First, in before Charlie...
Second, I am biased. I will not try to hide that. I've hated the Hurricanes for decades.
For background, these two ESPN 30 for 30 documentaries are highly recommended: The U, about the rise of the Miami football program, and Pony Excess, about the fall of the SMU football program.
Tuesday morning, this story broke over on Yahoo! Sports. A Miami booster, now in prison for a Madoff-style ponzi scheme, is claiming to have paid millions in illegal benefits to Miami football and basketball players, with the full knowledge of coaches and school officials. He claims to have documentation, just in case anyone tries to call him out as 'just a convicted felon.'
If true, this could be the end of the Miami football program as we know it. Mark May has said if even a third of the allegations are true, the death penalty is more than warranted. The current head of infractions for the NCAA, Paul Dee, was Miami AD during the time most of this was going on. When talking about the recent USC violations, he claimed a high-profile school, with high-profile athletes, warrants high-profile enforcement. But today, when it's his ass on the line, can only counter with a weak "we can't watch everyone." He's got to either recuse himself or flat out resign. Can't have it both ways, Paul.
Like Mike and Mike said on ESPN this morning, this was a guy trying to buy the friendship of 20 year old inner city black kids. Is anyone surprised they ran the other way when the Feds came after the guy?
The guy admits to wanting to be the next Luther Campbell, the rapper and Miami booster who got the program in trouble in the late 80s when he started throwing money around. Shapiro revels in his nickname of "Lil' Luke".
For a program that hasn't really tried to hide it's thug image, they deserve everything that happens to them from here on out.
Second, I am biased. I will not try to hide that. I've hated the Hurricanes for decades.
For background, these two ESPN 30 for 30 documentaries are highly recommended: The U, about the rise of the Miami football program, and Pony Excess, about the fall of the SMU football program.
Tuesday morning, this story broke over on Yahoo! Sports. A Miami booster, now in prison for a Madoff-style ponzi scheme, is claiming to have paid millions in illegal benefits to Miami football and basketball players, with the full knowledge of coaches and school officials. He claims to have documentation, just in case anyone tries to call him out as 'just a convicted felon.'
If true, this could be the end of the Miami football program as we know it. Mark May has said if even a third of the allegations are true, the death penalty is more than warranted. The current head of infractions for the NCAA, Paul Dee, was Miami AD during the time most of this was going on. When talking about the recent USC violations, he claimed a high-profile school, with high-profile athletes, warrants high-profile enforcement. But today, when it's his ass on the line, can only counter with a weak "we can't watch everyone." He's got to either recuse himself or flat out resign. Can't have it both ways, Paul.
Like Mike and Mike said on ESPN this morning, this was a guy trying to buy the friendship of 20 year old inner city black kids. Is anyone surprised they ran the other way when the Feds came after the guy?
The guy admits to wanting to be the next Luther Campbell, the rapper and Miami booster who got the program in trouble in the late 80s when he started throwing money around. Shapiro revels in his nickname of "Lil' Luke".
For a program that hasn't really tried to hide it's thug image, they deserve everything that happens to them from here on out.