Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pitino: Louisville should consider taking legal action against NCAA

Ex-coach says players deserve 2013 title

- By Gary B. Graves The Associated Press

Former Louisville coach Rick Pitino believes the school should take legal action against the NCAA after the governing body nullified the Cardinals of the 2013 men’s basketball title.

Pitino, speaking from his attorney’s offices in New York, said that the NCAA’S decision to have Louisville vacate the title as part of sanctions for a sex scandal was unfair.

“I don’t know if this Board of Trustees will do that,” Pitino said when asked if Louisville should take legal action, “but they should because the players deserve it.”

The sex scandal occurred during Pitino’s coaching tenure, though the Hall of Fame coach once again reiterated that he didn’t know about the sex shows.

Pitino did take responsibi­lity for the people he hired as assistant coaches — including Andre Mcgee. It was Mcgee who an escort said hired her and other dancers for sex parties on campus with players and recruits that led to the NCAA investigat­ion.

As for taking legal action himself, Pitino said he was defenseles­s in this situation, but he is suing Louisville for his dismissal. He was not fired after the sex scandal, but Louisville let him go in October after the school acknowledg­ed the university was being investigat­ed as part of a federal college corruption case.

That case is unrelated to the NCAA’S investigat­ion of the sex scandal.

Louisville announced on Tuesday that the NCAA had denied its appeal of sanctions that included vacating 123 victories and the return of about $600,000 in conference revenue from the 2012-15 NCAA Tournament­s. The school later removed banners of the 2013 championsh­ip and 2012 Final Four appearance.

Cardinals interim athletic director Vince Tyra said Tuesday that legal options hadn’t been discussed. He suggested being personally against it, citing the difficulty and cost of litigation.

Then there is the federal investigat­ion, and where that leads is still unclear.

The school fired Pitino following allegation­s that the family of former men’s basketball recruit Brian Bowen was bribed in an effort to get him to attend Louisville. Bowen has since transferre­d to South Carolina.

In part of a statement Pitino issued Wednesday he said that he was cooperatin­g with federal authoritie­s. Pitino is not named in the court complaint but said he received a grand jury subpoena last September and that his attorneys have met with U.S. attorneys in the case.

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