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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds (Merged)

The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article. ESPN's again covers the Troy Smith suspension (and how Maurice might be linked) with a repackaged AP article.



01/11/05
Newspaper connects OSU QB to booster money - ESPN FB

Updated: Jan. 11, 2005, 10:41 AM ET
Newspaper connects OSU QB to booster money
ESPN.com news services

CLEVELAND -- Payments for a cell phone used by former Ohio State running back Maurice Clarett might have led to the suspension of quarterback Troy Smith.

A report Tuesday in The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer said sources close to Ohio State and Smith told the paper that Smith used the money from Springfield booster Robert Baker to pay an overdue bill for a phone Smith's mother obtained for Clarett, a friend of her son's.

Smith; his mother, Tracy Smith; Clarett; and Baker could not be reached for comment. Clarett's mother, Michelle Clarett, said she knows nothing about the matter.

Smith missed the Alamo Bowl because of a disciplinary suspension. Ohio State didn't specify what improper benefits Smith might have received.

On Monday, outgoing OSU athletic director Andy Geiger expressed regret that Smith hadn't involved the school when Clarett's phone bill came due and repeated that Smith's suspension likely will include the 2005 opener against Miami (Ohio), according to the Plain Dealer.

Geiger cited federal student privacy laws in declining to comment on specifics of the phone scenario, the newspaper reported.

Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article. ESPN's repackages an Associated Press articles and tosses in another inflammatory headline. What ran as "Brand praises Ohio State dealings with Clarett" on the vast majority of headlines throughout the country received a different title on ESPN. At least they are consistent.



01/18/05
Brand: Clarett may have been unprepared for college - ESPN FB

Updated: Jan. 18, 2005, 4:55 PM ET
Brand: Clarett may have been unprepared for college
Associated Press

CLEVELAND -- NCAA president Myles Brand said Friday that Ohio State took "strong and transparent measures" to deal with former Buckeyes running back Maurice Clarett, who claimed to have received improper benefits while playing for the school.

Brand made the remarks during a question and answer session after a speech before the City Club of Cleveland.

The NCAA started investigating Ohio State in November after Clarett told ESPN The Magazine that coach Jim Tressel, his staff and school boosters arranged for him to get passing grades, money for bogus summer jobs, thousands of dollars in cash and loaner cars.

Most of Clarett's allegations were covered as part of an earlier NCAA probe that found Clarett lied to investigators, leading to his suspension from the team in 2003. Clarett helped Ohio State win the national championship in 2002.

Brand said Friday that Clarett is a great athlete but may not have been prepared to go to college.

"I do think frankly that Ohio State took strong and transparent measures to deal with him," Brand said. "He was influenced by sports agents and attorneys. In that effort I think he was exposed to some issues that he might not otherwise have been exposed to."

Brand also announced Friday the creation of the association's Task Force on the Future of Intercollegiate Athletics. The appointed panel will study strategies to help athletic departments cope with costs if revenues do not continue to climb.
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article. ESPN's repackages an Associated Press article.



01/31/05
Clarett pulls out of skills challenge - ESPN FB

Monday, January 31, 2005
Clarett pulls out of skills challenge
Associated Press


MIAMI -- Maurice Clarett stiff-armed another commitment, reinforcing doubts about his reliability and fitness with the NFL scouting combine three weeks away.

The elusive, reclusive former Ohio State running back had been scheduled to participate in the college football all-star challenge, an eight-player skills event taped Monday by Fox TV at Dolphins Stadium for broadcast Saturday.

But he recently hired a new agent, Steve Feldman, who told organizers late last week that Clarett was pulling out.

"It was completely my decision," Feldman said. "He wanted to be there, but from a safety standpoint, it doesn't seem logical to take a chance that he might tweak something or pull something or damage something that would prevent him from showing off his stuff at the combine."

At the combine a year ago, Clarett showed up overweight and declined to work out. He'll be eligible for the draft in April after his legal bid to enter the NFL last year was overturned by an appeals court. He hasn't played since being suspended by Ohio State following the 2002 season.

Feldman said Clarett is healthy and working with a private trainer but declined to say where.

"This guy will blow people's minds at the combine," Feldman said. "He is in fantastic shape. That's why it seems ludicrous to jeopardize it at this point."

Following the combine in Indianapolis, which begins Feb. 23, Clarett will likely take part in two or three private workouts, Feldman said.

Organizers of the all-star challenge said Clarett had accepted an invitation to the event earlier in January before hiring Feldman.

"Unfortunately Maurice is carrying forward his tradition of not honoring commitments and being very unpredictable," said Dan Jones, vice president of Intersport, the company producing the show. "We were excited about giving him an opportunity to change the public perception, and unfortunately he has done the exact opposite and reinforced it."

