That deserves a good bricking.
conns7901 wrote:
By Gene Wojciechowski
ESPN.com
Huh? Did the NCAA do what I think it did? Did it basically rule that a father and a third party can actively, brazenly and with impunity shop a player around for hundreds of thousands of dollars -- and the worst thing that happens is the father has to lie low and the third party has to disassociate himself from the programs in question?
No
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Did it just get embarrassed by a rules loophole the size of Jordan-Hare Stadium, the gist of it being: Your old man and another guy can put you on the open market, but as long as you don't know about it, you're good to strap it up for the next big game?
No
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The answers: yes and yes.
My answers are more accurate.
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"In determining how a violation impacts a student-athlete's eligibility, we must consider the young person's responsibility," said Kevin Lennon, NCAA vice president for academic and membership affairs, in announcing the ruling Wednesday that Auburn quarterback Cameron Newton is eligible. "Based on the information available to the reinstatement staff at this time, we do not have sufficient evidence that Cam Newton or anyone from Auburn was aware of this activity, which led to his reinstatement."
Notice the "or" part of that second sentence.
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Amazing. The NCAA just made it possible for anyone with a blue-chip prospect to shop that player without fear of real punishment. Football player … hoops player -- doesn't matter. All you have to do is say the kid didn't have a clue about the sales price and it's like nothing happened. Plausible deniability.
You can't just say that the player didn't know. There has to be evidence that it's true. And the prospect's school can't make any offers. That's a pretty big difference.
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The Rev. Cecil Newton should thank the heavens that the NCAA carries guns loaded with blanks. Newton's penalty for peddling his son: His access to Auburn athletics is "limited." That's it -- "limited," whatever that means.
Whatever the circumstances here, the father wasn't going to be punished. How would making Cam Newton ineligible punish Cecil Newton?
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This isn't a slap on the wrist; it's a wet kiss on the ring finger. Someone who tried to sell his own son as if he were a football commodity essentially beat the rap.
You think the reverend cares whether he has limited access?
Do you think he cares whether Cam is made ineligible for two games?
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Please. In all likelihood, his son has two games left in his Auburn career. And then Cam is off to the NFL, where the auction is sanctioned and done publicly. Amen, to that.
As expected, everyone involved issued the appropriate statements. The NCAA made its molar-less ruling. Auburn said it was pleased with that ruling. And SEC commissioner Mike Slive said, "The conduct of Cam Newton's father and the involved individual is unacceptable and has no place in the SEC or in intercollegiate athletics."
I don't think people are getting this. The NCAA ruling here isn't final. This isn't the end of the investigation. They're just saying, given what we know right now, he is eligible. This is unsurprising.
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Duh. Of course, it's unacceptable.
Nope. Unsurprising.
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But nothing the NCAA or the SEC did Wednesday is going to make this go away in the future. If anything, Cecil Newton provided a detailed road map for those parents or others looking to make a buck (or nearly $200,000) off their sons. Now everyone with their hands out knows the NCAA is powerless to do anything -- just as long as the kid has that plausible deniability.
And as long as
the school they actually play for never makes any offers. Why am I the only person not missing this? Plus, the deniability has to be, you know, plausible.
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And maybe it's just me, but the NCAA's phrase, "Based on the information available to the reinstatement staff at this time …" caught my attention. Does that mean investigators are still digging?
Yes
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Or does it mean they've run out of shovels?
Damned witty, Wilde. Deuce it all.
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And if they are still digging, what happens if they find something after the Heisman vote?
It'll be revoked.
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Or after the national championship game? Then what?
I'll be vacated, and Auburn will be sanctioned back to the stone age. Cam Newton will still be making millions of dollars in the NFL, but guess what? The NCAA could have given Auburn the death penalty today, and Cam Newton would still be making millions of dollars in the NFL next year.
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So Cam Newton is eligible -- for Saturday night's game against South Carolina, for the Heisman and for the BCS National Championship Game, should No. 1-ranked Auburn win the SEC title.
Right now, yes. At least you're catching on.
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But something still doesn't feel right.
The NCAA, for all of its countless, mind-boggling rules, is apparently useless when it comes to a father trying to sell his son. Think about that for a minute. It's like a bad fairy tale:
Once upon a time, in the land of the SEC, the quarterback's scheming father and the evil scouting service owner decided they were going to auction off the quarterback to the highest bidder. Best of all, the quarterback would never, ever know.
You're still not getting this. We don't know that the player was ever auctioned off, because
there is no evidence whatsoever at this point that the "auction winner" actually made any type of bid. The school might be completely innocent, and the player might be completely innocent; at the very least right now, we have no evidence that they are not innocent.
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Then one day they were ratted out.
The handsome quarterback was ruled ineligible but then instantly reinstated by the NCAA, played for the SEC championship, remained the favorite to win the Heisman Trophy and everyone lived happily ever after.
Meanwhile, Cecil Newton is laughing all the way to his big, bad limited access. He got his happy ending. And, as it turns out, so did his son.
But here's the thing: This isn't the end; it's the beginning.
Of the investigation, yes.
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Of loophole chaos.
I understood the "loophole" pretty well within about 25 seconds. I think the NCAA will be able to handle it.