Gatorubet;1731218; said:
In the recent wide ranging fsu academic scandal case, the FSU higherup in chage of coordinating Nole athletics and academics refused to testify in the years long investigation - despite the fact that his employee - Brenda Monk - said that she was following orders from her supervisors.
Despite this patently obvious attempt to keep the wrongdoing from going higher up, FSU was found by the NCAA to have cooperated in the same manner as USC was found to have cooperated.
I'm not quite sure that that finding means what it sounds like it means when all is said and done.
Goldsmith resigned before the investigation got to him. Both the university and the NCAA tried to get him to cooperate. This is all detailed in the investigative report. He got hit with a show cause order for his failure to cooperate.
Oh8ch;1731093; said:
Your efforts to defend USC are valiant. But O J Mayo was a ticking time bomb from day one. I went back and looked up my first post in the O J Mayo thread. This is from July of 2006:
I agree that Mayo was a mistake. So does the university. Hence the self-imposed sanctions on bball.
Buckeyeskickbuttocks;1731081; said:
Meeting an institution's obligations does not mean it volunteered information. I think that may be what's honking some people off. The sense is SC didn't give up the goods on their own, even if they did provide all that was asked of them. (Conversely, the sense is - certainly on this board - that Ohio State said "Hey, we're an open book.... here's this, here's that.... we looked high... we looked low.. this is what we found.. anything else you need?")
I have no opinion on that, just trying to make sense of the NCAA report as cited by Thomps, and the 4 year "stonewalling" idea. I think it's pretty clear that the investigation should not have taken than long, if SC was volunteering information. But, that said, and I haven't looked - I don't see where SC was obligated to do so while still being able to meet their "Cooperation" requirements.
The investigation took 4 years because the NCAA tried to wait out the Bush lawsuit. Finally, SC got Bush to agree to sit down with the NCAA in the summer of 2009 and the notice of allegations went out that fall.
Sorry, but I think the proposed idea that "stonewalling really means cooperating when asked but not going above and beyond" is simply changing the argument mid-air (which I am not accusing you of, but if anyone said before that USC stonewalled and now tries to use this clarification, then they are retreating without trying to make it look that way).
Here are some of the definitions of stonewall:
dictionary.com said:
to block, stall, or resist intentionally: lobbying efforts to stonewall passage of the legislation.
To engage in delaying tactics; stall: "stonewalling for time in order to close the missile gap"
To refuse to answer or cooperate with; resist or rebuff
I doubt Taos said "stonewall" but meant "cooperated when asked but nothing more."
But let's talk about this idea. What gives this sense that USC didn't volunteer information? The fact that it fits conveniently into a picture of the bad guy getting his just deserts?
Certainly nothing publicly available. We have the NCAA saying that USC cooperated (which assertion is of course immediately questioned on this board since it is inconsistent with the black/white story of bad and good). We have Taos quoting Paul Dee's statement about the reasons the investigation took so long:
"Dee said the investigation stretched on nearly four years for a multitude of reasons. Chief among them was the fact that it encompassed so many different facets, including three different sports, two major athletes, multiple individuals outside the USC program, and eventually, the majority of USC?s athletic administration. The report also notes that a lack of cooperation by the subjects ? Bush and his family and Mayo ? slowed the progress of investigators.
The only lack of cooperation cited is that of Bush, the Griffins, and Mayo.
So where is the basis for this "sense" that USC did not assist? You say it isn't required by the rules, but the very first sentence of 32.1.4 contemplates an "affirmative obligation on each institution to assist the enforcement staff in developing full information to determine whether a possible violation of NCAA legislation has occurred and the details thereof."
The NCAA says USC met that obligation. The NCAA knows what role USC played in this investigation. The NCAA knows what information USC volunteered and did not volunteer.
People on this board who sense that SC did not cooperate have no idea. They aren't privy to the communication that went on between the NCAA and SC.
As for the Ohio State comparison, as I said I will not discuss Ohio State compliance on this board.