Los Angeles Times

It’s all part of the game for Bland

USC assistant, who knew about perks as prep player, is charged in bribery probe.

- By Zach Helfand

Twenty years ago, there was a local basketball star who had already figured out that his talent even as a high school player could bring him riches.

“If you need something, you just ask,” said Tony Bland, then a junior at Westcheste­r High who played for a Nike-sponsored AAU team. “Shoes, shirts, jerseys, hats, socks, you name it. I’ve got shoes still in boxes.”

Bland’s quote was published as part of a 1997 Los Angeles Times investigat­ion entitled “Shoe Wars,” which documented the relationsh­ip between apparel companies and the murky worlds of club basketball and college recruiting.

On Tuesday, Bland, 37, was arrested in Tampa, Fla., on federal charges of conspiracy to commit bribery, soliciting a bribe and wire fraud, part of a broad series of indictment­s related to fraud and corruption in college basketball.

Investigat­ors say Bland, in his role as associate head coach of USC’s basketball team, took bribes to steer Trojans players to Christian Dawkins, a former sports agent who was trying to start his own firm. Bland also allegedly facilitate­d payments of $9,000 in cash to families of two USC basket-

ball players.

Three other college assistant coaches, Chuck Person of Auburn, Lamont Evans of Oklahoma State and Emanuel Richardson of Arizona, face similar charges, and authoritie­s said their investigat­ion was far from finished.

People familiar with the road many players take to the NBA say the game is fraught with opportunit­ies for corruption, from the club level to the high schools and colleges.

Bland was well acquainted with that route. He was an All-City player on a Westcheste­r team that won the 1998 state Division I championsh­ip. Westcheste­r coach Ed Azzam said he and his wife still consider Bland “one of our kids,” and said basketball for Bland had “been his life.”

After Westcheste­r, Bland went to Syracuse, where he played for two seasons with Jason Hart, who is also a USC assistant coach.

Bland then transferre­d to San Diego State, and when his eligibilit­y was up there he bounced between minor league circuits in the U.S. and Europe for a few years before becoming a personal trainer to NBA players.

He returned to San Diego State in 2008 to finish his degree and serve as the team’s manager.

In 2011, the Aztecs hired him as an assistant coach.

Bland quickly built a reputation for recruiting. His magnetic personalit­y helped him form immediate connection­s, people who know him say.

His reputation as a player gave him “instant credibilit­y,” Taft coach Derrick Taylor said.

Said Inglewood coach Pat Roy: “You go to basketball games and big high school tournament­s, Tony knows every kid that’s in the gym. Every kid wants to come over and shake his hand.”

Bland occupied a role particular­ly valuable in the freewheeli­ng but insular local basketball scene. He was a connector. Players gravitated to him. Coaches valued his opinions. Old heads respected him. If you wanted to make an introducti­on, Bland could help.

“There are a lot of guys who can do Xs and O’s, but there aren’t a lot of guys who can go into Westcheste­r or Compton or Harvard-Westlake and immediatel­y have a connection with a coach or his AAU coach or know someone his parents played with,” said Mark Zeigler, a reporter who covered Bland for the San Diego UnionTribu­ne. “And Tony’s one of those guys.”

Steve Fisher, who coached Bland at San Diego State and later hired him, declined to comment on the situation. Brian Dutcher, the current San Diego State coach, coached Bland and worked with him on Fisher’s staff. Dutcher told reporters Tuesday that Bland “represente­d himself and the university with great integrity. What he did at USC, I can’t comment on that.”

As a recruiter, Bland made an immediate impact for the Trojans.

Typical was the flourish with which he courted Etiwanda High point guard Jordan McLaughlin, now a senior at USC. McLaughlin described a recruiting visit when he and Bland went bowling. McLaughlin was winning and told Bland that if the coach rolled a gutter ball, McLaughlin would commit to USC.

Bland responded by rolling his next ball into a completely different lane. McLaughlin became the gem of coach Andy Enfield’s first class of recruits.

USC’s roster is stocked with such highly sought players as McLaughlin, forwards Bennie Boatwright and Chimezie Metu and guards Jonah Mathews and De’Anthony Melton. But Hart also played a key role in the recruitmen­t of those players, as well as Charles O’Bannon Jr., the highest-rated incoming freshman.

“I don’t even have Tony Bland’s phone number,” said Valencia O’Bannon, Charles’ mother.

Bland worked closely with USC’s most highly rated recruit in years, Taeshon Cherry of San Diego St. Augustine High, who would be part of the 2018 class. Cherry cited his relationsh­ip with Bland as a reason for committing to the Trojans.

In a statement, USC athletic director Lynn Swann said the school was “shocked” to learn of Bland’s alleged involvemen­t and promised an investigat­ion, headed by former FBI director Louis J. Freeh.

Local veteran coaches say the notion of bribes in basketball was not particular­ly surprising, but that Bland’s alleged involvemen­t was.

“I was surprised that Tony’s name had came up,” Taft’s Taylor said. “Am I surprised that the overall — the scandal or whatever you want to label it? No. That didn’t surprise me one bit. I’ve been around long enough to know there’s all type of hanky-panky and funny stuff going on.”

Encino Crespi High coach Russell White, whose program produced USC guard Melton, said that anybody who denies the inf luence of money at the high school level “does not have their ear to the ground.”

“It’s not a matter of whether it’s going on or not, it’s a matter of how true are the stories of Vegas poker chips being handed over and clandestin­e meetings in Laughlin, Nevada,” White said. “You hear that stuff all the time.”

The culture isn’t unique to Southern California. Clippers guard Austin Rivers said he experience­d a similar dynamic in Florida, where he attended high school.

“If my dad wasn’t rich, I probably would have gotten offered probably half a million dollars,” said Rivers, whose father is Clippers coach Doc Rivers. “That’s just what it is.”

Rivers added: “I don’t want people to lose their jobs because there are a lot of good guys, man. … If anybody is going to be held responsibl­e, it’s the AAU dudes.”

Rivers said the influence of AAU coaches was insidious because they steered players in certain directions without the players realizing it.

Prosecutor­s allege that’s what Bland offered too in his role at USC.

At a meeting in August with Dawkins and Munish Sood, the chief executive of an investment advisory firm who also was indicted, Bland told them, “I can definitely mold the players and put them in the lap of you guys.”

‘You go to basketball games and big high school tournament­s, Tony knows every kid that’s in the gym.’ —Pat Roy, Inglewood High basketball coach, on Tony Bland

 ?? Tony Dejak Associated Press ?? TONY BLAND has built a reputation as a strong high school recruiter.
Tony Dejak Associated Press TONY BLAND has built a reputation as a strong high school recruiter.
 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? USC ASSOCIATE COACH Tony Bland, center, yells instructio­ns to players during a game against UCLA and Lonzo Ball, right, in January. Hired in 2013, Bland made an immediate impact as a recruiter for the Trojans.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times USC ASSOCIATE COACH Tony Bland, center, yells instructio­ns to players during a game against UCLA and Lonzo Ball, right, in January. Hired in 2013, Bland made an immediate impact as a recruiter for the Trojans.

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