Showing posts with label Miami Hurricanes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Miami Hurricanes. Show all posts

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Pipe Dream: Randy Shannon as a defensive coordinator

image When Arkansas forced out defensive coordinator Willy Robinson earlier this month, reports quickly surfaced that former Miami Hurricanes head coach Randy Shannon had moved to the top of the “wish list.” There were even reports that he had interviewed for the job and “insider” claims that the deal was done.

Arkansas instead announced that it had hired Ohio State’s Paul Haynes.

Not surprisingly, Shannon’s name has also been connected with other high profile defensive coordinator positions, including the now vacant Ohio State job, the Auburn job vacated by Ted Roof’s dismissal and expected openings at Texas A&M, North Carolina and UCLA. While getting such a credentialed coach as Shannon to run your defense would be a home run hire, it’s more likely than not that Shannon has his sights set much higher. He wants to return as a head coach.

In an interview last month with the Associated Press, Shannon made it very clear that since his firing from his alma mater, he’s been on whirlwind tour of college programs across the country, learning more about the business of being a head coach in college football. He’s spent time at Alabama, TCU, North Carolina, UNLV, Oregon, Iowa State and Minnesota.


"I needed this year to sit out. I needed to learn something new. And I think I've done that.

"I spent my money and went to college," he said. "I met with the strength coaches, the policemen who are around some teams, compliance people, athletic directors, support staff. It wasn't just football. It was very little football. I needed to see other things, see a lot of ways to do different things, and it made me a whole lot better."


That doesn’t sound like the itinerary of a guy looking to take a step down from head coaching and serve a stint as an assistant, even if it’s a big time program. Shannon said he has interviewed at a few programs looking for head coaches, but said none were the “right fit.” He did not say whether he’d discussed any open or pending defensive coordinator positions.

Part of the lure of linking Shannon to these jobs—particularly Arkansas and Auburn—is that Shannon’s base defense is a 4-3 cover two, very similar in scheme and philosophy to what those two programs had run under Robinson and Roof. The sense is that Shannon could come in, make very few tweaks to scheme and personnel, and reverse some of the misfortunes those two programs suffered defensively and cost the two coordinators their jobs. That’s reasonable and good for discussion.

It’s more likely that Shannon lands at one of the many still open head coaching jobs on the spinning carousel. There are still several good positions yet to be filled, including Texas A&M, Arizona State, UCLA, Southern Miss and any of the positions left open should one of those programs hire a sitting head coach. Shannon has taken the year off to learn how to be a better head coach, and this year will likely present several opportunities for him to use what he’s learned.

At least for now, it doesn’t seem likely that Randy Shannon takes second chair.

[ed note: at publish time, both the Texas A&M and UCLA jobs were open. Texas A&M has apparently hired Houston’s Kevin Sumlin, and UCLA has hired Jim Mora, Jr.]

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Saturday, August 20, 2011

Miami case shows NCAA investigations benefit from federal involvement

image It’s one of the most often repeated statements regarding NCAA enforcement investigations: “The NCAA doesn’t have subpoena power.” While it’s true that the NCAA can’t force someone to cooperate with their investigations when the individual is not directly connected to or employed by the institution, they can compel current student-athletes, coaches and administrators to comply and cooperate.

The Department of Justice can—under pain of a federal prison sentence—interview anyone and the only thing stopping them from dragging the truth out of witnesses or the accused are the Fifth Amendment protections against self incrimination.

Their involvement often breaks a case wide open and makes enforcement’s job easier. Violations that would never have seen the light of day are dragged out and documented when the power of subpoena is in play.

A news report from NBC Miami explains that the investigators who uncovered the Ponzi scheme run by Miami Hurricanes booster Nevin Shapiro have been in contact with school officials and plan to interview current and former student-athletes as well.


Gil Childers, who was a part of the New Jersey prosecution team that investigated Shapiro's $930 million Ponzi scheme, told NBC Miami that the recent allegations that have surfaced about UM were not new news to him and that Shapiro's connections to the university were not that hard to find.

"We did reach out to the university and that did include some people who were directly involved in the Athletic Department," Childers said.

Shapiro recently alleged that he provided improper benefits to 72 current and former UM student athletes, mostly football players. The NCAA has initiated an investigation into the claims, which could result in major violations and stiff punishment for the Hurricanes.