Players participating included Aaron Rodgers, Jason White, Carnell Williams and Braylon Edwards, who shrugged off Clarett's absence.

"To be invited to something like this, I thought it would be something good for him," Edwards said. "Clarett's Clarett."
"I would be curious to just meet him and see where his head's at," Williams said.

Organizers disputed Feldman's contention that Clarett would have risked injury by participating. The event measures agility, speed and strength, and Jones said model Marisa Miller -- who will appear on the show -- tested the course without incident.

"If a supermodel can run through the course in high heels and not get injured, I'm pretty sure Maurice Clarett can do it without getting injured," Jones said.

But with the combine approaching, Feldman said Clarett can't risk even a minor injury, unlike other NFL prospects.
"The other guys have film. They've played the last two years. They can afford a tweak or pull," Feldman said. "He can't. He's got to be ready."

Feldman's clients include New England Patriots Corey Dillon and Rodney Harrison. Clarett has also retained as an attorney David Kenner, who has represented Death Row Records founder Marion "Suge" Knight.

Clarett rushed for 1,237 yards and 16 touchdowns as a freshman in 2002, leading Ohio State to the national championship. He was then suspended for lying to investigators during an NCAA investigation of allegations he received improper benefits from a family friend.

"He's going to convince people he has learned a great deal in the last year and a half," Feldman said.

This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire. Wire index
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds - Related Article

ESPN article. ESPN's repackages an Associated Press article and again uses an inflammatory headline. While 99% of the agencies that ran this story used a headline VERY similar to "Ohio State looks into dental work accusations", ESPN decided to go with this gem ... "AD won't say how many players are involved". This headline is intended to give the false impression of more impropriety with the football team. Even the headline is false. Geiger, in the article, details exactly how many players might be involved.



02/11/05
AD won't say how many players are involved - ESPN FB

Updated: Feb. 11, 2005, 8:59 AM ET
AD won't say how many players are involved
Associated Press

COLUMBUS, Ohio -- Ohio State is investigating allegations that a booster provided free dental work to members of the women's basketball team, athletic director Andy Geiger said Thursday night.

Geiger said no current members of the second-ranked Buckeyes are in danger of being declared ineligible, and that an investigation was under way into whether NCAA rules were violated.

An orthodontist may have done work on players but failed to bill their insurance companies, Geiger said. He would not specify when the alleged infraction took place.

The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported Friday that Geiger said two current players received invoices from an orthodontist saying they owed nothing, and the players assumed their insurance had paid for the work. Geiger said three or four other players over the past five years could also haven been involved.

The school reported the situation to the NCAA, which approved continued eligibility for the two current players, Geiger said.

"It's in hand. We're looking at it," Geiger told The Associated Press.

The school's athletic department has faced a series of NCAA investigations into its football and men's basketball programs over the past three years.

Ohio State suspended former star running Maurice Clarett following the 2002 season for lying to investigators during an NCAA probe of allegations that he received improper benefits from a family friend.

In December, the school imposed a one-year postseason tournament ban on its men's basketball team over an alleged $6,000 payment to a recruit by former coach Jim O'Brien.

Also in football, quarterback Troy Smith was suspended for the Alamo Bowl for accepting benefits from a booster.
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article #19. The first hard story authored by an ESPN pundit for some time. This is a harsh look at Clarett written by a reporter for Scouts, Inc. I have deleted the following portion of the article as it doesn't deal with Maurice. Follow the link to see the entire text.



02/07/05
Clarett remains on the sideline - ESPN FB

Updated: Feb. 7, 2005
Clarett remains on the sideline
By Todd McShay, Scouts, Inc.
Todd McShay Archive

It seems that former Ohio State RB Maurice Clarett is incapable of making a mature, responsible decision. After being ruled eligible for the 2005 NFL draft, one would think that Clarett would get himself into exceptional shape and participate in a postseason all-star game.

There were early rumors that Clarett would play in the East-West Shrine game, but he evidently turned down the offer. Most recently, Clarett had been scheduled to participate in a college football all-star challenge, but newly hired agent Steve Feldman told organizers just a few days prior to the event that Clarett would not take part. Clarett continues to make decisions that reflect poorly on his character and maturity level. Failing to capitalize on these opportunities will only contribute to his draft-day freefall ...

Scouts, Inc. watches games, breaks down film and studies football from all angles for ESPN Insider.
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article. ESPN repackages another Associated Press article



02/24/05
Clarett emerges from the shadows - ESPN FB

Thursday, February 24, 2005
Clarett emerges from the shadows
Associated Press


INDIANAPOLIS -- Maurice Clarett isn't challenging anyone but himself these days.
No lawsuits against the NFL. No feuding with authorities.

