šŸˆ Teflon Tide: Examining Alabama's recent NCAA concerns

Alabama football is enjoying the momentum expected of a power program. Nick Saban signed a contract extension worth more than $7 million per year. The recruiting class is stocked with five stars.

The Tide might have found a suitable replacement for A.J. McCarron in Jacob Coker, a transfer from FSU.

But such prowess doesn't illustrate the whole story of Alabama football, at least not lately. You have to look to the compliance office for that.

Since September, three NCAA-related stories have hit Saban's desk. Some of these issues could be considered minor in nature but they do speak to a broader context: There's a trend developing, a string of issues over a five-month span.

That doesn't mean Alabama has a systemic problem. In fact, one sports attorney with knowledge of NCAA investigations says that's not the case on the surface. The winner of three of the last five national titles might be considered an easy target.

Meanwhile, the Teflon Tide keeps rolling through what's considered a wide-ranging list of clichƩd violations alleged against them.

*A middleman for agents enticing a star offensive tackle.
*A starting safety taking a loaner from an employee.
*A disassociated booster selling memorabilia from eligible players.

Alabama has experienced minimal pushback, which means either the school feels covered in its merits – after asking around, Alabama sources seems less worried about these cases than, say, the Mark Ingram-Julio Jones fishing trip paid for by a businessman in 2009 – or the NCAA simply isn't doing anything about this.

The latter could be true with the September report in Yahoo! Sports that former player Luther Davis was serving as a middleman between agents and now-Chargers left tackle D.J. Fluker for payments and gifts. Mississippi State and Tennessee also were linked to improper benefits in the story.

Two sources with knowledge of the case from the schools' side said the NCAA does not appear to be investigating the case at this time.

ā€œNobody will talk to them and they can't find Luther,ā€ said a high-ranking source from one of those three schools.

A month later, Alabama shut down safety Ha Ha Clinton-Dix when he allegedly received a loan payment for between $100 and $300 from an assistant strength coach who was fired as a result. The NCAA cleared Clinton-Dix after three games missed.

On Jan. 16, the sports blog Outkickthecoverage.com showed T-Town Gallery – the alleged business of disassociated booster Tom Al-Betar – selling autographed memorabilia of eligible Tide players, which could be a violation of NCAA rules depending on whether the players profited from the autographs.

There's no evidence of that right now. Al-Betar told CBSSports.com ā€œthere's nothing to worry aboutā€ because he obtained the memorabilia from the school's fan day and from former players who visit the store after graduation.

On the surface, all three stories at least suggest the breaking of NCAA rules on a small or large scale. And all three could have minimal effect on Alabama, either because the school can prove there's no wrongdoing by the school or the NCAA is handcuffed.

Stu Brown, an attorney with Ice Miller out of Indianapolis who has experience with NCAA cases, said the last two items appear to be secondary violations, leaving the Luther Davis case as the primary concern.

Brown said there's nothing unusual about a high-profile program such as Alabama facing an accumulation of minor issues that are not mutually exclusive.

ā€œThe agent piece goes to amateurism, so it would surprise me if there hasn't been a pretty intense effort to look at that,ā€ Brown said. ā€œIf a guy's not cooperating, that does put a roadblock up. Unless it becomes a criminal investigation by some governing agency looking at subpoena power, he can't be compelled to sit down and talk. But that issue doesn't really combine with the other two to form a pattern.ā€

These cases don't really give Alabama a competitive edge – nothing's rooted in recruiting or poaching players – but in the case of Davis, Yahoo! Sports documented alleged violations of bylaw 12.3.1.2 prohibiting an eligible player from receiving benefits from agents or marketing reps.

That doesn't necessarily mean Alabama was negligent. It's uncertain when school officials knew about Fluker's enticements and when they happened. Alabama acted swiftly once the story broke in September, hiring the Birmingham-based firm Starnes Davis Florie LLC and banning Davis from campus.

Even if the NCAA feels it had something on Alabama, it still faces the same problem that Texas athletic director Steve Patterson says stunts all investigations these days.

ā€œIt's difficult for an enforcement agency to do its job when it doesn't have subpoena power,ā€ Patterson said. ā€œSometimes the ultimate outcome may look a bit perplexing to the outside world because you don't have the apparent evidence that you might like to have for what you think is going on there.ā€

If anyone's worried about their school getting hammered by the NCAA, consider the ā€˜golden era of cheating' narrative might be stronger than ever. While schools have beefed up on attorneys and compliance officers, the NCAA has lost several key staffers in the last year.

