Reaction the morning after

 

Stewart Mandel, Sports Illustrated

For all the tawdry scandals that have tarnished college football over the past 12 months — from USC to Tennessee, from Cam Newton to Jim Tressel — one can easily argue that the nine major violations levied against Butch Davis’ program Tuesday contain more filth and more blatant disregard for the rule book than any of them.

That task could get a whole lot harder once the Committee gets done nuking his program sometime after its October hearing, and perhaps by then the school will be shamed into making a change. As of today, however, the official stance, as articulated by Chancellor Holden Thorp, is: “We made mistakes, and we have to face that.”

Heather Dinich, ESPN

There were, however, allegations that the “institution” failed to properly monitor the conduct of Chris Hawkins, who was allowed access to the facilities and participated in one-on-one drills with the players. And the “institution” failed to monitor the social networking of the players in 2010. And here’s the kicker … the “institution” did not follow up on information that “indicated a risk of improper benefits being provided when reported by [a student athlete] to administrators within the football program.”

Somebody knew something was going on and “the institution” let it continue.

Dr. Saturday, Rivals

Thus concludes what appears to be the perfect storm of NCAA death: Players got paid, agents were everywhere, players committed academic fraud, coaches, players and tutors alike misled or stonewalled investigators — and there was direct institutional knowledge via Blake, who (according to the NCAA) not only knew but was actively participating in flouting the rules in a way that the last guy the NCAA accused of being a rogue assistant coach, USC scapegoat Todd McNair, never dreamed.

If you’ve been following this case from the beginning, none of those charges are new. But it is eye-opening to see all of them exhaustively detailed in one place for the first time, and there is no escaping the conclusion that the Tar Heels are going to feel the maximum, USC-level pain in response — up to and including a postseason ban and heavy scholarship losses. Institutionally, North Carolina worked hard to distance itself from the worst offenders ingratiate itself as a collaborator in justice when it became aware of the violations, but if the NCAA can’t throw the book at a school that employed an assistant coach it accuses of acting as a runner for an NFL agent, it might as well ditch the rulebook and badges and rename itself the “Basketball Tournament Deposit Association.”

Andrew Jones, Fox Sports

The culture and perception of UNC football certainly have changed, and Davis has failed in how he’s operated the ship. It seems suspect that he would be so grossly let down by the judgment of a close friend of 30 years and by a tutor he paid out of his own pocket.

This isn’t to nail Davis with a guilty stamp. However, it’s hard to look past those situations and relationships while accepting that the most meticulous coach in the ACC, one who is obsessed with the striping on his team’s pants, would be so far out in left field when it came to what Blake and Wiley were doing, not to mention the other charges levied by the NCAA.

And now Chancellor Holden Thorp must ask himself: If Davis didn’t know what was going on, should he have?

 

After a year of telling us how in control they are over at the Flagship, since last Thursday Thorp and Baddour haven’t had much to say, but now they just want us all to know how sorry they are (J.P. Giglio, Charlotte Observer):

UNC Chancellor Holden Thorp, athletics director Dick Baddour and football coach Butch Davis were requested by the NCAA to attend the meeting.

Baddour said the next step for UNC is to prepare a response.

“We’ll go through it in absolute detail,” Baddour said. “Then we’ll make decisions about what we agree with and what we don’t agree with and how we’re going to move forward.”

UNC has gone almost 50 years, spanning to a point-shaving scandal with the men’s basketball program in the 1950s, without incurring what the NCAA defines as a major violation.

“I deeply regret that Carolina is in this position,” Thorp said in a statement released by the school. “We made mistakes, and we have to face that.”

Updates to follow.

UNC Scandal

103 Responses to Reaction the morning after

  1. PackerInRussia 06/22/2011 at 3:06 PM #

    I really like the two tweets from @PackFootball today.