Instead, Clarett showed up Thursday at the NFL Combine with a smile and a plan. The former Ohio State star who challenged the league's draft rules in court -- and eventually lost -- claims he can handle anything except not playing.

"This is a big day I've been preparing for for a long time," he said. "This day has been on my calendar for a long time, coming here interviewing with everybody, kind of knocking off the kinks everybody had on me and the knocks everybody had on me. I've been real focused and ready for this day to come.

" I'm not sure what I have to convince them of."

Here's a little help, Maurice:

--NFL teams want to know how a two-year layoff has affected your running skills.

--And whether you are team-oriented enough for them.

--And if you've matured during that hiatus caused by a school suspension, then having a federal appellate court overturn a lower court ruling that made all underclassmen (and even high school players) draft eligible.

"He'll have to show people he's been working and is in shape," said Bills general manager Tom Donahoe, a loud critic of Clarett last year, when he did not work out for teams at the combine. "He'll probably have to work out well to show that. The fact that he hasn't played in a year is not a positive, so I think it is important based on what happened last year.

"I think you have to give the young man a chance to give his side of the story and then decide whether he's truthful. If you talk to other people and decide what he says is accurate, then you have to try and weigh the whole thing. I don't wish any kid ill will, but I think when you're on display, you should do everything you can to put your best foot forward, and I don't think he did that last year. Hopefully, he will this year."

Clarett is guaranteeing it. At 21, he says he has matured and learned from his mistakes. He spent much of the last year training in California and being tutored by his lawyer, David Kenner. Now, he's presenting the new Maurice Clarett, not the guy who basically blew off the 2003 combine. Not the guy who pleaded guilty to lying on a police report after claiming $10,000 in merchandise was stolen from his car. Not the youngster who accepted benefits in college to which he was not entitled.

And not the Clarett who accused Ohio State of arranging for a no-work job and providing improper academic aid after he was suspended by the school.

"A more positive person" is what the NFL will get, he says. "I've got a lot greater work ethic than I had last year. I think my drive is a whole lot more determined than I was last year. I just want to work, I don't care if it's special teams, anything, just get me on the field, I want to play with anybody."

Who is interested? That's hard to tell this early in the draft process and with so many questions surrounding Clarett.

But pro teams know all about the powerful runs and shifty moves Clarett showed in leading the Buckeyes to the 2002 national title. Of course, they also are aware of all the troubles he's had since.

Plus, this is a strong class of running backs, led by Cedric Benson of Texas, Ronnie Brown and Carnell Williams of Auburn, and Ciatrick Fason of Florida.

"I think it's a disadvantage," Fason said of Clarett's layoff, "because sometimes when you play, you'd be in a football season like us being in college, then we take four months off. Then we are back in spring football. In just those four months that you took off, you'd be kind of rusty the first couple of weeks when you put the pads back on. You have to get used to it all over again.

"Him sitting out two years is going to be real strange for him to get back onto the field."

Clarett, who last was tackled in the spring of 2003, acknowledges there will be some rust, but expects it to wear off quickly. He seems to understand the questions about his character could last longer.

"I had to take a look at myself from outside myself," he said. "When I looked at myself, sometimes I kind of looked like a joke to myself. I guess it was a part of growing up and becoming who I am today. I did do some things I shouldn't have done. I've taken responsibility for all those things and I'm just ready to move forward."

This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire. Wire index
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article. ESPN repackages an AP article detailing Mike Williams thoughts on Clarett.



02/25/05
Top running backs take back seat to Clarett as NFL combine opens - ESPN FB

Friday, February 25, 2005
Top running backs take back seat to Clarett as NFL combine opens
Associated Press


INDIANAPOLIS -- A season without football hardly was a lost year for Mike Williams.

Sure, the league and the courts kept him out of the 2004 NFL draft. And the NCAA wouldn't restore his eligibility, forcing him to sit out a second straight national championship journey for Southern Cal.

Williams isn't about to harp on those negatives, not when he has a chance to show the pros just how ready he is, beginning at the NFL combine this week.

"There's probably 20 minutes of last year that I really was down, that I really felt like I had the world on my shoulders," the wide receiver known for his spectacular catches said Friday. "I'm blessed to have a really good support group of people that really care about me, really care about my best interests.

"When I didn't know if I was going to get back in school or not ... I was getting calls from coaches at SC, wondering how I was doing, how I was holding up, making sure I was OK, making sure (if) I need anything. As soon as they found out I couldn't get back into school, the phone stopped ringing. And I have no problem with that.

"Emotionally, I'm ready to go. I definitely put myself in this situation physically and mentally and with my work ethic to hopefully turn out better this year than possibly last year."

