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Four basketball coaches, Adidas executive charged in college payoff scandal

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

Federal justice officials in New York unveiled felony charges against a total of 10 people in the case that lays bare the seedy underside of the multi-billion-dollar business of high school and college basketball in the US.

University of Arizona’s Emmanuel Richardson, Auburn University’s Chuck Person, Lamont Evans of Oklahoma State and Tony Bland of University of Southern California were the coaches named in indictment­s after a two-year FBI investigat­ion.

Also named was James Gatto, Adidas’s director of global sports marketing for basketball. The others included prominent agents and financial advisers in the business.

“The investigat­ion has revealed multiple instances of bribes paid by athlete advisers, including financial advisers and business managers, as well as high-level apparel company employees, and facilitate­d by coaches employed by NCAA Division I universiti­es,” said one of three indictment­s released by the Justice Department.

The bribes were paid to high school and college basketball players and their families to commit to playing at specific universiti­es and also to sign on to specific financial advisers once they move to the NBA league after university.

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

Another high school player was allegedly promised $150,000 to commit to retaining a certain agent once he moved to the profession­al level.

The athletes involved in the scandal were not identified. But the informatio­n in the indictment­s appeared to point to a player for Louisville, a perennial college basketball power already in trouble for providing prostitute­s to players.

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