The Borneo Post

Top basketball coaches, Adidas executive charged in college payoff scandal

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NEW YORK: Four top US university basketball coaches and a senior Adidas executive were arrested and charged with corruption and fraud Tuesday in a sprawling scandal over player recruitmen­t and gear sponsorshi­p bribes.

Federal prosecutor­s in New York bared what they called the “dark underbelly of college basketball,” with six-figure payoffs to teenage players made through a charity and other vehicles, and bribes and commission­s paid in restaurant­s with envelopes stuf fed with hundred- dollar bills.

Felony charges were unveiled against a total of 10 people in the case that reveals the seedy underside of the multibilli­ondollar business of ostensibly amateur high school and college basketball in the United States.

All those charged have been arrested, officials say.

The t h r e e ove rl appi n g indictment­s, based on the work of a confidenti­al informant and undercover agents, showed coaches, agents and financial advisors plotting greedily to lock in chunks of talented young athletes’ future career incomes.

“If we take care of everybody, we control everything, you can make millions off of one kid,” Christian Dawkins, a sports agent charged in the scheme, was recorded as saying.

Univer si ty of A r i zona’s Emmanuel Richardson, Auburn University’s Chuck Person, Lamont Evans of Oklahoma State and Tony Bland of University of Southern California were the NCAA coaches charged after a two- year FBI investigat­ion.

All are assistant coaches involved in recruiting at top-level college basketball programs which feed players to the NBA where they can earn millions of dollars in their first year as a pro.

Two people from Adidas were charged: senior executive James Gatto, the company’s director of global sports marketing for basketball, and Merl Code.

The others included the Adidasspon­sored head of Central Florida Basketball Academy -- one of the country’s leading programs for pre- college players -- a clothier who makes suits for some of the country’s leading athletes and financial advisors to players.

“The defendants exploited the hoop dreams of student athletes around the country,” said Joon Kim, acting US attorney for the Southern District of New York.

He said the four coaches had abused the confidence they cultivated in players.

“All of them had the trust of the young players they recruited,” Kim said.

As for the others, Kim said, “bribing coaches was a business investment.”

“They knew that the corrupt coaches, in return for the bribes, would pressure the players to use their services. They also knew, if and when those young players turned pro, that would mean big bucks for them,” he added.

The indictment­s delineated two separate schemes. The first was bribes paid to high school and college basketball players and their families to commit to playing at specific universiti­es.

In one case, Gatto and others working with him were accused of funneling US$100,000 to the family of a high school player in order to agree to join the Adidas-sponsored team of a university in the NCAA’s top-flight Division I.

In a second scheme, coaches earned payoffs to get players to sign on to specific financial advisors once they moved to the NBA league after university.

One player, still at the high school level but headed to college, was allegedly promised $150,000 to commit to retaining a certain agent once he moved to the profession­al level.

The indictment­s were the latest embarrassm­ent for the National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n, the powerful organizati­on regulating sports at more than 1,000 US colleges and universiti­es. — AFP

 ??  ?? Acting US Attorney Joon H. Kim speaks during a press conference at the US Attorneyâs Office, Southern District of New York, announce charges of fraud and corruption in college basketball. — AFP photo
Acting US Attorney Joon H. Kim speaks during a press conference at the US Attorneyâs Office, Southern District of New York, announce charges of fraud and corruption in college basketball. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Ange Postecoglo­u holds a football as he poses for a photo in front of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. — AFP photo
Ange Postecoglo­u holds a football as he poses for a photo in front of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. — AFP photo

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