A year ago, Williams entered the draft when the league was forced by the courts to open it to underclassmen. Ohio State running back Maurice Clarett brought the lawsuit, and when an appellate court overturned the lower court decision, it left Clarett and Williams in limbo.

While Clarett, who was suspended by the Buckeyes and missed the 2003 season, did not return to school, Williams petitioned the NCAA to be reinstated. He lost that appeal and has not played in a game since the Trojans won the 2004 Rose Bowl.

"I talked to Maurice a couple of times when things had first happened," Williams said. "But I've ... really tried hard to distance myself from his situation because we're kind of at different ends of the spectrum. But in the same token, I think we're always going to be linked together. We both understood that, but I definitely don't see him as the reason why I wasn't able to be in the draft last year. It's nothing personal against him, never has been. I just worry about maintaining my focus and my image, and I take care of my business."

Projected to go in the top 15 last year, when the wide receiver class was deep and five wideouts went in the first 15, Williams now is more of an uncertainty.

"It's hard," Ravens coach Brian Billick said of evaluating Williams. "You have to go back to the tapes and that has not changed. You take what is on film and now it is a year removed. Even with all that, I imagine he'll be a first-rounder."

And if your team is in dire need of a playmaking receiver, as the Ravens are?

"Maybe you take that little bit of a leap," Billick said.

Unless Williams completely botches his interviews and workouts -- he's scheduled his "pro day" for March 10 in Tampa -- he should be one of the first receivers selected. And this again is a good crop, although not quite as strong as a year ago.

"Braylon is a great receiver," Williams said of Michigan's Braylon Edwards, generally considered the top wideout. "I know (Oklahoma's) Mark Clayton personally. I know he's a great receiver. I've met Troy Williamson (South Carolina); he's a good guy. Terrence Murphy (Texas A&M) is a good guy. It's a lot of really good guys that are going to do some things in this league."

Including, of course, Mike Williams?

"Mike is about as gifted as anyone I've ever seen," said Georgia quarterback David Greene, who has been working out in Atlanta with Williams. "He's caught quite a few balls he wasn't supposed to catch and you just go, `Wow!' "

But will the NFL go "Wow!" as well?

This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire. Wire index
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article #20. ESPN's John Clayton details Clarett's apparent change in attitude before the 2005 combine. A new Maurice?



02/26/05
Clarett brought improved attitude to Indy - ESPN FB

Updated: Feb. 26, 2005, 8:10 PM ET
Clarett brought improved attitude to Indy
By John Clayton, ESPN.com

INDIANAPOLIS -- What a difference a year makes.

A year ago, Maurice Clarett showed up in Indianapolis at the combine by way of a lawsuit instead of an invitation, and, basically, he fumbled.

Clarett wasn't in great shape and didn't seem to care. From the way he acted, he sounded as though the NFL owed him a career. Instead, the NFL beat him in court and closed the loophole that would have allowed underclassmen with less than three years out of high school to turn pro. Clarett hasn't played a down of football in two years.

The player that showed up Thursday was a different Clarett, one that might win over a few general managers and coaches and possibly sneak back into the first day of the draft. This Clarett was cooperative, not defiant. This Clarett looked fit. His face was thinner. His body looked more solid. More than anything else, though, this Maurice Clarett was humble.

"I made some mistakes that were obvious to everyone in this room, and I paid for them," Clarett said.

Clarett arrived at the combine this year weighing 234 pounds. While that is only three pounds lighter than a year ago, his body looked more trim and fit. The former Ohio State running back said he has been training in Florence, Calif., doing sled drills, agility drills and weightlifting.

In many ways, Clarett did his best to put a positive spin on two years of personal hell. He felt he was above the NFL rules and learned a valuable lesson. Now, he wants to put those memories behind him. But he realizes that won't be easy to do.

Perhaps the most interesting thing he said was that he spent time working on his personality. He spent a lot of time during the past year with an attorney, David Kenner, who told him things about himself he didn't want to hear. It helped him mature.

"I worked on so much stuff," Clarett said. "I worked on stuff as a person, just personal things. I worked on me basically. It was a good thing. He [Kenner] wasn't scared to tell me about my faults and wrongdoings. It's kinda like a blessing."

Twice, Clarett used the word humble about himself. You wouldn't have found "humble" and "Clarett" in the same sentence a year ago.

"I wasn't saying I was humble in the past all the time," Clarett said. "I have said some things to the media I shouldn't have said. This taught me how to be humble."

Obviously, being humble was something new. For two years, he felt as though he could beat the system. He thought he could come into the NFL against the league's will. He was wrong.

The price was two years outside football and a return trip to the combine. He said doctors joked with him about returning.

