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May 2008

May 27, 2008

Call it the Bomar Rule

Oklahoma has banned any business from employing more than five Sooners athletes at the same time as part of its response to NCAA violations that occurred when three football players took pay for work they had not done at a car dealership.

In a series of compliance changes intended to bring more thorough monitoring of athletes’ employment, even those that do not have a job are required to fill out a form stating their status.

The changes were outlined to the NCAA in the university’s annual compliance report required following major violations by the football and men’s basketball programs. The Associated Press obtained the report Tuesday through an open records request.

Oklahoma subjected itself to an external audit by The Compliance Group in February 2007 and subsequently updated its student-athlete employment policy.

Athletes who wish to seek a job must now fill out employment registration forms and have them signed by their coaches before turning them in to the compliance department. Compliance officials then check with the coach to verify the signature and then work with the employer to ensure that NCAA rules are followed.

The Sooners were stripped of two scholarships after the NCAA ruled that quarterback Rhett Bomar, offensive lineman J.D. Quinn and walk-on Jermaine Hardison had taken pay for work they did not perform at the Big Red Sports and Imports car dealership in Norman. Bomar and Quinn were kicked off the team in August 2006, and by then Hardison had already been dismissed for an unrelated violation of team rules.

Oklahoma reported to the NCAA that it started periodic spot checks of athletes’ employers last year and even monitors Big Red Sports and Imports, where athletes are prohibited from working.

In its investigation, the NCAA blamed Oklahoma for failing to collect gross earning statements for 12 football players who had informed the university that they were employed by Big Red in the summer of 2005. The new employment registration form authorizes employers to release earnings information to the school, and the university provides employers with gross earnings information forms and self-addressed, stamped envelopes to return them to the school.

Oklahoma also informed the NCAA that it has expanded its full-time compliance staff from three to eight workers and also has two part-time staff members. As a result, the annual compliance budget has grown to $1.2 million.

Oklahoma also plans to perform an annual audit of its compliance procedures until at least 2010, when its NCAA probation is set to expire.

-- The Associated Press

May 22, 2008

Big 12 TV games

The Big 12 Conference and ESPN announced several TV games for early in the 2008 season.

ABC will televise 18 games from the Big 12 this season plus the Dr Pepper Big 12 Championship. As part of a two-year agreement with Fox Sports Net (FSN), the Big 12 also has seven contests televised by ESPN or ESPN2 each season, with games being played on Thursday or Saturday.

It had been previously announced that ESPN will televise the Texas vs. Texas A&M game on Thanksgiving evening. The TV schedule announced Wednesday:

Saturday, Aug. 30: Illinois vs. Missouri, 6:45 p.m. (ESPN)

Saturday, Sept. 6: Cincinnati at Oklahoma, 2:30 p.m. (ABC, WFAA/Ch. 8)

Saturday, Sept. 6: Texas at UTEP, 9:15 p.m. (ESPN2)

Friday, Sept. 12: Kansas at South Florida, 7 p.m. (ESPN2)

Saturday, Sept. 13: Arkansas at Texas, 2:30 p.m. (ABC, WFAA/Ch. 8)

Saturday, Sept. 13: Oklahoma at Washington, 6:45 p.m. (ESPN)

Wednesday, Sept. 17: Kansas State at Louisville, 7 p.m. (ESPN2)

Thursday, Sept. 18: West Virginia at Colorado, 7:30 p.m. (ESPN)

Friday, Sept. 19: Baylor at Connecticut, 7 p.m. (ESPN2)

Saturday, Oct. 11: Texas vs. Oklahoma, 11 a.m. (ABC, WFAA/Ch. 8)\

Thursday, Nov. 27: Texas A&M at Texas, 7 p.m. (ESPN)

Friday, Nov. 28: Colorado at Nebraska, 2:30 p.m. (ABC, WFAA/Ch. 8)

Saturday, Dec. 6: Dr Pepper Big 12 Championship Game, 7 p.m. (ABC, WFAA/Ch. 8)

May 21, 2008

Texas Tech player indicted in assault

LUBBOCK — Texas Tech center Stephen Hamby faces an aggravated assault charge for allegedly punching a man in the face twice in March.

Hamby, indicted by a grand jury Tuesday, is accused of punching the man during an altercation near campus. The victim suffered a fractured jaw and was treated at a Lubbock hospital, police said.
Hamby fled the scene, according to a police report.

Hamby, a 6-foot-3, 287-pound junior from San Antonio, walked on at Texas Tech and rose steadily on the depth chart before starting for the first time last season.

Hamby’s attorney, Tom Pitts, declined to comment Wednesday.

Texas Tech coach Mike Leach said in Wednesday’s edition of the Lubbock Avalanche-Journal that he knew of Hamby’s altercation and had not decided whether to discipline him.

“His status is we’ll see what the facts are and then address it based on the facts,” Leach said. “We’re not going to jump to any conclusions.”

