turned pro. Pearl didnāt know.
No one at Auburn knew anything.
In the case of Gottfried and N.C. State, not knowing didnāt mean they were innocent in the eyes of the NCAA. It meant they were guilty of not knowing.
The NCAA promised it would get tough on enforcement following the Department of Justiceās federal corruption case. If so, this could be a long summer for some high-profile head coaches.
In the grand scheme of NCAA basketball, Gottfried had turned into a pretty small fish. It feels like the NCAA is out to land some bigger prizes before this summer is over. Person pled guilty back in March, but his sentencing recently was pushed back to July 17.
Thatās right in the middle of SEC Media Days. Is basketball corruption going to overshadow everything at the SECās marquee football event?
Letās be clear. Pearl had nothing to do with Personās crooked schemes. He was innocent in the eyes of the federal government.
But hereās what administrators, school presidents and armchair attorneys need to understand. The NCAA isnāt a court of law. They donāt need any more evidence than what the FBI and Department of Justice already have uncovered to bust shady coaches for shady behavior.
If theyāre going to tag Gottfried for unknowingly running a corrupt program, then Pearl might be in trouble. Whatās more contemptible: an assistant coach who bribes players for their services, or an assistant coach who uses his players to line his own pockets? That shouldnāt be a difficult question to answer.
Person pled guilty to accepting over $90,000 in bribes from a financial advisor who was an FBI informant. The informant leveraged a relationship with a celebrity tailor, Rashan Michel of Fairfield, Alabama, to gain access to Person. At the time, Pearl called it āunacceptable.ā He was right about that, but Michel was no stranger to Auburn athletics before the scandal.
Gottfried wasnāt fired by N.C. State in 2017 for anything other than wins and losses. He went 31-24 over his final two seasons. When the axe fell, hereās what he said: āEverything that happens is my responsibility. I get it. Just like if you beat Villanova in the NCAA tournament, or you go to the Sweet 16, you get a lot of praise a lot of times as a coach. Other times you take the hits. Thatās part of what we do.ā
If an assistant coach bribes a player with cash, then doesnāt that, too, fall under the responsibility of the head coach?
Gottfriedās former assistant at N.C. State, Orlando Early, paid a middleman for Dennis Smithās recruiting commitment in 2015. The NCAA wasnāt concerned with the details of who knew what, or the perceived innocence of Earlyās boss. The NCAA simply cared about one thing. Gottfried should have known about it.
Now the former Alabama basketball player, who coached the Crimson Tide from 1998 to 2009, faces a Level I violation by the NCAAās investigators. Itās up to the NCAAās Committee on Infractions to determine Gottfriedās punishment. He could miss significant amounts of next season, or worse if Cal State-Northridge keeps him employed.
The NCAA once banned Pearl from coaching for five years for lying to investigators. Now they might not even care if he was telling the truth about Person.
"I don't think anybody else knew,ā former Auburn president Steven Leath said in 2017 after Person was arrested. āI don't think there's any indication at Auburn that anybody else knew about this."
It appears thatās all the NCAA cares about now.