Don
04-05-2007, 03:04 PM
I was just reading where Pat Summit bought each of her three assistant coaches a $43,000 Mercedes SLK 280 roadster.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/basketball/ncaa/women/specials/ncaa_tourney/2007/04/05/tennessee.rally.ap/index.html
It prompted me to look up the last probation UF had in football. One of the offenses was just that. Extra benefits provided to assistant coaches.
from the NCAA report
https://goomer.ncaa.org/wdbctx/LSDBi/LSDBi.MajorInfPackage.ProcessMultipleBylaws?p_Mult iple=0&p_PK=89&p_Button=View+Public+Report&p_TextTerms=ThisIsADummyPhraseThatWillNotBeDuplica ted&p_TextTerms2=ThisIsADummyPhraseThatWillNotBeDuplic ated&p_Division=1
"E. [NCAA Bylaw 11.3.2.2]
On one occasion each during the 1985-86 and 1987-88 academic years, and on three occasions during the 1988-89 academic year, the then head football coach provided salary supplements to two then assistant football coaches at the institution. "
The other two football related offenses were:
"C. [NCAA Bylaws 16.10.2.7 and 16.12.2.1]
On January 8, 1987, during a meeting in the office of the then head football coach, the then head coach provided an envelope to a then graduate assistant football coach and instructed the graduate assistant coach to drive a then student-athlete to the county sheriff's department in the young man's hometown where the student-athlete used the contents of the envelope (the contents of which had been provided by the then head coach) to satisfy the young man's delinquent child support debt.
Specifically, after the then head coach's instructions, the then graduate assistant coach drove the student-athlete to the young man's home where the student-athlete obtained some personal money, which the young man believed he might need in addition to the contents of the envelope to satisfy his debt, and finally, the then graduate assistant coach and the student-athlete then traveled to the sheriff's department where the young man discharged the $360.40 debt with the contents of the envelope; further, the student-athlete did not use any of his personal money to discharge that debt.
D. [NCAA Bylaws 16.12.2.2 and 16.12.2.3-(a)]
During the fall of 1986, a then assistant football coach provided a loan of between $70 and $100 to a then student-athlete to pay for the balance of an airline ticket that the young man utilized to travel home for Christmas; further, a representative of the institution's athletics interests provided this cash to the then assistant coach, and, finally, after the student-athlete returned from the Christmas vacation, he repaid the money to the then assistant coach who subsequently returned the money to the representative. "
These are the three offenses that cost UF the SEC championship in 1990 and cost UF a trip to a bowl game.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2007/basketball/ncaa/women/specials/ncaa_tourney/2007/04/05/tennessee.rally.ap/index.html
It prompted me to look up the last probation UF had in football. One of the offenses was just that. Extra benefits provided to assistant coaches.
from the NCAA report
https://goomer.ncaa.org/wdbctx/LSDBi/LSDBi.MajorInfPackage.ProcessMultipleBylaws?p_Mult iple=0&p_PK=89&p_Button=View+Public+Report&p_TextTerms=ThisIsADummyPhraseThatWillNotBeDuplica ted&p_TextTerms2=ThisIsADummyPhraseThatWillNotBeDuplic ated&p_Division=1
"E. [NCAA Bylaw 11.3.2.2]
On one occasion each during the 1985-86 and 1987-88 academic years, and on three occasions during the 1988-89 academic year, the then head football coach provided salary supplements to two then assistant football coaches at the institution. "
The other two football related offenses were:
"C. [NCAA Bylaws 16.10.2.7 and 16.12.2.1]
On January 8, 1987, during a meeting in the office of the then head football coach, the then head coach provided an envelope to a then graduate assistant football coach and instructed the graduate assistant coach to drive a then student-athlete to the county sheriff's department in the young man's hometown where the student-athlete used the contents of the envelope (the contents of which had been provided by the then head coach) to satisfy the young man's delinquent child support debt.
Specifically, after the then head coach's instructions, the then graduate assistant coach drove the student-athlete to the young man's home where the student-athlete obtained some personal money, which the young man believed he might need in addition to the contents of the envelope to satisfy his debt, and finally, the then graduate assistant coach and the student-athlete then traveled to the sheriff's department where the young man discharged the $360.40 debt with the contents of the envelope; further, the student-athlete did not use any of his personal money to discharge that debt.
D. [NCAA Bylaws 16.12.2.2 and 16.12.2.3-(a)]
During the fall of 1986, a then assistant football coach provided a loan of between $70 and $100 to a then student-athlete to pay for the balance of an airline ticket that the young man utilized to travel home for Christmas; further, a representative of the institution's athletics interests provided this cash to the then assistant coach, and, finally, after the student-athlete returned from the Christmas vacation, he repaid the money to the then assistant coach who subsequently returned the money to the representative. "
These are the three offenses that cost UF the SEC championship in 1990 and cost UF a trip to a bowl game.