Los Angeles Times

Pac-12: Decision would clash with NCAA rules

Scott says McNair ruling threatens membership of California schools.

- By Nathan Fenno

Pac-12 Commission­er Larry Scott warned that a Los Angeles County Superior Court judge’s tentative decision that the showcause penalty against former USC assistant football coach Todd McNair violated California law “would threaten the NCAA membership” of the organizati­on’s four schools in the state if adopted.

“If California law prevents institutio­ns in that state from honoring such commitment­s, it is hard to see how the Pac-12’s Member Universiti­es in California could continue to meet the requiremen­ts of NCAA membership,” Scott wrote in a three-page sworn declaratio­n filed in court Friday. “Thus, the Court’s tentative ruling would place at risk the competitiv­e and scholarshi­p opportunit­ies that flow from NCAA participat­ion for the Pac-12’s California Member Universiti­es.”

The ominous words are the latest twist in McNair’s seven-year legal fight with the organizati­on in the wake of an extra-benefits scandal centered on former USC running back Reggie Bush.

The Pac-12 did not make Scott available for an interview and declined to comment further.

While McNair lost his defamation trial against the NCAA earlier this year, Judge Frederick Shaller entered a tentative ruling last month finding the one-year show-cause against McNair constitute­d an “unlawful restraint” on pursuing a lawful profession. The judge declared the NCAA bylaws

supporting the penalty to be void.

Scott’s declaratio­n floating the possibilit­y of removing the nation’s second-largest market from the NCAA was attached to a filing by NCAA attorneys objecting to the tentative ruling.

“Under McNair’s interpreta­tion of California law, even if the NCAA has conclusive proof that a coach was breaking the rules — say, a video of the coach paying players or receiving money from agents — it would be powerless to sanction that coach in any way that would restrain his ability to continue unabated in his present duties and responsibi­lities,” the NCAA’s filing said.

In another declaratio­n, Big West Commission­er Dennis Farrell said the ruling would “force the Big West’s California member institutio­ns to devote substantia­lly more resources to self-monitoring and self-policing, because they could no longer rely on the NCAA’s disciplina­ry process …”

Scott invoked the FBI’s investigat­ion into bribery and corruption in college basketball that included the indictment of former USC associate head coach Tony Bland.

“The Court’s tentative ruling, by contrast, would render all show-cause penalties unenforcea­ble in the state of California,” Scott’s declaratio­n said. “Doing so would risk worsening the problems identified in the federal criminal investigat­ion ... by removing a major deterrent to NCAA rules violations.”

Scott asked the court to consider the perspectiv­e of the conference­s and schools before issuing a final decision.

The NCAA’s filing also challenged McNair’s claim that the show-cause penalty and associated stigma prevented him from getting another college coaching job — he hasn’t coached at the college or profession­al level since USC declined to renew his contract in July 2010.

“Simply put, there is no evidence from trial that McNair was ever ‘restricted’ — much less ‘preempted’ — from obtaining a college football coaching job after the expiration of his show-cause penalty,” the NCAA said.

McNair currently works as the offensive line coach for the Village Christian School in Sun Valley.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? USC QUARTERBAC­K JT Daniels brief ly loses the ball while being sacked by Texas defenders in the second quarter of Saturday’s loss.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times USC QUARTERBAC­K JT Daniels brief ly loses the ball while being sacked by Texas defenders in the second quarter of Saturday’s loss.

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