Baltimore Sun Sunday

Season tips off under cloud of NCAA scandal

- By John Marshall

A federal trial revealed more details of a pay-to-pay recruiting scandal, darkening the cloud hanging over college basketball for a second straight season.

But will it make a difference? Outside of a handful of suspension­s, the curtain pullback of the sport’s worst-kept secret had little impact last year. The 2018-19 season could take a similar route.

Two trials are still coming and more details could emerge from a federal investigat­ion into shady recruiting practices, so college basketball may still feel a major jolt.

But the sport is perhaps better than ever on the court. Scoring remains up, more star-in-the-making freshmen dot rosters across the country, blue blood programs have restocked and the mid-majors have more reason for optimism after Loyola-Chicago’s Final Four run.

Unless something monumental arises from the investigat­ion or the NCAA, don’t expect too much to change.

“If it’s not the most-watched sport in America, I’m not sure what is,” West Virginia coach Bob Huggins said. “You have six games a night, so I think the state of our game is fine. If things happened, we all know they shouldn’t have happened, but that doesn’t affect the state of our game and the way people go about doing their business.”

College basketball was rocked before the 2017-18 season started when 10 people, including four assistant coaches from prominent programs, were arrested on accusation­s that they funneled up to six-figure payments to top-tier recruits to influence their choice of schools, apparel companies and agents.

More accusation­s came out during the season and a federal trial last month led to the conviction­s of three men on fraud charges. Testimony during the trial revealed more accusation­s of paying players by Arizona, Louisville, Kansas, Duke, Oregon and North Carolina State, among others.

The NCAA has created new rules based on recommenda­tions by a commission headed by Condoleezz­a Rice in hopes of curtailing the pay-to-play practices, but may not punish any programs or coaches ensnared in the probe until after the final trial, which is scheduled for after the Final Four in Minneapoli­s.

“Just like Wall Street, no matter how many regulation­s there are, there are always going to be people that when the stakes are high and there’s a lot of money involved that don’t follow the guidelines,” Cincinnati coach Mick Cronin said. “Not that I don’t appreciate what the Rice Commission did and what they’re trying to accomplish. I get all that, but you’re not going to stop it. If people don’t want to do the right thing, you’re not going to stop them.”

Mid-major programs should get a boost of confidence this year after watching UMBC beat Virginia to become the first No. 16 seed to beat a No. 1 and Chicago-Loyola’s improbable run to the Final Four.

This season has plenty of deep-runpotenti­al mid-majors.

No. 7 Nevada has its highest preseason ranking and coach Eric Musselman has a loaded roster in Reno. Buffalo has five of its top six scorers back from a team that knocked off Arizona in the opening round of the NCAAs.

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