Dan Dakich calls out almost the entire top echelon of college coaching

Submitted by MGlobules on

Wonders where the sport's HOF coaches are tonight, why they aren't on TV and radio screaming in anger about cheating; says they are lying low until they see if they are implicated. Includes Izzo in the mix. Scathing: 

https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-dan-dakich-show-podcast/id12179…

(It's the very top most recent cast.)

Writer Jeff Goodman, calling in, says many HCs are calling him, worried. Bluntly says the NCAA targets small schools for infractions because big schools bring the org huge revenue. 

Was skeptical, but this thing really has legs. 

EDIT: Dakich is emphatic that he's not saying that all coaches are dirty. Thought I'd throw that in because that does seem to be the purport of his opening comments (as other callers note).  Also says Beilein is very clean. 

Mike Damone

September 28th, 2017 at 7:50 PM ^

why nobody was talking about the likelihood of this scandal spreading and impacting college football.  What about college basketball would make it more likely for these situations to happen than college football?  Maybe areas like the links with the AAU teams in college hoops - but those seem to be a minor part of the bigger picture.  

I don't know who you white collar attorney friend is - but his views seem pretty logical to me.

Mike Damone

September 28th, 2017 at 8:02 PM ^

but taking bribes/paying families to get a kid to a particular school, pointing him towards an agent or financial adviser for a kickback, or getting paid to guide him to endorse certain products would seem to be the same. 

On top of it - you have a bigger pool of players getting rich from the NFL than from the NBA.

Guess we will find out within the next few months...

Yeoman

September 28th, 2017 at 8:16 PM ^

I was wondering if it might hit sports where there's mass popular participation. How much is it worth to get Callaway's into the hands of a young golf star, or get a tennis player signed up with Babolat or Wilson? I know those aren't big-money college sports but the endorsement money's not small for a successful pro and strange as it may seem we have had some golf recruiting scandals in the past.

Yeoman

September 28th, 2017 at 11:10 PM ^

It seems to me there are a lot more former college players on the ATP and WTA tours now than I can ever remember before. Or is that my imagination?

And the demographic is a marketer's dream.  I can't think of another sport that's anywhere close to it in the media obsession with apparel. We don't get gratuitous close-ups of players shoes during football or basketball games.

 

Mr Miggle

September 28th, 2017 at 8:14 PM ^

Even if the payoffs aren't as big. They do sign players like Peppers before they even get drafted.

Another factor in football's favor is that the players have to spend at least three years in school. It is harder to project the top draft picks out of HS and they have to wait longer to recoup their money. Maybe the shady shoe deals mostly start later, but if the companies are willing to cheat, they're willing to cheat at more than just basketball.

Petr89

September 28th, 2017 at 7:59 PM ^

It's my understanding that there's a lot more money in basketball endorsements than football (at least when it comes to the shoe companies). I'm sure there's is shady money in football recruiting too, but it seems like there's a lot more predictability in prognosticating basketball endorsements (less time passes for the one-and-dones BB guys, less injuries, greater individual recognition, etc.).

1VaBlue1

September 28th, 2017 at 7:47 PM ^

This is planetary huge.  I wouldn't be surprised at all if this takes down the NCAA writ large.  If there's even one single person inside the Indianopolis offices of the NCAA that knows about any of this, the entire organization is coming down.

And does anyone really think that the NCAA doesn't know what's been going on?  Alabama just fired an administrator that used to work the enforcement office.  The SEC Commish used to be the director of NCAA enforcement.  Yeah, the NCAA has known about this shit for as long as its known about sketchy football recruiting.

1VaBlue1

September 28th, 2017 at 8:22 PM ^

The NCAA is a collection of schools purporting to look out for the student athlete.  It enacts rules for member institutions to follow, which keeps them from cheating (theoretically).  Included in those anti-cheat rules are bylaws that disallow the paying of players, whether directly or indirectly.  

If this 'governing' organization of college athletics is involved in the intentional paying of players, either indirectly or through direct involvement, you think it survives?

Something tells me you don't understand the purpose of the NCAA.

darkstar

September 28th, 2017 at 9:27 PM ^

After Arthur Andersen was imploded Feds realized that many innocent people lost their jobs because of a few really bad ones. They had the chance to go after some of the remaining Big 4 but realized they could extract major fines instead. Assuming they blow up a major program like UL I could see the NCAA and any other major program throwing a bunch of money to take the heat off. Have to think that the self serving nature of the NCAA saves their asses. There’s nothing to be gained by the Feds by blowing it all to hell

titanfan11

September 28th, 2017 at 7:36 PM ^

Rick Pitino right now, and your career is over...do you put out feelers for a tell-all book on the new college basketball and sell out, with names of coaches, programs, etc. to the highest bidder?

Petr89

September 28th, 2017 at 7:52 PM ^

As I understand it (and I could very well be wrong), Pitino is entitled to the 44 million dollars left on his contract unless it can be shown he definitively violated it. I don't think he'll be too eager to admit anything.