“I had to take a look at myself from outside of myself. I looked at myself, and I looked like kinda a joke to myself. I wasn't mature. I did some things I shouldn't have done. I'm ready to move forward.”
— Maurice Clarett, former Ohio State running back


Clarett announced to the world Thursday that he's willing to play special teams, be a backup or do whatever a coach wants him to do. He even said he will do everything during Saturday's workout session involving running backs at the combine. A year ago, he didn't begin serious training until after the combine and ended up running an uninspiring 4.6 in the 40 during his individual workout.

"This is another opportunity, we'll see what he does with it," Bills general manager Tom Donahoe said. "Based on what happened last year, maybe for once I was right."

Donahoe was Clarett's biggest critic a year ago. He questioned Clarett's resolve for showing up at the combine out of shape and with a little bit of an attitude. As far as the Bills are concerned, Donahoe's not interested in Clarett -- and with Willis McGahee, the team doesn't need him. But, at least for now, Donahoe was encouraged.

The prevailing thought heading into the combine was that Clarett probably rated as a low third- or fourth-round choice. He hasn't played in two seasons. He's not fast. And in the one year he did play at Ohio State, he was dogged by injuries. He hasn't played a full season without an injury since his senior year in high school.

But there is a new, competitive look with Clarett. The confidence is still there. He admits to not being intense at last year's combine. Now, he's intense.

"You can ask anybody who I've ever played against that I don't fool around," Clarett said. "I handle my business. I have toned myself down a little bit. I've made football my life again. I think I will be fine."

Clarett dismisses the rust factor from two lost years.

"It will take me two or three weeks to get my rhythm and speed back," Clarett said.

Good times in his workout could help immensely, but the interviews will be just as important. He has to sell teams interested in drafting him on his personality. He has to convince them that he won't be a cancer or a problem in the locker room.

"I had to take a look at myself from outside of myself," Clarett said. "I looked at myself, and I looked like kinda a joke to myself. I wasn't mature. I did some things I shouldn't have done. I'm ready to move forward."

Clarett made the first step, and it was a good one.

"We haven't seen him play in two years," Texas halfback Cedric Benson said. "It's a tough situation, but regardless what he's been through, somebody is going to love him and somebody is going to pick him up."

Clarett's mission this week it to find that somebody.

John Clayton is a senior writer for ESPN.com.
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article. ESPN repackages an AP report on Maurice's combine performance.



02/26/05
Clarett messes up workout - ESPN FB

Saturday, February 26, 2005
Clarett messes up workout
Associated Press


INDIANAPOLIS -- All that baggage Maurice Clarett has been carrying for years seemed to be riding on his shoulders when he ran Saturday at the NFL combine.

Clarett expected to blow away everyone with his workout. Instead, he might have blown his chance to go early in April's draft.

While fellow running backs J.J. Arrington and Ronnie Brown were running very quickly, impressing scouts and personnel directors, Clarett managed a 40-yard time above 4.7 seconds; because he was not among the five fastest, no official time was provided.

That's not nearly fast enough for a first-day draft prospect. Some runners, especially those with a history as cloudy as Clarett's, don't get selected at all when they seem so slow for the position.

"It was a rough one," Clarett told NFL Network. "I've been working so long to get to this day, doing better at practice, and I kind of mess it up. I'm frustrated. I've been working a long time, waking up at 5:30 and going back at 12:30 and then at 7 o'clock, and I totally busted."

He certainly didn't make any teams think about drafting him in a big-money slot. Instead, he claimed he aced the interview sessions with the teams, then bungled the physical stuff.

"A lot of coaches said I was a lot more humble and approachable," he said. "I thought they'd ask a lot more about what happened in the past."

Such as challenging the league's draft rules in court, winning early, then seeing an appellate court overturn the decision, making him ineligible for the 2004 selections after he missed the '03 season under Ohio State suspension.

Or pleading guilty to lying on a police report after claiming $10,000 in merchandise was stolen from his car.

Or accepting benefits in college to which he was not entitled.

Or accusing Ohio State of arranging for a no-work job and providing improper academic aid.

Or showing up unprepared for last year's combine.

Or not playing football in '04, either.

Those things are on his resume, however. So is his spotty workout Saturday in which he skipped several drills after his slow run.

"I think we were all as disappointed in his time as he was," Titans general manager Floyd Reese said. "It looks like he's in better shape than last year. It wasn't quite what he hoped when he ran 40s. And it doesn't help when guys around him run 4.4s."

That would be Arrington, of Cal, who ran a 4.46, and Brown, of Auburn, who turned in a 4.48 on either side of Clarett's poky pace.

"After two years out, he has to get himself in football shape," Cardinals coach Dennis Green said of Clarett. "We don't even know how fast he has run before.

"If you look at the 2002 season, he can play football."