May 09, 2008

Report: New witness in Benson arrest

The Chicago Tribune reports that a new witness has emerged in the arrest at Lake Travis of Cedric Benson, the former University of Texas standout now with the Chicago Bears. Here is an excerpt:

A witness emerged Thursday to support Benson’s claim that he was mistreated at nearby Emerald Point Marina on Saturday night.

Toby Patch claims he saw police “manhandling” Benson after taking him off the boat. Patch was not one of the 15 people on the boat.

“As they were taking him up the dock, they stopped. He said, `I am fine, I can continue walking,’ and they put their legs behind his knees and knocked him over his knees and started hog-carrying him,” Patch told WXAN-TV in Austin.

Near the parking area, Patch says the treatment of Benson worsened.

“They ended up — I don’t know why — but laid him on his back, I heard him say, `Please don’t pepper-spray me, please don’t pepper-spray me,”’ Patch said. ”It was uncalled for, it was ludicrous, no point for it.“

Patch’s version sounded similar to the account Elizabeth Cartwright, who was on the boat, gave the ChicagoTribune on Tuesday night. She called her father, Jeff, to urge him to call 911 because she feared her cell-phone battery would run out before she could describe the incident to a dispatcher.

Benson is in Chicago and has not commented since proclaiming his innocence Sunday night and saying police mistreated him. He is considering a lawsuit.

UNT should survive APR hit

Yes, North Texas has a bit of a mess to clean up after this week's latest Academic Progress Reports released by the NCAA. This fall, the football team can't carry more than 80 scholarship players, a penalty of five from the usual limit of 85. UNT football has a four-year average APR score of 917. To avoid penalties, a program must average 925 or better.

While UNT appears more serious about player retention and academic progress, graduation rates of those athletes who remain in a program don't factor into the APR formula. UNT is getting the job done in this area, but a spate of player departures in waning years under former coach Darrell Dickey, and in the transition period to Todd Dodge, took a toll.

So, what now? Five scholarships is a hefty penalty, but maybe it sounds worse than it is. Immediately, it affects the walk-on program, where each August a few worthy hopefuls are rewarded for their progress.

UNT won't be completely without rides to offer for 2008. In 2007, the program was two or three short of the 85-scholarship limit. Also, five scholarship players with remaining eligibility -- Tye Rexrode, Korey Washington, Kevin Ealey, Desmon Chatman and Dominique Green -- won't be returning. Absorb the hit with those five absences, and UNT can give at least two scholarships to get to 80, or hold them for another recruiting class.

It should be noted that the NCAA's APR waiver process is counterintuitive and counterproductive, if you consider schools aren't rewarded for maintaining higher graduation rates in the general student body.

Basically, if you adequately fund (everyone should, no excuses) student-athlete academics and graduate all students with reasonable regularity, don't hope for much of a waiver shake. The NCAA is glad to hand out waivers like candy for schools that cry mea culpa loud enough when it comes to funding or overall academic quality. Hmm...we don't graduate college students, so don't penalize us.

It's true when people say Division I athletics includes too many schools, that BCS and non-BCS suffer a too-wide disconnect. But the problem isn't on the field, and schools like UNT aren't the ones that need to go.

--Troy Phillips

QB Nichol to transfer from Oklahoma

Third-string quarterback Keith Nichol plans to transfer from Oklahoma after just one season.

Sooners coach Bob Stoops announced Friday that Nichol would not be returning.

“We had a good conversation with Keith and certainly understand his desire to seek an opportunity in another program,” Stoops said in a statement. “He knows that we are supportive of him under any circumstance, whether it’s here or at a different school. We want what’s best for him.”

Nichol initially committed to Michigan State, but then enrolled at Oklahoma last January to get an early jump on the quarterback competition. Sam Bradford eventually won the starting job and became the nation’s top-rated passer last season.

Joey Halzle, a senior-to-be, was the Sooners’ backup and replaced Bradford after he suffered a concussion in the first quarter of a loss at Texas Tech last season.

Nichol played in three games last season, completing 2 of 7 passes for 15 yards. He still has three years of eligibility remaining and has not used his redshirt season.

May 02, 2008

LSU dismisses Ryan Perrilloux

Defending national champion LSU has dismissed quarterback Ryan Perrilloux. Coach Les Miles made the announcement Friday morning.

"Ryan was given every opportunity to be a part of htis football team,'' Miles said in a statement. "In the end, he didn't fulfill his obligation as an LSU student-athlete. We hope that a new beginning will benefit him.''

Perrilloux was one of the nation's top recruits in 2004. He verbally committed to Texas before signing with LSU. When he arrived in Baton Rouge, he said he would win a Heisman Trophy. Last season, he was a short-yardage specialist in place of starter senior Matt Flynn.

Perrilloux was expected to replace Flynn as the starter in 2008. However, a continuing series of off-field missteps led to Perrilloux being suspended for spring practice. Miles reinstated him after spring drills.

_ Wendell Barnhouse

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