Started By
Message

re: As The Capstone Crumbles: Rumored compliance issue at Alabama per Y Sources

Posted on 9/27/17 at 10:00 pm to
Posted by MrAUTigers
Florida
Member since Sep 2013
28586 posts
Posted on 9/27/17 at 10:00 pm to
quote:

Last I checked, no one from Bama has been arrested.



Yet. But one of your suits, suits, resigned. He didn't resign just because. There may not have been criminal misdoings, but that certainly points to NCAA stuff....at the very least. You don't step down if laws/rules weren't broken.
Posted by SummerOfGeorge
Member since Jul 2013
102991 posts
Posted on 9/27/17 at 10:02 pm to
quote:

Yet. But one of your suits, suits, resigned. He didn't resign just because. There may not have been criminal misdoings, but that certainly points to NCAA stuff....at the very least. You don't step down if laws/rules weren't broken.


Our "suit" (or basketball administrator) who was hired directly from the literal NCAA enforcement office.

Have you read the thread? It sounds like he at least attempted to get involved in some capacity but either did it at a time the FBI wasn't there or didn't finish the job. It's literally in black and white in the report.
This post was edited on 9/27/17 at 10:03 pm
Posted by JustGetItRight
Member since Jan 2012
15735 posts
Posted on 9/27/17 at 10:03 pm to
quote:

You don't step down if laws/rules weren't broken.


Believe it or not, his greed MAY have saved both him and Bama.
Posted by Monticello
Member since Jul 2010
16197 posts
Posted on 9/27/17 at 10:27 pm to
quote:

Yet. But one of your suits, suits, resigned. He didn't resign just because. There may not have been criminal misdoings, but that certainly points to NCAA stuff....at the very least. You don't step down if laws/rules weren't broken.



Not necessarily. There is a legitimate scenario at play here where he is fired for unethical and potentially illegal behavior that does not violate NCAA rules.

If the advisor paid the Bama admin to influence a player to sign with the advisor on a future date, but he never paid the player or his family to do so, that is both unethical, and illegal, but not an NCAA violation. It is not an NCAA violation to recommend a future advisor.
This post was edited on 9/27/17 at 10:28 pm
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow SECRant for SEC Football News
Follow us on Twitter and Facebook to get the latest updates on SEC Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitter