ScriptOhio
Everybody is somebody else's weirdo.
Perhaps there's a place for Biancardi in the NBA...
Maybe there is a position for him at "sparechange.com" working with this guy.
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Perhaps there's a place for Biancardi in the NBA...
WSU, Biancardi part ways
'Voluntary termination' comes after NCAA banned coach from recruiting
By Marc Katz
Dayton Daily News
FAIRBORN | Wright State University announced Monday that the stormy tenure of men's basketball coach Paul Biancardi has ended.
Biancardi's attorney, Jim Zeszutek, called the development "a voluntary termination."
Biancardi, who recently completed his third season at Wright State, was found guilty last week by the NCAA Division I Committee on Infractions of recruiting and extra benefits violations while he was an assistant coach at Ohio State from 1997-2003.
The NCAA banned Biancardi from all recruiting activities until Oct. 1, 2007.
Monday's announcement did not address whether Biancardi was fired. He had two years remaining on his contract. WSU spokesman Bob Noss called it "a joint agreement" and said that "both parties signed off this afternoon at 4 o'clock."
Biancardi, who had a three-year record of 42-44, met with his team at 4:30 p.m. at WSU's Stetzer Pavilion. WSU Athletics Director Mike Cusack met with the team at 5.
Cusack had no comment. Part of the agreement included a provision that neither side would comment on Biancardi's departure.
The statement from the WSU athletics department was issued under the headline, "Joint statement by Wright State University and head coach of WSU men's basketball, Paul Biancardi."
It indicated that the move was made as a result of the NCAA report released Friday.
It also indicated that "a national search for a new head men's basketball coach will begin immediately."
Contact Marc Katz at 225-2157.
It’s official
An Ohio State spokesman confirmed that all games and accomplishments, not only those in the NCAA Tournament, will be vacated for the 1998-99 through 2001-02 seasons, as required by the NCAA sanctions against the men’s basketball program.
Banners recognizing the Buckeyes’ Big Ten championships in 2000 and 2002, Big Ten tournament title in 2002, Final Four appearance in 1999 and NCAA Tournament appearances all four years were hanging again in Value City Arena yesterday for the girls state basketball tournament, but with the vacated years removed.
NCAA ruling negates damages to O’Brien, OSU argues
Attorneys discuss settlement; award hearing put off
Saturday, March 18, 2006
Kathy Lynn Gray
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Ohio State University apparently will use the NCAA’s recent infractions decision to argue that the university doesn’t owe Jim O’Brien damages in his successful breach-of-contract lawsuit against the school.
O’Brien, who coached OSU men’s basketball until he was fired in June 2004, won the lawsuit in the Ohio Court of Claims in February.
A separate trial had been scheduled April 12 to determine damages but it has been put off, OSU spokesman Jim Lynch said. The new date was not available from the court yesterday.
A brief conference yesterday didn’t bring about a settlement, he said.
In a statement filed March 10, OSU attorneys suggested that 12 issues should be considered at the trial. Among them is whether O’Brien’s claim for back pay is "barred or reduced" because the NCAA found he had committed a major infraction when he lent the family of potential recruit Alexander Radojevic $6,000 in 1998.
After a long investigation, the NCAA announced March 10 that O’Brien, Ohio State and former OSU Assistant Coach Paul Biancardi were guilty of several NCAA rules infractions.
OSU attorneys also suggested in the statement that damages be reduced because of what they called O’Brien’s lack of good faith, his breaches of contract and other issues.
O’Brien’s attorneys said the former coach is entitled to recover damages beyond his back pay, and his contract does not limit how much the university owes him because the university breached that contract.
The court lists O’Brien’s case as a $9.5 million lawsuit, but his attorneys have said he’s asking for either $3.5 million or "in excess of $6 million."
Ohio State would have had to pay O’Brien $3,484,205 to fire him with five years left on his contract. The $6 million-plus would be the buyout figure plus damages, as per O’Brien’s contract.
Ohio State has listed 18 witnesses it might call, including former nanny Kathleen Salyers, her daughter Amanda, several of Salyers’ friends and a neighbor, NCAA officials Julie Roe and Steve Duffin, and former coaches O’Brien, Biancardi and Randy Shrout.
A lawsuit Salyers filed in 2003 led to the public disclosure of the $6,000 loan to Radojevic. Salyers said yesterday that she wasn’t aware she was a potential witness in the case until she saw the statement.
O’Brien lists eight potential witnesses, including himself, former OSU Athletics Director Andy Geiger, OSU President Karen A. Holbrook, OSU men’s basketball coach Thad Matta and OSU attorney Julie Vannatta.
[email protected]
Ex-OSU coach gets new trial in April
Judge to decide damages owed
Friday, March 24, 2006
Kathy Lynn Gray
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Ohio State University has never been willing to discuss a settlement in the lawsuit filed by fired men’s basketball coach Jim O’Brien.
O’Brien won the case in February when Ohio Court of Claims Judge Joseph T. Clark ruled that the university breached O’Brien’s contract by firing him in June 2004 for loaning $6,000 to a recruit’s mother in 1998.
Clark scheduled a separate, two-day trial in April to determine how much in damages the university owes.
But after a pretrial conference last week, Clark rescheduled the trial for five days, June 5-9, and canceled a March mediation session at OSU’s request.
"Jim O’Brien has been willing to talk about resolving this situation from Day 1," said Brian Murphy, one of O’Brien’s attorneys. "Nothing about that has changed. But OSU has been 100 percent unwilling to even discuss that."
OSU spokesman Jim Lynch said there have been no settlement negotiations in the case.
"The university’s legal counsel informed Judge Clark that the university was not willing to enter into settlement discussions with Coach O’Brien or his attorneys," Lynch said. "That led to the judge’s decision to cancel the mediation."
Asked if the university ever has been willing to settle the case, Lynch said:
"The university continues to believe that it acted appropriately in terminating Coach O’Brien, and the serious and extensive sanctions just imposed on the university by the NCAA make it very clear that Coach O’Brien’s violations of NCAA rules caused enormous damage to the university and will continue to have adverse consequences into the future."
The court lists O’Brien’s case as a $9.5 million lawsuit, but his attorneys have said he’s asking for either $3.5 million or "in excess of $6 million."
Ohio State would have had to pay O’Brien $3,484,205 to fire him with five years left on his contract. The $6 millionplus would be the buyout figure plus damages, as per O’Brien’s contract.
[email protected]
Salyers: OSU case made her an outcast
NCAA probe hurt her, too, whistle-blower says
Monday, March 27, 2006
Kathy Lynn Gray
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Kathleen Salyers, whose lawsuit prompted the NCAA probe of OSU’s basketball program, says she’s been vilified for telling the truth.
The whispering starts while she’s standing in line at the grocery store or Target.
Snatches of it reach her ears: "OSU ... that’s her ... basketball."
Every now and then, someone takes her picture with a camera phone.
Even now, two years after her revelations prompted a harsh look at Ohio State University men’s basketball, Kathleen Salyers is still something of a pariah in her hometown.
"It’s a difficult community to live in right now," Salyers, 48, said from the living room of a relative she’s living with.
"I’m very paranoid, always looking over my shoulder, not trusting. I used to walk down the street and smile and say ‘Hello.’ Now I look down at the sidewalk."
She’s been demonized as "disgruntled," "crazy" and worse on Internet blogs, radio call-in shows and in e-mails on the Web site she set up to defend herself.
And she’s been blamed for the firing of OSU men’s basketball coach Jim O’Brien and an NCAA investigation that cost the university nearly $1 million and stripped it of the honor of its 1999 Final Four berth.
All because she provided a home away from home beginning in 1998 for a basketball player known as Boban. And because five years later, she sued the couple she says promised to pay her for his upkeep.
In 1998, Salyers was living a quiet suburban life in the Gahanna area with her husband, Walter, their daughter, Amanda, and Salyers’ son from an earlier marriage, Rob Huston.
She cleaned houses for a living and baby-sat for the children of clients Dan and Kim Roslovic of Bexley.
That summer, the Roslovics asked her to provide a temporary home for Slobodan "Boban" Savovic, a Serbian who would begin playing basketball at Ohio State in the fall.
Kim Roslovic, who later admitted she had an affair with Savovic, agreed to pay Salyers $1,000 a month plus expenses to care for Savovic while he was in college, Salyers says.
The money showed up for a short time, then stopped. But Salyers, confident she’d be repaid eventually and increasingly protective of Savovic, continued to pay for what he needed: a special bed, a computer, clothes, his international taxes, a cell phone, travel.
Although he had a dorm room and later an apartment, Savovic became part of the Salyers family, celebrating holidays with them, hanging out with Rob and Amanda and bringing his friends to the house on Pathfield Drive.
The family cheered him on at games, helped with his homework and met his girlfriends.
Their relationship ended abruptly, however, after Savovic’s mother visited from Serbia midway through his senior year. She felt, he later told Salyers in an emotional phone call, that Salyers was trying to replace her as his mother.
Savovic dropped out of the family’s circle.
In the next few years, Salyers’ life turned sour.
The debts she’d wracked up for Savovic remained. To stay afloat, she borrowed and borrowed again. Money problems grew when her husband was forced to retire after several heart attacks and strokes. He moved out in March 2003.
Threatened with foreclosure, Salyers sold their five-bedroom house for less than she owed.
The family scattered.
Salyers moved into an apartment with Amanda, who was then 18.
In August 2003, Salyers filed a lawsuit against the Roslovics to recover the $360,000 she said she was owed.
As Salyers tried to gather evidence to prove that the Roslovics promised to pay her for Savovic’s upkeep, information about the financial and academic help that Savovic had received surfaced in depositions and other legal documents.
And another fact surfaced: O’Brien gave the family of basketball player Alex Radojevic $6,000 while he was being recruited by Ohio State.
That revelation from Salyers’ deposition became public on June 9, 2004, when Ohio State unceremoniously fired O’Brien over the payment. With that, Salyers became renowned practically overnight in Columbus and in the world of college sports.
Few believed her account of the $6,000 or her claims that she’d helped get Savovic’s grades changed, written college papers for him, provided him with spending money and received free tickets to basketball games from O’Brien.
Fewer still believed her when she said she’d provided the help at the direction of Paul Biancardi, an assistant coach under O’Brien.
"We live in a town that bleeds scarlet and gray," said Salyers’ sister, Rita, who asked that her last name not be used.
"To most people, especially the sports fans, Ohio State can do no wrong.
And anyone who says that they did becomes scum."
Salyers lost most of her cleaning jobs as a result of her notoriety. A few friends stood by her, but many turned their backs.
Once, she said, a man pushed her against the wall at a fast-food restaurant and told her to drop her lawsuit. Another time her daughter’s tires were slashed.
Much of what Salyers said in depositions and interviews has been verified by others in the past two years.
Two Ohio State teachers confirmed they changed Savovic’s grades. Several people admitted they helped Salyers write papers for Savovic. O’Brien admitted he’d given the Radojevic family $6,000, saying it was for humanitarian reasons.
The NCAA, after a nearly two-year investigation that included interviews with Salyers, declared her credible and punished the university, O’Brien and Biancardi this month for breaking NCAA rules.
A few days later, Biancardi was fired from Wright State University, where he was the head men’s basketball coach.
By then, Salyers had settled her lawsuit with the Roslovics. As part of the agreement, she can’t disclose details.
"People are under the assumption that because this case was settled, Kathleen walked away with some big, huge settlement," Rita said. "But I see how she’s living. She’s sleeping on a mattress that has coils sticking up out of it."
Salyers won’t say who she’s living with now in Columbus. She lived with a friend in Cincinnati for much of last year but returned here to care for Amanda’s 2-year-old daughter, Kayla.
"I don’t understand how people can be so angry with me now that they know I told the truth. I had to tell the truth. Would they rather I lied? "
Saddled with her "15 minutes of fame" and her responsibility for Kayla, she’s been unsuccessful finding a part-time job.
She’d like, she said, "to hold my head high and know that I at least attempted to do the right thing.
"I think that Ohio State should make some kind of an attempt to apologize or admit there was a breakdown in the system. The community would better understand my situation if they did that."
[email protected]
"I don’t understand how people can be so angry with me now that they know I told the truth. I had to tell the truth. Would they rather I lied? "
Saddled with her "15 minutes of fame" and her responsibility for Kayla, she’s been unsuccessful finding a part-time job.
She’d like, she said, "to hold my head high and know that I at least attempted to do the right thing.
"I think that Ohio State should make some kind of an attempt to apologize or admit there was a breakdown in the system. The community would better understand my situation if they did that."
I'm ashamed of our Coaching Staff (O'Brien and Biancardi, mostly) for doing this and for the Athletic Dept and Admin for not properly controlling it. This black eye is going to stick with not only our BB program but also our FB and other sports programs. O'Brien really had me fooled......completely. It's sad that Matta/Tressel and their players will have to face this kind of BS....and, yes, we alums as well. This sucks.....but at least the punishment is official and the future is more defined for us.
O’Brien asking for $3.6 million
Coach is owed nothing, OSU tells court
Wednesday, April 19, 2006
Kathy Lynn Gray
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
Attorneys for Jim O’Brien have asked the Ohio Court of Claims to cancel a second trial in his breach-of-contract lawsuit and rule that Ohio State University owes the former men’s basketball coach $3.6 million.
"The court should require the university to live by the deal it made," states O’Brien’s latest motion. "In order to calculate the amount of Coach O’Brien’s damages, the court need only know the coach’s base salary, the value of his benefits, and the number of years remained on his contract."
Judge Joseph T. Clark ruled in favor of O’Brien in February after the initial trial, then ordered a second trial to determine damages. That trial is set for June 5-9.
In a brief filed Monday in the Court of Claims, Ohio State argues it doesn’t owe O’Brien anything despite the trial results.
The university details the numerous sanctions the NCAA imposed March 10 on the school’s athletic program, most for violations in the men’s basketball program during O’Brien’s era.
Calling O’Brien "the architect of this disaster," Ohio State said, "Both common law and common sense require that Coach O’Brien’s demand for further compensation be rejected."
Ohio State fired O’Brien in June 2004 after he admitted giving a potential recruit’s mother $6,000 after her husband died in 1998.
O’Brien sued and Judge Clark agreed that O’Brien’s contract did not allow him to be fired under those circumstances.
In his request for summary judgment, O’Brien says he is due $236,552 in partial liquidated damages, which is one year’s salary plus benefits.
He says he’s also due liquidated damages of $3.3 million. Under his contract, this is 3.5 times his base salary of $188,335 for each of the 5.06 years remaining on his contract.
Ohio State argues that it accumulated evidence after firing O’Brien that would have given officials there sufficient cause to fire him.
"Such after-acquired evidence necessarily does away with any possible award of liquidated damages," the school’s brief asserts.
The university gives several other reasons it should not have to pay O’Brien.
It says O’Brien was not negotiating in good faith when the contract was under consideration and that any damages he might be due are offset by the damages the university suffered by his actions.
[email protected]