Perhaps NCAA enforcement can still do important work again, but as it stands, the last school to get the proverbial NCAA hammer for an amateurism issue was Ohio State in 2011. Is there enough manpower to pursue cases anymore?

It's possible the NCAA is holding off on the Luther Davis case because Alabama agent lawmakers want to tackle it first, Brown said. State Rep. Jack Williams told AL.com that Davis, Fluker and the agents from the Yahoo! story could be in violation of the Alabama's sports agent laws.

But in the four-plus months since the story broke, there's been no indication of a ripple effect disrupting Saban's program.

Until then, Auburn and Oklahoma are the only ones disrupting ā€˜the process.'

Jeremy Folwer - CBS Sports
 
(Non-)Issues at Alabama Highlight Change in NCAA Perception

CBSSports.com's Jeremy Fowler wrote an interesting piece that published this morning about how Alabama is not really receiving any blowback from a few recent NCAA issues: D.J. Fluker receiving gifts from agents, Ha Ha Clinton-Dix getting a loan from an employee, and Tom Al-Betar surfacing again and selling memorabilia of current players.

Fowler dubs the program the "Teflon Tide" and notes that none of these recent issues seem to be sullying the program's reputation. I don't really find it all that remarkable for a number of reasons. Some are specific to Alabama, and some aren't.

The reason why the Fluker issue hasn't stuck is because there has been no follow up on it at all. Fowler reports that the NCAA isn't even investigating it because no one will talk. We've seen far more explosive allegations end up leading to nothing in recent years, so this one isn't going to keep sizzling without any further details. As for Clinton-Dix, I don't think anyone cares because the loan truly was a loan, and the amount of money was pretty small. Finally with Al-Betar, nothing came of it the last time he caused trouble, and back then, he had pictures of a then-current player signing stuff in his store. There isn't much meat on these bones.

With these and more over the past few years, Alabama compliance has been really on the ball. It has been remarkably prepared for when the news comes out, and it basically shuts down the stories right when they start as a result. They've not been caught flatfooted that I've seen, and that really makes a difference. Plus, Nick Saban's persona helps out with the image. He's very detail oriented, and he doesn't have a reputation as a cheat like Jackie Sherrill or someone like that. Fair or not, the public image of a head coach goes a long way here. It's why the scandal at Ohio State was such a shock a few years back; Jim Tressel's public image of being a boring, by-the-books type made it easier for people to think that nothing bad would go on under his watch.

It's not just an Alabama thing, though. It's also an NCAA thing.

The NCAA has been losing credibility in its enforcement quite a bit in recent years. It looked like it was really stepping things up with its monumental penalties on USC for the Reggie Bush scandal, but it hasn't matched those sanctions anywhere else since except for Penn State (which is a whole other story).




  • A couple of recent Heisman winners seemed to get into trouble—Cam Newton's dad shopping him and Johnny Manziel signing improbably high numbers of autographs if he wasn't getting paid—but nothing ever came of it.
  • Yahoo! Sports served up a decade-long scandal at Miami on a silver platter, but the NCAA botched things up anyway and didn't levy anything as bad as USC got for Bush despite a huge disparity of evidence between the two cases.
  • That Ohio State case looks awfully fishy, with players getting to play a bowl game but being suspended for games in the forthcoming year. It looked like the NCAA was trying to protect business interests ahead of its own values.
  • I really don't want to get into the details of Penn State, but there were plenty of people who thought the NCAA didn't have the jurisdiction to do what it did. At the very least, Mark Emmert made up a lot of stuff as he went along.
  • Remember that academic scandal at UNC? The one that's still festering even now? The NCAA isn't doing a thing about it.

In short, the NCAA has lost nearly all of its credibility on the big stuff, if it hasn't lost it entirely. Is it any wonder, then, that people can't be bothered to worry about a player getting a loan of between $100 and $300 from an employee? Bobby Petrino hiring his mistress to a football staffing job is far more distressing than that.

In that light, it's not hard to guess why Alabama isn't getting a reputation for being out of control despite three NCAA issues cropping up in the last five months. Thanks in large part to the NCAA's own actions, it's getting progressively harder to care about these kinds of things. Call them the Teflon Tide if you want, but it's more a symbol of how the tide of public opinion has turned decidedly against the NCAA in general.

Team Speed Kills
 

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