That's what Clarett hopes NFL people do until his personal workout in two weeks. And he might get the benefit of the doubt from some, such as Cardinals executive Rod Graves.

"I will says this, because there is a lot that goes on out there that you have to keep it within the context," Graves said. "Maurice Clarett, when he had the opportunity to perform without the distractions that went on off the field, performed very well. I think you have to keep that in mind when you're evaluating Maurice Clarett. That he is a good football player when his focus is there. And when he's on the field."

This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire. Wire index
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article. More AP information on Clarett's combine performance.



02/28/05
The 40 takes the spotlight - ESPN FB

Monday, February 28, 2005
The 40 takes the spotlight
Associated Press


INDIANAPOLIS -- Mike Williams ran. Matt Jones ran fast. Jerome Mathis ran very fast.

Maurice Clarett ran, but looked as though he was walking.

Oh, what 120 feet can do for a football career.

The NFL combine is all about interviews, physicals and drills. But the focal point always is the 40-yard dash that many -- but hardly all -- prospects run.

During the weekend, Williams, who originally said he would pass on the 40, changed his mind and ran a pair of 4.59s. Not great for a wide receiver, but at least Williams put himself on the line and produced a time, something several other wideouts didn't. Including the top player at the position, Michigan's Braylon Edwards.

But many did perform -- and perform well.

"It was good to see Mike out there running," Tennessee coach Jeff Fisher said of the Southern Cal receiver who sat out last season in the fallout from Clarett's failed legal challenge go the draft. "It's great for the clubs to see so many guys running."

Williams wants to play wide receiver in the pros, although some teams believe he could be a tight end or H-back. Two definite wideouts, Miami's Roscoe Parrish and Oklahoma's Mark Clayton, ran swift 4.43s.

"Clayton earned himself a lot of money by doing that," NFL draft expert Gil Brandt said.

Mathis, who played at Hampton in Virginia, was the fastest wideout at 4.32. Brandt and Cowboys coach Bill Parcells caught him in an incredible 4.25, which would have broken the best registered combine time of 4.28 by Deion Sanders.

That time could shoot Mathis' value way up. A small college All-American, Mathis certainly improved his stock. He already had a big Gridiron Classic, scoring on a 26-yard reception and a 38-yard run off a reverse. Mathis had 108 yards of total offense in that game.
Jones has become an intriguing prospect. A quarterback at Arkansas, where he also played basketball, his 4.41 time was the fastest ever by a quarterback at the combine.

"Very impressive," Fisher said.

Jones is looked at as a wideout or an H-back by many pro teams. He apparently has very good hands, too.

Of the true QBs, former Florida State player Adrian McPherson ran a 4.72 before he tweaked his quadriceps. That was the quickest at the position.

Courtney Roby of Indiana sped to a 4.36 to trail Mathis among wideouts.

All of them would have left Clarett in the dust. The former Ohio State sensation -- for one year at least -- badly set back his cause with slow 40s. His best was in the 4.75 range, with no official time released because he wasn't in the top five in his running backs group.
While fellow running backs J.J. Arrington and Ronnie Brown were running very quickly, impressing scouts and personnel directors, Clarett botched his opportunity.

"It was a rough one," Clarett told NFL Network. "I've been working so long to get to this day, doing better at practice, and I kind of mess it up. I'm frustrated. I've been working a long time, waking up at 5:30 and going back at 12:30 and then at 7 o'clock, and I totally busted."

He certainly didn't make any teams think about drafting him in a big-money slot. Instead, he claimed he aced the interview sessions with the teams, then bungled the physical stuff.

"A lot of coaches said I was a lot more humble and approachable," he said. "I thought they'd ask a lot more about what happened in the past."

Such as challenging the league's draft rules in court, winning early, then seeing an appellate court overturn the decision, making him ineligible for the 2004 selections after he missed the '03 season under Ohio State suspension.

Or pleading guilty to lying on a police report after claiming $10,000 in merchandise was stolen from his car.

Or accepting benefits in college to which he was not entitled.

Or accusing Ohio State of arranging for a no-work job and providing improper academic aid.

Or showing up unprepared for last year's combine.

Or not playing football in '04, either.

Those things are on his resume, however. So is his spotty workout Saturday in which he skipped several drills after his slow run.
"I think we were all as disappointed in his time as he was," Titans general manager Floyd Reese said. "It looks like he's in better shape than last year. It wasn't quite what he hoped when he ran 40s. And it doesn't help when guys around him run 4.4s."

Including a quarterback.

This story is from ESPN.com's automated news wire. Wire index
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article #21. ESPN's Len Pasquarelli details Maurice's poor performance in the combine.