    1) Coach O heading to DC for Toys for Tots Board of Directors meeting. #championsinthecommunity

    (should also add #notbutchdavis)

    2) Chat with NC State Compliance Thurs. @ 2:30. Do you have questions about how NC State ensures NCAA rules are followed? http://bit.ly/mjfRwv

    (also under #signoutsheetsareajoke)

  2. PackerInRussia 06/22/2011 at 3:11 PM #

    Is is possible that UNC’s holding onto Butch in order to fire him later when it might seem more punitive in the eyes of the NCAA? In other words, if they’d fired him last year, the NCAA’s final rulings come out a year or more later, the feeling that UNC has self-imposed some sort of punishment by firing the head coach has already worn off. But, if they wait until the NCAA is finished with everything and then fire Butch, it makes it look like they’re taking it seriously and they could use that as a type of bargaining chip to reduce any other penalties.

  3. JeremyH 06/22/2011 at 3:13 PM #

    “”We made mistakes, and we have to face that. … We will emerge with a stronger athletics program, and we will restore confidence in Carolina football.” (quote from Holden Thorpe)

    We will emerge a stronger athletics program?? restore confidence in Carolina football??? Holden, baby, what about confidence in the University?? You’ve undermined everything the University of NC-CH has been said to represent!

  4. ncstate05 06/22/2011 at 3:25 PM #

    page 38 (c) and (i) — The (c) item asks for a statement from (Redacted) “regarding his interactions with Hawkins” and his attempts to determine his affiliation with Willie Parker. Item (i) a statment summarizing information reported by (Redacted) “regarding his approval of Hawkins’ presence at the institution’s athletic facilties.”

    Redacted = Lance Markos?

    If so, LOIC is certain.

  5. wolfpacker 06/22/2011 at 3:29 PM #

    If they fire butch, the TITANIC takes over. If they keep him, thinking that he will keep his mouth shut as will all others that have been paid. Just think about how UGLY this could really get if/when he gets fired and tells the truth…that everyone knew and was involved. It might expose what has been going on at unx for decades. That would be SOMETHING to watch. Keeping him as head coach is just making things worse for them…and it’s amazing how incompetent the BOG, acc commissioner, and the unx administration is.

    The institution’s credibility is going down the tubes and fast. They know what the phone records say and they are hiding them. When you are a leader, you stand up and take responsibility for the mistakes you made. They continue to hide them, push them under the rug, and act as if nothing happened. They have also lied to the PEOPLE and the press, because the have known all along…if they didn’t know…how in the world can this even be called a university?

    If this were any other school, the BOG would have long since started their own investigation. Instead, they take the word of bozo and his counterparts.

  6. whitefang 06/22/2011 at 3:36 PM #

    I think what is most interesting about this is that Thorpe has NOT taken the public approach that he is going to get to the bottom of this, clean it up, and make it so this never happens again, kicking ass in the process NOW! I think that will ultimately cost him his job. Because as smug as these SOB’s are about their sports, there are a hell of a lot of even smugger ones when it comes to their academic rep.
    This stuff on the front page is causing a lot of behind the scenes talking by the faculty and influential alumni, I have to believe. This is one serious black eye to these pricks no matter what the NCAA’s penalty turns out to be.

  7. TOBtime 06/22/2011 at 3:52 PM #

    Left “Hold’en the cards” Thorpe.

    Has a nice ring to it. What a bill of goods that sucker got sold! He probably thought he had it made when he made it to chancellor. The thought of being a yes-man patsy probably never crossed his mind. Nor did any other rational thought.

  8. TOBtime 06/22/2011 at 5:14 PM #

    The Fox Sports headline is priceless – Allegations make Davis look like a REAL HEEL.

  9. triadwolf 06/22/2011 at 5:21 PM #

    “The only problem with no TV for UNC will be that NC State fans out of state cannot share in joy of beating UNC again.”

    Unfortunately no TV for UNC impacts the entire ACC as teams share TV & bowl revenue. A TV & post season ban will not be good for the conference. It’d be one thing if the problems only punished UNC, but that is not the case. I hope the punishment leans more in the loss of scholarships and an administrative house cleaning.