1VaBlue1

September 29th, 2017 at 8:40 AM ^

How was that proven?  I get that Bowen and Louisville have been narrowed down to obviousness, but I don't see where the same thing has been done with Pitino.  All I've seen are that "coach-2" was speaking with Gatto the day before Bowen comitted.  What am I missing?

Yeoman

September 29th, 2017 at 9:44 AM ^

Seriously, it was obvious that it had to be Pitino.

"Nobody swings a bigger dick than Coach-2 at [Adidas]."  "All Coach-2 has to do is pick up the phone and call somebody." "Coach-2 isn't the type to have his own agent set up" so it would fall upon other coaches to steer the athletes.

Who has to keep himself clean from direct contact with the agents? Who swings the biggest dick at Adidas? Some assistant coach?

But for those that couldn't figure this out on their own:

Rick Pitino is Coach-2, law enforcement official says

Lawyer12

September 28th, 2017 at 8:07 PM ^

He’s rich and of age to retire. You keep your ass out of jail and help your son become prominent and let him write the book in a few years with a forward that says he’s telling the “real truth”.

Mr Miggle

September 28th, 2017 at 8:56 PM ^

Revenge because he got caught? He'd make his own reputation much worse, damage the sport he loves, end most of the relationships he has with people in basketball. He'd have to get the details right or he's open to lawsuits. Even if he gets everything right, he'd need evidence to fend them off.

He can't need the money that badly.

If he simply wrote an honest tell all about himself, I might read that. Maybe that would make him feel better.

 

titanfan11

September 28th, 2017 at 9:27 PM ^

sever any relationships...but this is also the guy who had an affair in a restaurant and leads a program that was using prostitutes and strippers for recruiting purposes.  

I guess I imagined a book titled something like "I'm Not Alone" and he delves into what the AAU circuit, recruiting, and college basketball are all like.  He might not even name names, just drop hints.  

skegemogpoint

September 28th, 2017 at 7:38 PM ^

I like Dakich but how can anyone say small schools are being targeted when Arizona, Louisville, USC, Auburn, Alabama, So Carolina and Miami (YTM) have been named so far? This has been a 3 yr investigation. Any school not implicated in this wide net deserves the presumption of innocence.

buddha

September 28th, 2017 at 7:40 PM ^

I could be wrong, but is the investigation "over"? Maybe I misunderstood, but I was under the impression this is only the first wave of potential "findings" and that several schools / people could still be implicated...or maybe that's just my wishful thinking...



Sent from MGoBlog HD for iPhone & iPad

Everyone Murders

September 28th, 2017 at 7:48 PM ^

It's on Spotify, and it's glorious.

He's brutal on Izzo, Roy William, Coach K, Jim Boeheim, Bill Self, Calipari, etc.  Saying that they'll comment on anything, anytime, but now that the game is under siege they've gone radio silent.

He guarantees that you'll hear "very pompously, very piously" from these guys - but only once they're in the clear.  He especially has a hard-on for Izzo.

Yeoman

September 28th, 2017 at 8:21 PM ^

How will they know they're in the clear?

If the FBI has any sense at all...and I think they do...they'll let this drip out slowly. There's not going to be an announcement that "this concludes our investigation"...it won't peter out until they run out of people willing to roll over.

Everyone Murders

September 29th, 2017 at 7:21 AM ^

First, I'm just relaying what Dakich said on his podcast.  But I think it means that when word gets out in the basketball community that the FBI is done interviewing and subpoenaing people, programs will have a good sense of whether they're under the microscope.

If none of your recruits, coaches, or recruits' families are getting interviewed, you're in pretty good shape.

Yeoman

September 29th, 2017 at 9:23 AM ^

Unless your phone's being tapped, or that guy that came along with the Adidas rep to your meeting last week turns out to be UC-11.

They've been at this for two years and nobody had an inkling. They're pretty good at keeping their undercovers under cover. But I hope you're right and some coaches think they're clear because they aren't caught up in the first couple of rounds of interviews.

davidhm

September 28th, 2017 at 7:58 PM ^

He makes a great point about Izzo, Coach K, et al.  Why aren't they speaking out against this travesty affecting their sport?  And why aren't any reporters sticking microphones in their faces asking the tough questions? 

el segundo

September 28th, 2017 at 10:39 PM ^

According to the feds' allegations, Louisville and Adidas wanted to pay Bowen so much because they were bidding against another apparel company.  MSU and Texas, both Nike schools, were high on Bowen's list before his commitment to Louisville.  Is not much of a stretch to infer that Nike was bidding for Bowen, possibly through more than one school. This could be trouble for Izzo and MSU.

As for Coach K, I find it hard to believe he keeps getting so many one-and-dones without some help from Nike.

Alumnus93

September 29th, 2017 at 4:42 PM ^

I had floor seats after winning the season ticket lottery for the Final Four when Webber called time out.  Nick Nolte and his agent tried to buy our tickets for the pair of games, and we weren't even selling them.  They approached us.  He was in town filming Blue Chips nearby at Tulane.