02/28/05
After slow times, Clarett quits drills - ESPN FB

Updated: Feb. 28, 2005, 3:08 PM ET
After slow times, Clarett quits drills
By Len Pasquarelli, ESPN.com

INDIANAPOLIS -- A federal appeals court kept Maurice Clarett out of the 2004 NFL draft. This time around, the former Ohio State standout tailback could keep himself from being chosen in the 2005 lottery.

Clarett, who was hoping to improve his stock with NFL scouts, squandered his latest shot at redemption on Saturday afternoon, posting sluggish performances in the 40-yard dash. According to the unofficial times, Clarett ran 4.72 seconds and 4.82 seconds in his two efforts. Because he was not among the five fastest, no official time was provided.

How slow are those times? By comparison, four offensive line prospects, all weighing more than 300 pounds, were clocked faster than five seconds.

"It's a rough day," said Clarett, who has not played in a game since Ohio State claimed the 2003 national championship. "I prepared 20 times harder than a year ago. I worked to get ready for this day. To totally bust it ... well, it's frustrating."

While he still has time to prepare for a personal workout on March 8, there is now some sense that Clarett, who earlier this week seemed enthused about another chance to prove himself to talent evaluators, might go undrafted. Even with a good performance, he might have been only a middle-round selection, particularly given his long layoff.

Clarett took part in some of the early drills during the running back session at the RCA Dome. After running his 40s, he pulled on his sweatshirt and opted not to finish the rest of the drills. When he appeared in an interview with the NFL Network after the poor times, Clarett appeared to be distraught at his performance.

The scouts quickly surveyed by ESPN.com universally panned Clarett's workout. Arizona Cardinals coach Dennis Green said that the former Ohio State star has a tough road ahead of him.

"Well, it was obvious he didn't run the way he had hoped to, and he has to go back and try to get himself ready for his [private] workout next month," Green said. "I mean, we really don't know how fast he ran when he was playing football. But we know he didn't run fast after this prolonged period away from the game."

At the opposite end of the spectrum, Auburn star Ronnie Brown dazzled scouts with a workout that included unofficial 40-yard times of 4.32 and 4.40. Brown also caught the ball well and may have established himself as the top tailback prospect, ahead of former Auburn teammate Carnell "Cadillac" Williams and Cedric Benson of Texas.

Len Pasquarelli is a senior NFL writer for ESPN.com.
 
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The Maurice Clarett Saga Unfolds

ESPN article #22. Maurice Clarett's biggest "friend" in the media resurfaces ... Tom Friend! Here's Tom's views (and excuses) on Maurice Clarett's poor combine performance. Oh yeah, and Tom thinks once everyone knows the "whole story", they should get off Maurice's back. OK?



03/01/05
What really happened to Clarett - ESPN FB

Updated: Mar. 1, 2005, 4:57 PM ET
What really happened to Clarett
By Tom Friend, ESPN The Magazine
Tom Friend Archive

In another example of how five seconds can definitively change your life, we present you with Maurice Clarett.

He ran/jogged a 4.82-second 40-yard dash at the NFL Scouting Combine -- live on national TV, no less -- and now he's a mystery all over again. Everyone is taking shots at Clarett. Some media members actually sat in the press room Saturday laughing out loud at his expense. One NFC scout said he could've run better than Clarett.

But that wasn't the worst of it. After Clarett ran a 4.72 in his second attempt -- and decided, out of frustration, to blow off the rest of the drills -- many teams wrote him off completely. They said if he quits at a combine, he'll quit in a fourth quarter somewhere. That's how a lot of NFL people think, and probably nothing can change their minds ... not even the whole story.

But someone -- maybe an Arizona, maybe an Oakland -- will try to find out what really happened to Maurice Clarett at the combine and over the last 12 months. And maybe then they'll get off his back.

Let's go back a year, to the 2004 combine. Clarett, who at the time was eligible for the draft, noticed how the scouts, during the weigh-in, were salivating over Greg Jones of Florida State. Jones was chiseled, looking like an Adonis, and a flabby Clarett made a mental note right then that it should've been him.

Later, after the courts had removed him from the 2004 draft, his mind kept drifting back to Jones. If he was going to repeat the process, and parade again in front of NFL scouts in his underwear, he was going to be buff. In fact, he said he was going to look better than Jones. He was going to look like David Boston.

In retrospect, it was a mistake. Boston, the sculpted Miami Dolphins wide receiver, has tried in the past to play at 250-plus pounds, and has experienced knee problems as a result. Clarett ended up following a similar training and eating regimen and, while he appeared rock solid, his body mass had increased too much. His work ethic was commendable and his body fat was plummeting, but his weight was exorbitant and there had to be some doubt about what it would do to his speed.

