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Alabama paid

obfuscating

HB Legend
Jan 8, 2016
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8,424
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A Sports Illustrated story published Monday alleges that two players from Alabama's 2009 national championship football team accepted cash in exchange for signing their names to memorabilia.

Cliff Panezich, who sold signed sports memorabilia, told Sports Illustrated that he and Adam Bollinger paid Alabama players Marquis Johnson and Terrence Cody $200 and $400, respectively, in December 2009. Johnson denied that he was paid for his autograph and told the magazine that he did not know Panezich. Cody declined comment.

It's unclear whether the allegations would have fallen within the NCAA's statute of limitations, which covers four years unless it is shown that there was a "pattern of willful violations" that began before the four-year window but continued into the current four-year window, or a "blatant disregard for certain fundamental rules" such as recruiting, extra benefits, academics, ethical conduct or an "effort to conceal violations."

According to the report, some Alabama players, including quarterback Greg McElroy, signed the memorabilia but refused payment in order to stay in compliance with NCAA rules.

Panezich and Bollinger told Sports Illustrated they waited for players outside of the athletic dormitories during winter break while the team wasn't practicing, first encountering Johnson, who then allegedly recruited other players to participate.

An Alabama spokesman told SI, in part, "As part of our comprehensive compliance and education program, we routinely review all situations of potential concern and address matters such as these with all of our student-athletes."

Alabama went undefeated in 2009, beating Texas to win the BCS National Championship.

In December 2016, Panezich pleaded guilty in Youngstown, Ohio, to aggravated theft, identity fraud, telecommunications fraud, money laundering, engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity and three counts of forgery with a forfeiture specification.

In April, he was sentenced to six years in prison. Prosecutors say he was the mastermind behind an enterprise that sold sports items with fake athlete signatures to close to 20,000 people.


http://www.espn.com/college-footbal...wo-alabama-players-took-money-autographs-2009
 
UAB is on high alert, sanctions just around the corner.

If UNC ran a fraudulent academic program for years to shelter athletes and didn't receive as much as a slap on the wrist, you think the NCAA is going to do anything to Bama as a result of a couple kids getting a few hundred dollars for their autographs?

Nothing to see here...
 
Really $200.00 oh my call out the National Guard....

Every day occurrence everywhere yes even at Iowa ... I love the Hawkeyes but this is just routine
 
Really $200.00 oh my call out the National Guard....

Every day occurrence everywhere yes even at Iowa ... I love the Hawkeyes but this is just routine
ahh yes the old [everybody does it defense] does that mean if some one jumps off the cliff you are going to follow and claim well every one is doing it?
 
This could happen anywhere, I dislike Alabama as much as anyone, to me this isn't something that indicates widespread cheating.
 
Im all for NCAA reform. But not for this. Aplayer should have every right to be able to sell his autograph. The fact a student athlete can't do this without getting in trouble should be changed. Academic fraud no toleration for. But to disallow a person from partaking in American capitalism is fundamentally wrong.
 
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