Many have speculated that Shapiro is flipping on the U so he can have his 20-year prison sentence reduced. That might not necessarily be the case.

"A lot of what is in the media, while it may be a revelation to the public, it is not a revelation to the government," he said.

He also said they were ready to call in former and current players to bolster their case against Shapiro.


This is not the first time that an NCAA investigation has included the involvement of the federal government. Both the Michigan Fab Five and Northwestern cases from the 1990’s and earlly 2000’s were the results of federal probes into criminal wrongdoing. Most recently, a federal probe into a tattoo shop owner led to the Ohio State Tattoogate scandal. Last November, federal agents interviewed at least one figure in the ongoing Cam Newton recruitment investigation, and were said to be interested in Auburn booster Milton McGregor.

Not all NCAA violations constitute a federal crime, but it’s difficult to come up with an instance where someone connected to a member school committed a crime and didn’t violate NCAA rules. And while the federal government isn’t required to cooperate with NCAA enforcement staff, case history shows that they do so, anyway.

"When they get involved, the NCAA's job becomes a lot easier," Jim Delany, Big Ten commissioner, said in a USA Today article. "We're not talking about freedom of information. We're talking about subpoena power. If you lie to an FBI agent, you are violating the law. You can go to jail if you are caught doing that."

If a member school is in violation of NCAA by-laws, the blood must run cold when Yahoo! Sports’ Charles Robinson has left a voicemail message seeking an interview. But getting a call from an FBI agent may well be the kiss of death.

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Friday, August 19, 2011

Pumping Sunshine for Pannunzio!

image

Izzy Gould reports that Alabama Head Football Coach addressed the media regarding allegations made against Director of Football Operations Joe Pannunzio and Offensive Line Coach Jeff Stoutland. The allegations were made in the sweeping, explosive Yahoo! Sports story detailing alleged NCAA violations at the University of Miami.

"I know what goes on in this program and I know that we do things correctly.

We do have people in this organization, who worked there (at Miami). Before those people were ever hired here we do an NCAA check to make sure they pass all compliance criteria and that they don't have any red flags relative to compliance history,” Saban said.

"We certainly did that in both of these cases. Now, if any of these people had any wrongdoing, I'm sure the NCAA will investigate it in due time and, if they did anything wrong, I'm sure they will get the appropriate punishment, which we would do if we had any internal problems in our organization. But we're going to continue and control and manage what we do in our organization and do it correctly, and that's basically all we can be concerned about."

For Pannunzio, there was some piling on from Long Beach State University President F. King Alexander (I swear I did not make up that fking name). Alexander says he fired Pannunzio in 2005 over incidents he termed “quite bad.”

"You must understand that in 2005 when I was president at Murray State, I fired our football coach, Joe Pannunzio, because of numerous incidents that occurred in our program under him that were quite bad.

“Well, Pannunzio immediately was hired by Miami, and he's one of the coaches who's been prominently mentioned by [former Miami booster Nevin] Shapiro in the current scandal. He's now the head of football operations at Alabama." 

Even taking off the crimson colored glasses, I don’t find FKing Alexander’s statements credible.

First of all, Pannunzio was fired the day after the Murray State Racers football team finished a 2-9 season, going winless in the Ohio Valley Conference and 30-37 over five years. If there were numerous, “quite bad” incidents of cheating, clearly Pannunzio wasn’t very good at it.

Secondly, Pannunzio certainly was not prominently mentioned by Shapiro. In fact, the Yahoo! Sports report on the scandal states that Shapiro refused to talk about Pannunzio at all, while bringing the wood on almost every other member of the UM staff, from President Donna Shalala right on down to the water boy.

But the real deal is this—it may be quite a while before it all comes out in the wash. The first thing the NCAA would do in a scandal this big is put all of the coaches and administrators involved under a gag order. Saban famously refuses to make assistant coaches available to the media, but in this case he would have no choice. Even Athletic Director Mal Moore could be precluded from discussing the matter with Pannunzio until investigators have had a sit down interview with him. Given the breadth and depth of the allegations made against Da U, the 2011 season will probably be over by the time the NCAA gets around to a coach that Shapiro refused to finger in his jailhouse interviews with Yahoo! Sports’ Charles Robinson and Rand Getlin.

Depending on what color glasses you view this through, Pannunzio could either be in a world of hurt or could walk away with clean hands and a clean slate. My guess is that it’s somewhere in the middle.

