One of the worst days of Rick Pitino's coaching career
occurred nearly three weeks ago when word leaked that a soon-to-be-published
book claimed a Louisville basketball staffer paid escorts to dance for and have
sex with players and recruits.This is surely Pitino's worst day since then.
An extensive ESPN.com report released Tuesday morning
corroborates many of the most serious allegations self-described escort Katina
Powell made in her book.
Five ex-Louisville basketball players or recruits confirmed
anonymously they attended parties that included strippers paid for by former
director of basketball operations Andre McGee. One former player said he had
sex with one of the strippers in a separate room after McGee paid her to do it.
Another ex-player described how the parties would unfold.
"[McGee] would give us the money, just the
recruits," the former player told ESPN.com. "A bunch of us were
sitting there while they danced. Then the players left, and the recruits chose
which one [of the dancers] they wanted."
Added a former Louisville recruit, "It was like I was
in a strip club."
McGee's attorney has consistently denied that his client
supplied Louisville players or recruits with strippers or prostitutes, however,
the evidence against the former point guard continues to mount. In its report,
ESPN said that it reviewed Powell's text messages and phone records and
independently confirmed that texts sent to Powell to arrange the parties came
from McGee's cellphone and that McGee sent Powell a wire transfer of money on
one occasion.
Between Powell's book and the ESPN report, this much is now
pretty clear: Either Pitino masterminded an incredibly reckless, foolhardy
scheme to lure recruits, or he hired the guy who did and somehow remained
oblivious to it. Either certainly is enough to jeopardize his job even if it's
clear he has no intention of stepping down on his own.
Pitino has repeatedly denied any knowledge of strippers
being paid to dance for or have sex with recruits, but in Powell's first
interview since her book was published, she reiterated to ESPN she finds that
hard to believe.
Said Powell: "Four years, a boatload of recruits, a
boatload of dancers, loud music, alcohol, security, cameras, basketball players
who came in [to the dorm] at will ... "
What will be interesting now will be how Louisville
responds. Will the school try to get ahead of potential NCAA sanctions and
self-impose penalties or encourage Pitino to step down? Or will it do nothing
besides continuing to insist it's still investigating the veracity of Powell's
claims?
With no hard evidence having surfaced that Pitino or his
assistants were aware of the parties, Louisville has no reason to deviate from
its stance that they were orchestrated solely by McGee, but how much that will
make a difference remains to be seen.
Last month, SMU got a one-year postseason ban and heavy
scholarship reductions, and coach Larry Brown received a nine-game suspension
even though NCAA investigators were unable to prove Brown knew that a staffer
had taken an online course for a coveted incoming recruit.
That's a precedent that doesn't bode well for Louisville.
Nor does it bode well for Pitino.


No comments:
Post a Comment