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NCAA must come down on Calipari

POSTED AT 08:23 PM ON Aug. 24, 2009 | PRINT | Email | SHARE | COMMENTS (14)

Although 13 years have passed since Kentucky coach John Calipari’s last incident, there’s been a common occurrence at the end of his two most successful seasons.

Final Four appearances at both the University of Memphis and the University of Massachusetts have had their records erased and banners yanked from the rafters. The most recent at Memphis came down only five days ago.

Here’s my question to the NCAA: Why has more not been done to look into Calipari’s most recent incident at Memphis?

Given his track record, you would think the NCAA would have more concern.

The Memphis basketball program was hit earlier this summer with allegations that Derrick Rose, a freshman from the 2007-08 team, had a stand-in take the SAT for him. Rose had failed the test twice before passing on his third try and becoming eligible to play at Memphis.

The NCAA forced Memphis to vacate its 38 wins tallied in 2007-08 on Aug. 20, and removed the Final Four banner.

Rose went on to play point guard for the Chicago Bulls, and he led them to the playoffs last season. Meanwhile, his coach at Memphis, Calipari, went on to 33 wins and Sweet 16 appearance in the 2008-09 season. He was rewarded with an eight-year $31.65 million coaching job to revive the historic Kentucky basketball program.

According to a statement released by Kentucky, the coach is in no danger of consequences stemming from the situation, and current Memphis coach Josh Pastner said the Memphis program isn’t in hot water, either.

Calipari’s coaching job before Memphis ended with a very similar situation.

The 1995-96 UMass Minutemen, coached by Calipari, had their Final Four banner taken down from the stadium rafters. The punishment came after it was found that NBA star and former UMass center Marcus Camby became involved with an agent and accepted $28,000 while in school.

While it was decided UMass officials had no way of knowing what was going on behind the scenes in ’96, this is the second offense at a second program to have a situation like this occur under his watch.

Lesser violations have been looked into further.

For instance, the violations by Kelvin Sampson at IU were much more heavily investigated by the NCAA than Memphis’ violation of academic standards thus far.

Isn’t the allowance of a student-athlete to evade educational standards a little worse than impermissible phone calls?

Everyone saw what Sampson’s example of cutting the recruiting corners can do to both the future of a coach and a program. A minimal investigation such as the one seen in the Rose situation does nothing to steer coaches and players away from the temptation of putting hoops before a high school diploma.

At the very least, a sort of probation needs to be the consequence on Calipari’s end. And, if evidence proves fault, a heavier sanction for Memphis may also be consequential.

ESPN’s Erik Kuselias summed it up best last week while on “The Herd With Colin Cowherd.” Kuselias stated the NCAA’s essential blind eye to the situation thus far is a reflection of a problem all too common in society: “If there’s production, there’s no wrong.”

While money and business are at stake in professional sports, collegiate athletics have an added classroom aspect. The current Calipari situation’s  educational ties make it a perfect time for the NCAA to emphasize its grades-before-glory purpose.

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14. Posted by Trent at 12:55 PM on Aug 26, 2009 | Report this comment

Hey Frank, why don't you leave the commentary to those who actually know what they're talking about -- like Dick Vitale and others? I notice no mention of Corey Maggette and Duke.

13. Posted by Willie at 11:23 AM on Aug 26, 2009 | Report this comment

The kid who wrote this obviously didn't do his homework or a little research beforehand.

12. Posted by ryan at 11:2 AM on Aug 26, 2009 | Report this comment

Ok the author is a Coach Cal hater. Read Dick Vitale's article and this should clarify a lot of misunderstandings. There isnt a coach in the country who would not have played Rose, after being cleared by the clearinghouse not once, but TWICE. Cal, had him checked out TWICE just to be sure. Even he had his doubts.

11. Posted by Tom Burns at 10:50 AM on Aug 26, 2009 | Report this comment

I am incredulous that you would compare Kelvin Sampson's egregious recruiting violations while under NCAA sanction to John Calipari/Derrick Rose. You don't know what John Calipari knew or suspected in respect to Derrick Rose's SAT scores. You don't know that Derrick Rose did not take the SAT exam in question. Even the SAT people can't say for certain Rose didn't take the test. Their expert says there is a 40% chance that Rose didn't take the test, so they invalidated his score. The circumstances are so far removed from the concrete evidence of violations committed by Kelvin Sampson it becomes a work of fiction to attempt to equate the two. While you are entitled to a personal opinion of what the truth is in relation to John Calipari and Derrick Rose, your opinion is not substance to call for sanctions against John Calipari. Sanctions should be based upon facts. Better you should question why Memphis is required to vacate the 2008 tournament while Duke (Corey Maggette) is not required to vacate the 1999 tournament. Or why Kansas (Darrell Arthur) hasn't been required to vacate their 2008 Championship given the sanction against Memphis.

