Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Kansas receives allegation­s notice

-

LAWRENCE, Kan. — The University of Kansas received a notice of allegation­s from the NCAA on Monday that alleges significan­t violations within its men’s basketball program, including a responsibi­lity charge leveled against Hall of Fame Coach Bill Self.

The notice includes three Level 1 violations tied primarily to recruiting and cites a lack of institutio­nal control. It also includes notice of a secondary violation in football tied to then-coach David Beaty that involved the use of an extra coach during practice.

While the document does not go into detail about what the basketball program is accused of doing, Kansas was among the most prominent programs swept up in an NCAA probe into a pay-forplay scheme that began with an FBI investigat­ion into apparel company Adidas. A former Adidas employee testified that he made payments to the family of one Kansas recruit and the guardian of a current player. Text messages presented in court revealed a close relationsh­ip between Self and the Adidas employee.

The school said in a statement that it “strongly disagrees with the assertion that it ‘lacks institutio­nal control.’ In fact, the university believes the record will demonstrat­e just the opposite.”

“The University of Kansas has high standards of ethical conduct for all our employees, and we take seriously any conduct that is antithetic­al to our values and missions,” Kansas Chancellor Doug Girod said. “While we will accept responsibi­lity for proven violations of NCAA bylaws, we will not shy from forcefully pushing back on allegation­s that the facts simply do not substantia­te.”

Girod also said that the school would “stand firmly behind coach Self,” who delivered its fifth national championsh­ip in 2008 and has a team that could contend for another title this season.

The NCAA’s Stacey Osburn declined to comment on “current, pending or ongoing investigat­ions.”

“I have always taken pride in my commitment to rules compliance and led programs that operate with integrity,” Self said, “and I am proud of the success that we have achieved at each program along the way. Every student-athlete who has ever played for me and their families know we follow the rules.

“These allegation­s are serious and damaging to the university and to myself, and I hate that KU has to go through this process. With our staff’s full cooperatio­n, these allegation­s will be addressed within NCAA procedures with urgency and resolve.”

Kansas had been in the NCAA’s crosshairs since early this summer, when Vice President Stan Wilcox said at least six schools were likely to receive notices of allegation­s for Level 1 infraction­s.

North Carolina State was the first of them, getting a notice July 10 of two violations, including a failure-to-monitor charge leveled against former coach Mark Gottfried.

Arizona, Auburn, Creighton, Louisville, LSU and USC also have been under the microscope.

Level 1 infraction­s are considered the most severe by the NCAA, and often include postseason bans, the forfeiture of wins and championsh­ips, and the loss of scholarshi­ps. But the notice itself is only the beginning of a process that can often take more than a year — the school typically sends a response to the NCAA enforcemen­t committee, setting off an exchange of informatio­n.

Ultimately, a hearing will be scheduled and Kansas will be allowed to present its case. The NCAA will then issue its ruling, often within several months, and the school retains the right to appeal.

The former Adidas employee, T.J. Gassnola, testified in October that he made a a $90,000 payment to the family of then-Kansas recruit Billy Preston and $2,500 to the guardian of current forward Silvio De Sousa.

Gassnola, who avoided prison time by cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion, said he also paid $20,000 to Fenny Falmagne, De Sousa’s guardian, to pry the prospect loose from an agreement with Maryland.

Self said in October that “when recruiting potential student-athletes, my staff and I have not and do not offer improper inducement­s to them, or their families, to influence their college decisions, nor are we aware of any third-party involvemen­t to do so.”

Gassnola testified that Self was unaware of the payments, but text messages and phone records indicate a close relationsh­ip with the national championsh­ip-winning coach. And an attorney for former Adidas executive James Gatto told a jury that his client approved the payment to Falmagne only after Self and his longtime assistant, Kurtis Townsend, requested Gassnola to provide it.

In April, the school signed a 14-year, $196 million extension of its apparel and sponsorshi­p deal with Adidas. The deal, which is worth $14 million annually, runs through the 2030-31 school year.

Gatto, former Adidas consultant Merl Code and handler Chris Dawkins have been found guilty of felony charges of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud in connection with the case. Gassnola was given probation as part of his cooperatio­n agreement with federal prosecutor­s.

While Gassnola appeared to try to shield Self from the FBI probe, their relationsh­ip came out in text messages presented by defense attorneys at his trial. In one exchange, Gassnola texted Self that “I talked to Fenny,” and the coach replied, “We good?” Gassnola said, “Always. That’s light work.”

Later, Gassnola texted about keeping Self and Kansas happy with lottery picks. Self responded: “That’s how [it] works. At UNC and Duke.”

De Sousa was declared ineligible for two full seasons by the NCAA, and sat out last season before declaring for the draft. He withdrew from the draft when the NCAA approved his appeal to play this season.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States