Azubuike24;1499257 wrote:It's just funny. Read some of the stuff they found at Central Florida or Florida A&M, and imagine if that stuff was documented at Alabama or Michigan in football or Duke or Kentucky in basketball. I mean, it's crazy the blatant nature of some of it. It's a small scale, with lesser known alumni, coaches and recruits, but if the principle is what's important, damn. The NCAA is looking in some of the wrong places then...
Hell, I've seen some of it first hand at a DIII school in Ohio. Non-scholarship athletes and rules being broken out the wazoo. It's slightly different than a scholarship athlete who signs a LOI, but many of the same NCAA rules apply and it's not only crazy some of the stories, but how out in the open it is. This might be a weird comparison, but it's almost like The Wire where certain streets were relegated to having deals go down, and everyone including law enforcement, the media and political figures knew it. Instead of doing anything about it, as long as it was self-contained, it didn't matter.
Hence, all of this stuff in this thread. If it was all self-contained, nobody would care. It's only until a certain media member gets a hard on for a specific story, or a player is disgruntled and speaks out, that it becomes a story. It happens in every case, and then the NCAA steps in and pretends it's such a serious violation and must need addressed.
Sorry for the long rant, BTW...
I have seen first hand also at a DIII school. I'm not going to say if I benefited or not but a lot of us got a mysterious grant that paid for a lot of our schooling.