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AKAK

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Didn't see this posted elswhere.-- but... I don't know... Does this seem like a problem to you guys? And I thought the Indian thing was bad.

Dogs fans show heart, but . . . link
NCAA won't let them pay for dad's trip to game
By CHIP TOWERS
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Published on: 08/11/05

ATHENS ? A group of Georgia football fans took up a collection to pay for a Boise State player's father to fly from Baghdad to see his son play against the Bulldogs in Athens.

But the NCAA rule book got in the way.


Georgia fans wanted to raise money to bring Dan Miller from Iraq to see his son play for Boise State, but the NCAA prohibits it.


Dan Miller, father of Broncos sophomore guard Tad Miller, is a retired police lieutenant who is training Iraqi police officers.

When Sam Hendrix of Signal Mountain, Tenn. ? "suthndawg" to his fellow Georgia fans on the Dawgvent, an Internet message board ? read a story in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution about the Millers, he started an online movement to raise the $2,700 it will cost Dad to make it to Sanford Stadium to see his son play in the home opener Sept. 3.

"Within moments of suthndawg's post, there were 25 to 50 people who offered to pledge money," said Ryan Crowe, a 25-year-old legal assistant from Atlanta who offered to collect and distribute the funds. "It just took off from there."

But when Crowe checked with the two schools, he was told the UGA fans' generosity would be a violation of NCAA bylaws regarding extra benefits and expenses for student athletes and their families.

"Ironically, by providing this money, these [Georgia] fans would in effect become Boise State boosters," said Amy Chisholm, UGA's assistant athletics director for compliance. The NCAA defines a booster as "a representative of an institution's athletics interests."

NCAA spokeswoman Gail Dent did not have an immediate response to questions about the situation Wednesday.

"Makes no sense to me," said Hendrix, a 56-year-old marketing consultant. "It just hits me that twice in a week, these people have lost touch with reality."

The NCAA caused a furor when it ruled last week that member schools' Native American mascots would no longer be allowed at championship events.

Word of the Georgia fans' good intentions ? and their being thwarted ? spread quickly via the Internet.

"It was such a nice and giving gesture, I almost felt embarrassed," said Kathy Miller, Tad's mother, who lives in Boise, Idaho. "We appreciate it so much. But we want people to know that the company Dan contracts for pays for his R&R every six months, and this will be his first time home since January. So his travel is taken care of."

"Perhaps they can collect money to send some underprivileged kids to the game or something," she added.

Kathy Miller said the family received other overtures from Georgia fans. One offered to host a party for the family when it arrives in Athens. Miller said she is running everything by Boise State's compliance office.

Said Crowe: "Us Georgia fans love our football but, as a collective group, we're pretty hospitable people."
 
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That just goes to show you how stupid Georgia fans are. All they needed to do was contact the athletics administration office at UG. They would have told them all kinds of methods to get money to players and their families without the NCAA ever knowing about it. :wink2:
 
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FCollinsBuckeye said:
Perhaps we should all go in and by lavish gifts for scUMmers and their families... :sneaky:
I've thought about that. Give one of those guys $500 or so. Then I realized that I don't have $500 to give.

I think the NCAA is right when they want to put "student" back in "student-athlete." But not letting the kid's dad fly to see his kid play is pretty stupid. (The fact that he's in Iraq has no weight in my opinion. I'd have the same opinion if the kid's dad was in the next town over and needed cab fare.) It's not like he's going to Vegas afterward and then to Paris and then to Germany and then wherever the hell else he wants to go.

You know that if this was Troy Smith's dad, this would be ALL OVER the national news. Cable TV could quit crying about how the Tennessee fugitives were found so quickly, and they could ride this for 2 months easily.
 
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