  10. State Fan 06/22/2011 at 5:25 PM #

    We State grads justifiably should be proud that one of our own started the “Carolina Way”. William B. Aycock, UNC Chancellor (1957-1964), NCSU grad and student body president, cleaned up the Frank McGuire mess and hired Dean Smith, telling him that wins and losses don’t matter as much as running a clean program and representing the university well.
    P.S. William Friday also is an NCSU grad.

  11. state99 06/22/2011 at 5:48 PM #

    Great line from Brett Friedlander in today’s Wilmington Morning Star: “Like a rusty old trophy from a bygone era gathering dust in the back corner of a display case, “The Carolina Way” is now a thing of the past.”

    link to article: http://acc.blogs.starnewsonline.com/23165/unc-allegations-are-bad-but-they-could-have-been-worse/?pa=2&tc=pg

  12. IamGumbyDammit 06/22/2011 at 6:16 PM #

    So it appears from my layman’s perspective that the NCAA draws the line for LOIC at whether or not improprieties cross over multiple sports/teams. Looking at Boise State, the accusations were mostly peanuts but crossed sports, and the NCAA brought the hammer. UNX’s allegations are ALL major but one sport, and the NCAA left the hammer in the toolbox. If there was stink to the football program that clearly reflects a sense of entitlement, then only a fool would believe that it was restricted to that sport. I find it curious that the NCAA did not look at what other sport athletes were tutored by the same tutor (maybe she only did football).

    Anyway, it is clear that even the NCAA doesn’t have the stomach to try to uncover any dirt at UNX basketball unless the mainstream media sniffs it out first, a la tOSU, and we all know the mainstream sports media (especially UNX-loving ESPN) doesn’t want to slaughter another cash cow.

  13. choppack1 06/22/2011 at 6:23 PM #

    VaWolf – I agree with you. As things stand right now – unless something changes, I predict the following:
    * This will fall off the “sports radar” in about 2 days.
    * No one will be talking about this story in July, much less August or September.
    * The local media has probably already called off the dogs. No more records will be requested by the media organizations. I see zero evidence that any of the print or TV media or ESPN has an appetite to drill down any farther on this.
    * The NCAA will meet UNC at the scheduled date, UNC will lose a football scholarship or two, no post-season ban, 3-4 years probation.
    * The state of NC will create some draconian agent laws impacting all NC colleges.
    * UNC will go to a bowl game and have a Top 25 recruiting class.

  14. Rochester 06/22/2011 at 6:58 PM #

    Will the Heels’ Wal-Mart fans recognize Thorp next year when he’s working as a greeter there after getting canned and not being able to find another job?

  15. Gene 06/22/2011 at 7:50 PM #

    “How can TarHeelWire say that LOIC was found at State during the Valvano case. The NCAA found NO WRONGDOING.”

    Because I think that’s what the NCAA slapped us with that landed us on probation for two years, a post season ban, restricted recruiting activities and a television ban.

    Found this link on the penalties handed down to us http://www.statefansnation.com/index.php/archives/2009/08/01/results-of-1989-ncaa-investigation-into-nc-state-basketball/

    A bunch of stuff about not having appropriate controls for sneaker inventory and tickets and some other stuff. I’m guessing that means LOIC, but I could be mistaken.

    Compared to the crap some schools pull, it is pretty minor. There wasn’t any intention to cheat and gain unfair advantages over other programs by circumventing the rules.

    The reaction of the BoG and others to throw our basketball program under the bus didn’t help matters at all.

  16. Gene 06/22/2011 at 7:54 PM #

    I’m pessimistic about UNC getting hit with serious penalties that have long term damage to their football program, because the Administration and the BoG and the powers that be are “circling the wagons” to make sure the damage from NCAA violations will be minimal.

    They are doing their damnedest to make sure their football program is still perceived positively and I don’t think this will create the same sort of backlash against athletics programs that happened here 20 years ago.

    If anything they’ll treat this as a bump in the road to becoming a football powerhouse.