Eventually, by late January, he was ready to choose his agents. And in concert with his attorney, David Kenner, he settled on Steve Feldman, who represents Corey Dillon and Rodney Harrison of the world champion New England Patriots. Feldman and his associate, Josh Luchs, explained to Clarett that he had to get his weight down, preferably in the 220s, and Kenner -- Clarett's most trusted confidant -- agreed with them.

By this time, Clarett did not have a permanent trainer, so on his own he began working 16-hour days in Los Angeles to get trimmer and leaner. No one knows how heavy he'd been at his apex -- although it's conceivable he'd been around 250 pounds at one point -- but it was through tireless work that he showed up in Indianapolis at 234.

The problem was, his body might have been sapped from losing a lot of weight in a short period of time. And he was also way too nervous, skittish that his entire future was coming down to a three-day period in Indianapolis. He actually ended up flying into Indy two days ahead of the combine, afraid that he couldn't get a proper workout in rain-infested Southern California. That's how intent he was about performing well; he was borderline neurotic about it.

The first two days of the combine seemed to ease his fears a little. His press conference, his first public appearance in a year, was an unequivocal success. He never bashed his former school, Ohio State, and he explained that he'd do every drill the NFL people asked him to do, that he was willing to play special teams next season or be third string. His interviews with teams went smoothly as well, because he was forthright and humble.

A year before, when a few teams asked about his family, he snapped, "What does my family have to do with anything? I'm here to play football." He'd been confrontational, a loner, but this time he was one of the pack. Players wanted to eat meals with him, were following him around, were asking him questions about the combine.

After he did 22 repetitions of 225 pounds on the bench press -- one of the best numbers put up by a running back -- most teams were beginning to perceive him as a first-day draft pick. They liked that his body fat was down from almost 17 percent last year to 11.4 percent this year.

But every night, late at night, he'd still get back on the hotel treadmill. He was worried about the 40, knew he had to deliver in the 40.

The pressure had to be getting to him. No one was more scrutinized that week than him, and on the day before the 40-yard dashes, he took off during his lunch break and ran wind sprints on an outdoor track in 30-degree weather.

Even that night, 14 hours before his 40-yard dash, he was back on the hotel treadmill, running, thinking, analyzing.

The next day, of course, was a disaster. He's never been a speedster anyway, but his 40s lacked explosion. He looked spent, defeated. The worst thing he could've done was quit, but that's what he did, on a whim, overwhelmed by the embarrassment of it all. Last year, completely out of shape, he had run a 4.6. This year, in shape, he'd run a 4.8.

His closest confidants felt he'd over-trained, but the spin had already been spun by then. Word traveled fast. NFL people said he was a bust, that he might not get drafted. It broke his heart, and in a post-40 interview with The NFL Network, which no one in their right mind would have expected him to do, he was inconsolable and took full responsibility for his collapse.

Where does he go from here? He's back in L.A., and he's headed back to the gym, back to a trainer who specializes in speed and fast muscle twitch. He said he will work out at Ohio State's Pro Day, on March 9, but this is news to Ohio State, where he is essentially on a black list.

Either way, he will run again, at a weight better suited for the 40, and his hope is that some team, any team will bring a stopwatch.

Because all it takes is one.

Tom Friend is a senior writer for ESPN The Magazine. E-mail him at [email protected].
 
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Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge James Kleinberg issued a preliminary ruling Thursday that states three Mac enthusiast sites can be forced to expose their sources to Apple Computer. Kleinberg said journalistic protections do not cover Web sites, and will hear further arguments Friday from Apple and the EFF.

http://www.betanews.com/article/Judge_Web_Sites_Must_Reveal_Sources/1109948966

The far reaching implications? Anything made for ESPN.com would not be subject to journalistic protections, and any "sources" cited could be brought out in a court room proceeding.
 
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Winter games in Norway are branching out

By Dwight Perry

The Seattle Times

Sideline Chatter


Maurice Clarett has nowhere to run.



Eddie the Eagle, meet George of the Jungle.


Eleven competitors flocked to the Hallingskarvet wilderness area, 125 miles west of Oslo, for Saturday's second annual Norwegian Tree-Ski-Jumping Championships, in which the winning jumper is determined by how high he or she can stick a landing up a tree. Eldar Heide, for example, struck gold — not to mention the trunk of a small birch — about 6 ½ feet off the ground last year. So, other than a few bumps and bruises ...

"It isn't really all that dangerous," event organizer Oeystein Lia told The Associated Press. "It usually goes pretty well."

Easy for him to say. Insurance underwriters, on the other hand, insist you'd be lucky to live long enough to win this thing once or twice, let alone treepeat.

NFL injury update

In an unprecedented announcement, Ohio State officials declared that ex-Buckeyes running back Maurice Clarett has been ruled out of this week's Pro Day workouts because of a cold shoulder.
 
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