Porterville Recorder

Louisville’s Pitino awaits NCAA questionin­g about prostituti­on

- By GARY B. GRAVES AP SPORTS WRITER

Coach Rick Pitino said Tuesday morning that he is still waiting to be interviewe­d by the NCAA about an escort’s book allegation­s that a former Louisville staffer hired her and other dancers for sex parties at the team’s dormitory.

Pitino has said repeatedly that he did not know about the incidents, and Tuesday took that a step further, saying that athletic director Tom Jurich does not believe he was aware of the activities.

The coach said on ESPN’S “Mike & Mike” that if Jurich “thought for one second I had 1 percent knowledge of hearsay in this case, I would have been gone a long time ago.”

The university has announced a self-imposed one-year postseason ban for the men’s basketball team after the school’s investigat­ion into allegation­s revealed violations did occur.

The coach said he has been kept in the dark about the investigat­ion because he has not been interviewe­d by the NCAA. The university investigat­ion is ongoing and it’s unclear if more self-imposed penalties are possible.

Pitino also has stated that he has no plans to step down, and Tuesday he indicated he position has not changed.

“My future is really irrelevant and unimportan­t, it’s the University of Louisville that I care about,” Pitino said. “I do the same thing every single year. I go away, I take my time and say, ‘ Did you have fun? Do you still have great passion?’

Powell alleged in the book “Breaking Cardinal Rules: Basketball and the Escort Queen” that Andre Mcgee paid her $10,000 for 22 shows from 2010-14 with many taking place in the Cardinals’ Billy Minardi Hall dormitory. The allegation­s led to several investigat­ions: one by the athletic department; the University of Louisville Foundation; the NCAA; and university and Louisville Metro Police in cooperatio­n with the Commonweal­th’s Attorney’s Office.

Powell wouldn’t say how she felt about Pitino being discipline­d in a radio interview, but did say that the school should be punished because it tried to damage her reputation after the book’s release in October. During an appearance on Kentucky Sports Radio, she also said she didn’t think much of Louisville’s self-imposed penalty and suggested it was the school’s way of heading off possible NCAA sanctions.

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