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Pitino silent, but the players have to talk? That's not right

Halldan1

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Jan 1, 2003
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Right move or gutless move? What's you opinion?


i
Myron Medcalf, ESPN Staff Writer

Rick Pitino and Louisville Cardinals basketball are in the middle of a scandal that could affect both the former's career and the latter's future. And next week, on the day when coaches, players and reporters from the ACC all gather to discuss the upcoming season, Pitino will be in Louisville and his players will represent the team. That seems unfair.

Louisville announced Friday afternoon that Pitino will not attend ACC media day Wednesday in Charlotte. The news release said he has been advised by counsel to avoid the gathering and the questions that would accompany the trip until the smoke clears from the sex-as-bait recruitment scandal that arose when Katina Powell released her book, "Breaking Cardinal Rules: Basketball and the Escort Queen." The book claims that former Louisville assistant Andre McGee paid her to arrange escorts who offered sex to prospects and Louisville players for a price.

Instead, Louisville will send transfers Damion Lee and Trey Lewis, both of whom joined the program a few months ago, in the worst "welcome to our team" gesture in college basketball. Someone at the university thought this was the best idea.

Well, it's not. It's a cop-out. A punk move. The kind of thing you do when you don't want to deal with the issues you've been paid millions to address. Pitino can't be a seven-figure coach in tailored suits and shiny shoes when he's coaching the Cardinals against Kentucky and then suddenly turn into someone who won't be available in Charlotte next week due to whatever legal nonsense the lawyers asked him to spew when he distributed this excuse.

He's sending a couple of players who just want to talk about basketball -- and weren't around during the chapter tied to the allegations -- to address a variety of nonstop queries related to a sex scandal.

Nah, that's not how this works. That's not how this should work.

The particulars of this case will be settled at some point. Louisville police, school officials and the NCAA are all investigating Powell's claims. We still don't know what's true and what's false. And until then, this thing is gray.

But to date, Pitino has controlled the message. He has asked McGee to step forward and tell the truth.

He has been consistent and fervent in his proclamation that he didn't know about any financial deal between Powell and McGee. On Thursday, he stated in a message to fans on his blog that he will not step down.

And now, he has decided -- or the fearful attorneys behind him decided -- that ACC media day is a bad idea.

Pitino to skip media day, avoid scandal inquiries

Louisville coach Rick Pitino won't attend ACC media day Wednesday in Charlotte, North Carolina, on the advice of legal counsel, the school announced Friday.

No, sending two players without their head coach in the middle of this chaos is a bad idea. Telling the world that you're not resigning and then, a day later, announcing that ACC media day will be a no-go is a bad idea. Asking McGee, your former assistant, to step up and tell everyone the truth but then refusing to discuss the matter yourself at a media day -- an event that SMU coach Larry Brown and Syracuse coach Jim Boeheim both attended in their respective conferences when they were under fire for NCAA investigations -- is a bad idea.

Yes, Pitino would probably hit the "no comment" button in Charlotte a million times. But his attendance would remove the heat from a couple of players who won't have the option to say, "You should ask our coach."

This is bizarre. And if you've ever attended a Louisville news conference, you'd understand that. Pitino's postgame conferences are unique. It's more of a conversation than a traditional, stale Q&A with reporters. He's often humorous and always blunt. He once told reporters that Wayne Blackshear had to "wake up" and get ready for his senior season. In 2011, he told ESPN's Jeff Goodman, then with CBS Sports.com, that he ignores "the paranoid" after rival coach John Calipari suggested that the state of Kentucky only bled blue.

Pitino is a verbal jouster. He's quick-witted and direct. He has an answer for everything. If you lose to the Cardinals by 30 or you beat them by 20, he's still there. Ready to talk. Ready to discuss the issues. Ready to face the music.

But next week, the only sound that Lewis and Lee will hear in Charlotte is a crowd around them simultaneously asking the same questions. Sure, they will be trained to hit reporters with a crossover whenever buzzwords such as "Powell," or "escorts," or "sex," or "McGee," or "parties" are mentioned.

But they'll be trapped by it all.

In those moments, on and off the court, players usually turn to their coaches for help.

Pitino, however, won't be there.

http://espn.go.com/mens-college-bas...isville-coach-rick-pitino-bails-acc-media-day
 
something doesn't smell right here. Many coaches have been caught up in scandal, and yet they still show up at these functions. Certainly Boeheim and the UNC coach will be there. For attorneys to advise him to not attend, you would have to think there is something going on or something that he could say that may come back to harm him.
 