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Wednesday, August 17, 2011

FARKS! Somehow, we don’t think this is Nevin Shapiro’s first disaster…

Charles Robinson’s soon-to-be-nominated story uncovering breathtaking NCAA violations is a disaster of biblical proportions for the University of Miami athletics program. But the scope and depth of the damage done to The U by former booster and confessed Ponzi scheme operator Nevin Shapiro say that this man has experience $&#!ing stuff up.

NevinTitanic

NevinHindenburg 

NevinKatrinaBuses

NevinWildFire

NevinTsunami

Nevin2012

NevinBarnBurn

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Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Twitter Meltdown: Yahoo! Sports “Canes” The U

image Here’s just a small sampling of the best of the best Tweets from Miami Hurricanes fans in the fallout from the exclusive, extensive and absolutely exterminative story on Nevin Shapiro, the disgraced former booster. Warning, some of these are not safe for work, small children or polite company.

Delusion. Heartbreak. Anger. Gallows humor. Let the meltdown begin!

@JHorne2010 After reading the Nevin Shapiro report, I'm convinced he was the kid everyone picked on in gym class. What a loser. #theU

@STEM08 so, with all this paying, how come we sucked under shannon? #TheU

@MrBill11 Randy Shannon couldn't win w/ the backing of a $930mil Ponzi scheme?

@ericw_ if nevin gets our mpc computer bowl taken away im gonna be pissed #theu

@whetherPROOF Speaking of sick as hell... Al Golden might as well have coached at FAMU. Pretty soon he'll have similar talent #TheU

@ELLedo1307 On a side note, Shapiro got #TheU horrible ROI from his payments. Couldn't even buy us an ACC title during his run.

@ELLedo1307 All players from 2004-2010 screwed #TheU twice. On the field and now off!

@LDGutierrez16 There is something seriously wrong with our justice system if the claims of a 930 million dollar stealing prick go unquestioned. #Canes

@Mr_DFernandez #NevinShapiro why when your locked up for stealing must you try to come clean on everything you did before. Your worthless scum #1 #U #canes

@BetsyT13 Cane fans stop tweeting the f___ers name. It makes me sick that its trending. #canes #theU #Miami

@MiaSportsGuy #CANES allegations are coming from a lying, manipulative dog...This isn't fact and has to be proven as fact. Remember that.

@MrBill11 I'm at the point where if we get ANYTHING less than the Death Penalty, I'll be beside myself. "10yrs w/o a bowl game? THAT'S IT?" #TheU

JdotLeazy All #TheU fans who are getting defensive and acting like this aint shit, youre just as bad as any of the players that did this shit.

@GregWOWT I don't understand all the fuss about the Longhorn Network. Miami has had their own network for years. #CourtTV

@strauzer Why #TheU will B ok: Nobody from those admins are still at the U; We self reported allegations a year ago; Shalala's rep; Shapiro=pro-liar

@carenwake My jinx is in full force... got my #Canes wall set up and BAM! SMH...

@JeremyShockey Wow what a shame another loser( Nevin Shapiro) trying to make money after a $930 million Ponzi scheme.I just dont get it. GOD rest his soul [ed. note: Yes, that’s THE Jeremy Shockey]

@RichAskintowicz Shapiro must not have been a good recruiter, we have not won anything in years! #THEU #UMIAMI. CLASS OF 1992. [“Lamar Thomas has got it… he’s on the way down the sideline. George Teague RUNS HIM DOWN!]

@JorgesalesgenieI'm so f___ing pissed off right now at this piece of shit Shapiro. #Canes

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Monday, August 15, 2011

NCAA Enforcement is still in South Florida

image Dig, baby dig!

InsideTheU.com reports that the NCAA has launched an investigation into an impermissible benefits scandal involving the University of Miami.

A former booster, Nevin Shapiro has confessed to operating a nearly $1 billion Ponzi scheme and plans a tell-all book about his relationship with the program and dozens of players.

Sources have said that the relationships may include as many as 100 players and may go back as far back as 2001.

CBSSports.com’s Bryan Fischer expanded on the story this morning, and adds this little nugget of information:


The NCAA has been active in South Florida over the past several months, sending investigators to various 7-on-7 camps and making connections with parents and coaches. One source added that the secondary focus of the look was on the recruiting methods of at least three SEC schools and a number of ACC schools in the area. It is unclear whether the two probes are connected but one person told CBSSports.com that the NCAA will be questioning several people connected to the Miami players, such as coaches and other "third parties" connected to them.


