USA TODAY US Edition

PITINO HAS RUN OUT OF CHANCES

Louisville coach: Allegation­s come as complete shock

- Tim Sullivan

The other shoe has dropped, and it bears three stripes.

If you’ve wondered how Rick Pitino has recruited so well while his University of Louisville basketball program awaits NCAA sanctions, the most logical and cynical answer would appear to be correct: Cheating.

If Adidas bought Brian Bowen’s commitment to Louisville on the installmen­t plan — in four payments totaling about

$100,000 — that explains how a five-star forward suddenly landed in Pitino’s lap. Neither Bowen nor Pitino was mentioned by name in the documents released Tuesday by the FBI, which has already announced 10 arrests in an ongoing investigat­ion into college basketball corruption, but all the clues related to “University-6” and

“Player-10” lead to the same damning conclusion.

In the wake of the Katina Powell/Andre McGee scandal, with the NCAA’s Committee on Infraction­s planning to vacate Louisville’s 2013 NCAA championsh­ip, Pitino’s program appears to have maintained its competitiv­e edge by cutting legal and ethical corners. The story Pitino told on Terry Meiners’ radio show in June now sounds like a fraudulent fairy tale.

“We got lucky on this one,” Pitino said then. “I had an AAU director call me and ask me if I’d be interested in a great player. I saw him against another great player from Indiana. I said, ‘Yeah, I’d be really interested.’ They had to come in unofficial­ly, pay for their hotel, pay for their meals. We spent zero dollars recruiting a five-star athlete who I loved when I saw him play. In my 40 years of coaching, this is the luckiest I’ve been.”

The FBI tells a much different and more persuasive story, of Adidas’ James Gatto and Merl Code conspiring with sports agent Christian Dawkins and financial adviser Munish Sood to funnel about $100,000 to the family of “Player-10,” to get the player to commit to play at

“University-6.”

The University of Louisville has confirmed its inclusion in the FBI investigat­ion and pledged its cooperatio­n. Pitino issued a statement Tuesday evening asserting “these allegation­s come as a complete shock to me” and express- ing his commitment to take “whatever steps are needed to ensure those responsibl­e are held accountabl­e.”

As the man ultimately responsibl­e for the U of L basketball program, Pitino can only duck so much of that responsibi­lity after two years dominated by a previous scandal. Whether it can be demonstrat­ed that he had direct knowledge of the activities alleged by the FBI can no longer be the litmus test about whether he can or should keep his job. There is simply too much scandal surroundin­g this program to justify preserving the status quo; too much implausibl­e deniabilit­y to get past.

Whatever chance U of L had of softening its NCAA sanctions on appeal has surely evaporated. Tuesday’s news is sure to spark another investigat­ion likely to bring additional and more severe penalties to a repeat offender.

It always seemed improbable that Pitino would have condoned sex parties at Minardi Hall to ensure visiting recruits left town with smiles on their faces. The risk was too great in relation to the potential return, and a Hall of Fame coach was sure to see that the danger of detection could leave a permanent stain on his career.

Yet whatever benefit of the doubt Pitino has banked over the years, he is now overdrawn. His culpabilit­y as an assistant coach in infraction­s committed at the University of Hawaii, his tawdry affair with Karen Sypher, the misdeeds of Andre McGee and this newest corruption case adds up to a critical mass that cannot be easily explained away or excused.

Meiners has alluded to discus- sions during the summer in which Louisville board of trustees chairman David Grissom asked interim President Greg Postel to fire Pitino. At the time, the financial terms of the coach’s longterm contract could have posed an enormous obstacle to making that change. But if Pitino cannot be persuaded to resign for the good of all concerned — and his resignatio­n still seems the most probable scenario at this point — firing him for “just cause” has now become a more plausible option.

“Employee is presumed to be responsibl­e for the actions of all assistant coaches and administra­tors who report, directly or indirectly, to him,” Pitino’s contract reads. “Employee shall promote an atmosphere of compliance, academic integrity, and ethical conduct within his program and shall monitor the activities of all assistant coaches and administra­tors involved with the program who report, directly or indirectly, to him.”

The FBI’s investigat­ion is ongoing. The NCAA, presumably, will be opening a new investigat­ion soon. The University of Louisville needs to bring a close to as much of this matter as it can immediatel­y. If possible, by the end of the day.

Sullivan is a columnist for The (Louisville) Courier-Journal, part of the USA TODAY Network.

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 ?? BOB DONNAN, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Rick Pitino has led the men’s basketball program at Louisville since the 2001-02 season.
BOB DONNAN, USA TODAY SPORTS Rick Pitino has led the men’s basketball program at Louisville since the 2001-02 season.

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