He could have attended, announced that on advice of counsel and because of the ongoing investigation , he will not answer any questions concerning Sexgate .
 
This a strange saga. If these were allegations of your every-day, garden-variety form of cheating, Pitino would have been at Media Day with bells on his fingers and toes. Sex is a different matter. I'm not sure he was wrong not to show. In a way, his absence was like a penance. I'm sure it was painful for him not to be there. Of course it could have been much more painful had he attended. But a sex scandal takes things to a whole new and higher level. Louisville has always been a party town, but Kentucky in the Bible Belt. It is odd he didnt attend. To me, this entire story goes to the bigger question of how corrupt are the school's at the top. How widespread is this? The answer to that question has to scare the sh out of the NCAA. Would Congress get involved? These are moral issues, a sex scandal. My, wouldn't they love a taste --wet their beeks-- of that $750 million pot for the tax coffers that March Madness brings. This will become more interesting before it gets settled.
 
. Would Congress get involved? These are moral issues, a sex scandal. My, wouldn't they love a taste --wet their beeks-- of that $750 million pot for the tax coffers that March Madness brings. This will become more interesting before it gets settled.
I hope that was tongue in cheek Mike...as we've seen how politicians, especially Congress does such a good job on these issues.

I haven't looked at the timeline, but this also could have an eerie NJ connection with ex-UL employees, Willard, McHale and Julie Hermann.
 
My thoughts on this scandal: I really don't care. Are people outraged? Do people actually think this isn't something that's rampant around college sports?
 
K gets hurt and gets a bad season stricken from his record...
I'll bet Pitino briefly considered going before tabling the idea...o_O

The most unethical man in college basketball strikes again. The guy is pure pond scum.
You came up with that rather quickly! (And that's what she said...)
 
Just my opinion here and no inside info but I'd be somewhat surprised if Pitino is the Louisville coach by the time the first game is played. I just don't see how he survives this, as long as the media keeps the pressure on.
 
The most unethical man in college basketball strikes again. The guy is pure pond scum.
Whoa Nellie! Mighty strong statement since there's a guy named Calamari coaching across the state in Lexington who's had a couple of teams names removed from the NCAA tourney record books because of him.
 
Whoa Nellie! Mighty strong statement since there's a guy named Calamari coaching across the state in Lexington who's had a couple of teams names removed from the NCAA tourney record books because of him.
Even still... I think when all things are considered, Pitino has lower moral standing than Calipari. Left unmentioned in all this hookers-for-recruits deal is that the transgressions took place in a building named for Pitino's beloved brother-in-law, who was killed on 9/11. Pitino has spoken many times about how close they were and how he is determined to honor the guy's legacy.

Yuck...
 
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Just my opinion here and no inside info but I'd be somewhat surprised if Pitino is the Louisville coach by the time the first game is played. I just don't see how he survives this, as long as the media keeps the pressure on.
But the media loves Pitino, especially the media at ESPN.
 
But the media loves Pitino, especially the media at ESPN.
The media loves anyone that might provide them more access and a story. They will also be the quickest to turn on someone when it goes bad and pile on. Media folks are now below used car salespeople in my book. Sorry used car salespeople.
 
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The media loves anyone that might provide them more access and a story. They will also be the quickest to turn on someone when it goes bad and pile on. Media folks are now below used car salespeople in my book. Sorry used car salespeople.
Steve Spurrier quit on his team mid-season and was a complete horse's ass at his exit press conference, but he hasn't received an ounce of criticism from the mainstream media. Just a few days after he quit on his team mid-season, ESPN had him on as a guest analyst in Ann Arbor.
 
Could not agree more. The fawning over him was disgusting.

I wonder how many players he coached were told it was OK to quit on your team if things were not going well? Any chance he would have taken the back door if his team was in contention for a major bowl?
 
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Steve Spurrier quit on his team mid-season and was a complete horse's ass at his exit press conference, but he hasn't received an ounce of criticism from the mainstream media. Just a few days after he quit on his team mid-season, ESPN had him on as a guest analyst in Ann Arbor.

If it's a guy like Mike Rice, it's an easy target. Spurrier, Pitino, Boeheim etc are off limits. You get to act like a horse's ass, but still have Bilas and Vitale bow before you. In college sports, the coaches rule and players are nothing more than pawns to the networks.
 
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