10. Posted by jday2101 at 9:5 PM on Aug 25, 2009 | Report this comment

Well, at Rupp arena, you don't have to worry about taking down a Final Four banner. As only National Championship banners are hung. If the NCAA cleared Rose to play 3 times that year, why aren't they the ones to blame. As far as Calipari goes, who really (and lets be honest) thinks he knew about Camby. Its nor like Camby is going to tell him, "hey coach, this agent gave me $25,000 in cold hard cash." The Rose and SAT situation happened before Rose was at Memphis, so why is Calipari in this discussion. Rose is the one to blame and the only one who will not pay a price. Calipari will pay a price in recruiting over the next few years!

9. Posted by Chris Huffer at 8:29 PM on Aug 25, 2009 | Report this comment

I do see the problem that Calipari gets to walk away without even a wrist slap, and Sampson makes three illegal phone calls and our program falls apart, and he cannot coach for five years in the NCAA. Remember, Indiana is the one that uncovered the Sampson NCAA violation and turned it into the NCAA. Perhaps if we would have been like Kentucky, and not made that big of a deal about it, our program would never have been punished. Seems USC Football and basketball and John Calipari get to cheat and the NCAA is okay with it. I cannot figure out that institution-the NCAA seems to be unfair. I wish that USC and Calipair would have been penalized. Seems to be unfair being an Indiana fan. Looks like we got screwed and Kentucky and USC get to rise. Perhaps we can blame this on Myles Brand. I guess he truly hates Indiana University. Can't say I admire him.

8. Posted by Doc Moonlight at 8:13 PM on Aug 25, 2009 | Report this comment

Camby, like a man, accepted responsibility for his actions and paid UMASS back once he became a pro. And Calipari's job before Memphis was coach of the Nets, not coach of UMASS.

7. Posted by andrew at 6:7 PM on Aug 25, 2009 | Report this comment

its true, the banner is still in the Mullins Center at UMass

6. Posted by Steve at 4:49 PM on Aug 25, 2009 | Report this comment

Glad to see Calipari is gone fro Memphis and become Kentucky's problem. A school that was dumb enough to let Tubby go is dumb enough to accepy Calipara for a couple of years of glory. Kentucky has sold it's basketball soul and the university's legacy for short term fame. They will pay the price in the long run.

5. Posted by Richard L at 11:20 AM on Aug 25, 2009 | Report this comment

Who do you think is running the NCAA? It is that same hypocrit that came from IU that dumped Knight from his basketball coach position. I would recommend that we get this multiple standards loser, Myles Brand, out of his post. Just take a look at USC's football violations too and tell me what did he do?

4. Posted by Josh at 9:51 AM on Aug 25, 2009 | Report this comment

The Final Four Banner is still on display at the Mullins Center at UMass. It was not taken down.

3. Posted by k92 at 8:51 AM on Aug 25, 2009 | Report this comment

Something under the table is sugested to me in an instance like this. One university and coach is punished severly and two other coach's walk away with not even a hand slap.

2. Posted by Mark Beyke at 7:48 AM on Aug 25, 2009 | Report this comment

You don't want Calipari to be investigated, you want him to be punished "At the very least, a sort of probation needs to be the consequence on Calipari’s end.". Why should he be punished when the NCAA found no evidence of his wrong doing. Memphis and UMASS should not have been punished either as they did nothing wrong. Rose and Camby are the guilty parties and they are the one who should be punished.

1. Posted by ksanders7 at 1:35 AM on Aug 25, 2009 | Report this comment

really. how about the difference being that sampson made the phone calls that broke the rules. point blank, caught red handed. while calipari didn't give camby money and hookers personally, nor did he take the test for rose. that seems like a pretty obvious difference. sampson broke the rules, calipari had students break rules. sampson has recruiting violations, calipari has no violations. instead he has recruits who got cleared by the ncaa to play, and it was later found out that they accepted money from an agent or have a test in question before they even made it to campus. i for one have felt bad for the hoosiers and the situation sampson left the program in, but i also think tom crean is the guy to turn it around. but if he were to have a top recruit except money from an agent or have a player possibly cheat on a test and not know about it, i wouldn't be too hard on him. especially if the ncaa has cleared him of any wrongdoing, just as they have calipari both at umass and at memphis.


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