Riddickulous
"That" Guy
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well the flood gates will be opened now, just pay the parents with out the kids "knowledge". And the kid will play where ever the parents push them to play.
Say goodbye to college football as we know it
If the school's innocent, and the player's innocent, then can anyone really complain about the player being allowed to play for the school?
They were talking about the actual rule on ESPN radio, if ANYONE ask money from ANYONE associated with a school or agency it renders the athlete automatically ineligible
12.3.1.2 Benefits from Prospective Agents. An individual shall be ineligible per Bylaw 12.3.1 if he or she
(or his or her relatives or friends) accepts transportation or other benefits from: (Revised: 1/14/97)
(a) Any person who represents any individual in the marketing of his or her athletics ability. The receipt of
such expenses constitutes compensation based on athletics skill and is an extra benefit not available to the
student body in general; or
(b) An agent, even if the agent has indicated that he or she has no interest in representing the student-athlete
in the marketing of his or her athletics ability or reputation and does not represent individuals in the
student-athlete’s sport. (Adopted: 1/14/97)
Ok so once I got a chance to do some research this is what I found. It's the best part that shows why he should be ineligible, and from everything in that section and others, I personally seen nothing that says the athlete has to have knowledge it was happening.
....Whether Newton did it or his father did should not be relevant. Otherwise, you'd be crazy to not ask schools for money. Dad asks school A for money. If school A says yes, attend school A and hide money. If school A says no, ask school B for money. Rinse and repeat. School A can turn you in, but all they will have evidence of is the father asking for money, not the actual transfer of money (since they refused).
The reason Cam was originally ruled ineligible yesterday, but wasn't reported, was because it was found that his father had in fact asked for money from an agency to have his son, Cam Newton, play for Miss. St. Which in that case would fall under the benefits section.
The reason the NCAA then overturned that ruling was because they look at each case on an individual basis. For whatever reason, it was then ruled that he could play because they felt Cam had no "knowledge", but if the rule is read correctly, he should be still be ineligible. The rule itself states nothing about knowledge, it was the NCAA that decided that, because it each case is looked at on an individual basis.
Under Bylaw 12 only a "representative" asking for money can make a player ineligible. If a player has no knowledge of another asking for money on his behalf, then by definition that person is not a "representative".
In fact, if Cam could truly show that he had no knowledge of the request (assuming the request happened...) he would have a pretty good 14th Amendment Due Process claim against the NCAA, were he ruled ineligible. This would be a helluva lot stronger than Clarett's Sherman Act claim that made it all the way to the federal circuit court of appeals.
Under Bylaw 12 only a "representative" asking for money can make a player ineligible. If a player has no knowledge of another asking for money on his behalf, then by definition that person is not a "representative".
In fact, if Cam could truly show that he had no knowledge of the request (assuming the request happened...) he would have a pretty good 14th Amendment Due Process claim against the NCAA, were he ruled ineligible. This would be a helluva lot stronger than Clarett's Sherman Act claim that made it all the way to the federal circuit court of appeals.
So, assuming it's clear that his father did attempt to secure financial reward from at least one school, the question becomes: is his father a "representative" of Cam Newton...
There's no way to prove that Cam didn't have knowledge of his father's request...
Well said, my thoughts are the line from Blazing Saddles- 'we got to protect our phoney baloney business here boys'. This smells like a cover up to get the $$$ and get 2 teams in the BCS bowls. They will deal with the consequences later. I have many Auburn friends and have pulled for them get a shot at a NC since they got shotchanged in 2004 but now I hope they get beat. The SEC is always suspected of the good old boy dont tell on your buddy network but now they just look like shams to me. Great conference great players but I give them no respect now, this smells.This isn't the final word. This is just them sweeping it all under the rug until after the season.
As things stand, though, this is complete bull ****. As M.I. said, this has the potential to end amateurism as we know it. Either embrace the concept or don't, don't say it's ok for a parent to go fishing for cash as long as the player doesn't know (wink wink) about it.
Well, I think it's pretty simple. LSU lost to Arkansas, dropping them down. Arkansas is ranked 7 in the BCS, so they are probably not going to leap to 1 or 2 for the title game. That leaves Auburn as the only real shot for the NCAA to get a team from their Golden Conference into the title game. The conference already covered their *** by not penalizing Fairley for a few blatant dirty plays against Georgia. So he played against Bama and probably won the game for them with that fumble plus recovery. So Auburn gets to play in the title game, everyone gets paid and fat and happy. No harm done.
Sorry, I am seriously jaded about this garbage.
Well, first of all this, Sources: Cam and Cecil Newton talked of pay-to-play plan with recruiters - ESPN , makes it seem like Cam did, in fact, know.
I agree that if true, he's not eligible. I guess that's the million dollar question.
Second, it is far from clear to me that everybody has a legal right to play in the NCAA. The due process clause seems less relevant than the rulebook. And since, in the rulebook, an athlete is ruled ineligible if his parents receive benefits, regardless of whether or not the athlete knows about these benefits, it is not clear to me that parents aren't automatically considered representatives of the athlete.