Fischer is referring to this report from the South Florida Sun Sentinel’s Dave Hyde. In June, Hyde reported that the NCAA was in the area looking into the recruiting practices of several high-profile schools, including Auburn, LSU, Tennessee and Ohio State. Those programs had been enjoying unusual success in pulling recruits from the area, and Hyde reported that “red flags” had been raised about shady recruiting practices and money changing hands.

In a Sports Illustrated story last March, SI’s Andy Staples explored the phenomenon of 7-on-7 football and noted that NCAA Enforcement staff was closely monitoring the development of extracurricular football tournaments that walk, quack and look like AAU basketball. Staples reported from Hallandale, Florida.

It’s difficult to tell if all three of these matters are connected. Of the three, the Miami matter seems to be the one with no connections to the other two. But while they’re in the area, the investigative staff is sure to intensify the scrutiny that was reported in March again in June.

They’ll let you know when they’re finished. And they’re not finished.

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Thursday, December 23, 2010

Going to the Sun Bowl in El Paso? Customs & Border Protection has ‘travel tips’

On New Year’s Eve, the Notre Dame Fighting Irish and the Miami Hurricanes will renew a heated rivalry for the first time in 20 years. In the Ft. Wayne, Indiana Journal Gazette, Fighting Irish beat writer Tony Krausz has a few travel tips for fans visiting El Paso, the site of the game, courtesy of the Department of Homeland Security’s Customs and Border Protection.


EL PASO, Texas – The city of El Paso is expecting to host a large number of college football fans from around the country who will be in town to attend the annual Sun Bowl football game December 31. Historically some college football fans visit neighboring Juarez, Mexico during their time in El Paso. U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is reminding the visiting Notre Dame Fighting Irish and Miami Hurricanes fan base that there are a number of border crossing requirements they need to be aware before venturing across the international boundary.

U.S. citizens returning at an international land border crossing like El Paso must present a U.S. passport, U.S. passport card, or other Western Hemisphere Travel Initiative (WHTI) compliant document to enter the United States. For more information on the U.S. passport card or other WHTI compliant documents, travelers should visit: http://www.getyouhome.gov

h/t Jay Christiansen


CBP doesn’t offer this advice, but I sure will:  Stay the hell out of Cuidad Juarez, or make sure you travel in a heavily armored SUV convoy with trained paramilitary bodyguards. Juarez has become one of the central battlegrounds in the bloody war between two rival drug cartels. The body count since the bloodshed began in 2007 is staggering:  1,600 dead in 2008; 2,600 in 2009 and this year the 3,000 mark was passed. That brings the death toll in Juarez to a total of 7,200 people.

By way of reference, that number is more than twice the worst estimates of total US troops killed in combat for the entire Iraq War since the March 19, 2003 invasion.

From the El Paso Times:


U.S. anti-narcotics officials said the cartel war began after the collapse of an alliance between the drug-trafficking organizations of Sinaloa kingpin Joaquin "Chapo" Guzmán Loera and the Juárez cartel led by Vicente Carrillo Fuentes. Both kingpins remain at large.

Guzmán had made inroads into Chihuahua state, and several Juárez cartel lieutenants switched to his organization. The dispute set off a war that spawned a violent crime wave in Juárez and other parts of the state.

Along with the cartel war, there was a rise in carjackings, auto thefts and extortionists collecting protection quotas from bars, schools, medical offices and other businesses.

On Monday, about 4,000 doctors, nurses and other medical professionals in Juárez went on a 24-hour strike to protest the lack of security. The strike was spurred by the slaying of José Alberto Betancourt, an orthopedic surgeon kidnapped on Dec. 2 and found dead two days later.

"Drug violence also appears to be affecting people more broadly and more publicly than in the past," stated a midyear report on drug violence in Mexico by the Trans-Border Institute at the University of San Diego.

"While the government estimates that 90 percent of drug violence impacts individuals involved in organized crime, in 2010 there has been a worrying tendency to target high-profile victims (including politicians and public officials), drug rehabilitation centers, and private parties. In this sense, Mexico's drug-related violence is becoming a much wider societal phenomenon that engages wider sectors of the society."


Here’s another story about football, and how three brave men are trying to help bring order to a city more dangerous than Baghdad.