  17. highstick 06/22/2011 at 8:00 PM #

    Gumby, think “baseball”…it ain’t over yet@!!

  18. VaWolf82 06/22/2011 at 8:10 PM #

    Because I think that’s what the NCAA slapped us with that landed us on probation for two years, a post season ban, restricted recruiting activities and a television ban.

    It’s been a long time, but I think that the NCAA just agreed with the self-imposed penalities (and labels) that NCSU imposed on itself.

  19. choppack1 06/22/2011 at 8:14 PM #

    I don’t think we had a TV ban and we were also allowed to compete in the ACC tournament.

  20. GAWolf 06/22/2011 at 8:58 PM #

    I’ve been saying all along that don’t have today LIC to levy heavy penalties. The corruptionwavas thorough as has ever been seen.

  21. blpack 06/22/2011 at 9:39 PM #

    Vandy just eliminated UNC-cheat baseball. I guess Baddour has to fly home now and face the music.

  22. choppack1 06/22/2011 at 9:43 PM #

    GA Wolf – I really wonder why teams play by the rules. It doesn’t make much sense. I hope the NCAA proves me wrong. Unfortunately, w/ UConn winning basketball tournament (a team already on probation for major violation) and Auburn winning the football national championship w/ a QB whose father allegedly demanded 50k for his son to go to school at Miss State…it appears that UNC is taking the most sensible route to success.

  23. T-Pack 06/22/2011 at 10:37 PM #

    I’m curious as to whether the I.R.S. will have any interest in Blake’s sideline business with Pro Tect and Wichard. Surely he didn’t list his “loans” as taxable income. Who knows … possible tax evasion charges may at some point (after the Sec. of State gets in gear) be just the leverage needed to get him to tell who did what and knew what when. Yes, the NCAA violations and tax evasion would be dealt with by totally unconnected agencies, but considering the quantity of smoke here, there may be other criminal acts being covered … relatively minor ones, most likely, but being covered none-the-less.

  24. ancsu87 06/22/2011 at 10:47 PM #

    Do not even begin to compare UNC issue with the 1989 NCSU basketball issue. There was no LOIC. Whenever a UNC fans brings this up tell them to take their “Carolina Way” and shove it where most of their other attitude comes from. This is the facts about 1989:

    A 1989 NCAA investigation cleared Valvano, but found that players sold shoes and game tickets. As a result, NC State placed its basketball program on probation for two years (the maximum) and was banned from participating in the 1990 NCAA tournament. The state-appointed Poole Commission issued a 32-page report that concluded that there were no major violations of NCAA regulations, and that Valvano and his staff’s inadequate oversight of players’ academic progress violated “the spirit, not the letter of the law.” After this report, Valvano was forced to resign as the school’s athletic director in October 1989. He remained as basketball coach through the 1989–1990 season. Under subsequent pressure from the school’s faculty and new Chancellor, Valvano negotiated a settlement with NC State and resigned as basketball coach on April 7, 1990. Six separate entities investigated Valvano and the NC State basketball program including the NC State Faculty Senate, the North Carolina Attorney General, the University of North Carolina Board of Governors, the NC State Board of Trustees, and the NCAA. None of them found any recruiting or financial improprieties. However, a school investigation did reveal that Valvano’s student athletes did not perform well in the classroom, as only 11 of the players that he coached prior to 1988 had maintained an average of C or better.[4] This was perhaps due to his persistence in recruiting students deemed to be “academic exceptions.”

    The 1989 NC State probation and media attention were all about Jim Valvano bring national attention to NCSU and being a rival not just to Dean Smith but to the flagship university itself. It was also about professors who wanted more money and, while loving the attention and donations Valvano pulled in for the university itself, were jealous of Valvano. They were under the belief that donation money would still roll in without a nationally ranked athletic program.

  25. 61Packer 06/22/2011 at 10:49 PM #

    Wonder what the Daily Tarred Heel will say in Thursday’s weekly summer edition?

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