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July 14, 2006

Tiger By The Tale

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 9:54 pm

You have to read the story from the NY Times on Auburn’s burgeoning academic scandal involving a “groupie” like sociology professor (who just happened to have earned his doctorate at Notre Dame).

The Auburn football team’s performance in the N.C.A.A.’s new rankings of student athletes’ academic progress surprised many educators on and off campus. The team had the highest ranking of any Division I-A public university among college football’s six major conferences. Over all among Division I-A football programs, Auburn trailed only Stanford, Navy and Boston College and finished just ahead of Duke.

Among those caught off guard by Auburn’s performance was Gordon Gee, the chancellor of Vanderbilt, a fellow university in the Southeastern Conference and the only private institution. Vanderbilt had an 88 percent graduation rate in 2004, compared with Auburn’s 48 percent, yet finished well behind Auburn in the new N.C.A.A. rankings.

“It was a little surprising because our graduation rates are so much higher,” Mr. Gee said. “I’m not quite certain I understood that.”

The sociology department became “a dumping ground for athletes,” according to one sociology professor, Paul Starr. That did not bother Professor Gundlach as much as what he viewed as the university administration’s apathy toward Professor Petee’s academic approach.

Professor Gundlach took the case to John Heilman, a university administrator who would soon become Auburn’s provost. He included paperwork showing that Professor Petee taught more than 250 students individually during the 2004-5 academic year. He also provided Mr. Heilman with examples of how prominent athletes had cut academic corners.

“It was at that point that I figured the corruption runs the full gantlet of the administration,” Professor Gundlach said. “We were getting sociology majors graduating without taking sociology classes. I’m a director of a program putting out people who I know more than likely don’t deserve a degree.”

After Professor Gundlach turned over many of his findings to The New York Times and a reporter began questioning administrators two months ago, the provost’s office began an investigation. Mr. Heilman said today in a prepared statement that the investigation began on June 5 after an anonymous complaint was submitted.

In a separate statement today, Edward Richardson, Auburn’s interim president, said, “I want to assure everyone associated with Auburn that upon completion of the investigation we will deal with this issue as we have dealt with other challenges –— directly and openly.”

The Auburn football team appeared to be the biggest benefactor of Professor Petee’s directed-reading offerings.

The 18 football players received an average G.P.A. of 3.31 in the classes, according to statistics compiled by Professor Gundlach. In all of their other credit hours at Auburn, their average was 2.14.

“He’s the kind of teacher that, you know, he wants to help you out, not just pile a lot of stuff on you,” said Carlos Rogers, a former sociology major and defensive back who left the university early and now plays in the N.F.L. for the Washington Redskins.

Mr. Williams said one of the two directed-reading courses he took with Professor Petee during the spring of 2005 was a statistics class.

Asked if that course, considered the most difficult in the sociology major, was available to regular students as a directed reading, Professor Petee said, “No, not usually.”

Mr. Williams described the class this way: “You’re just studying different kinds of math. It’s one of those things where you write a report about the different theories and things like that.”

He said that Virgil Starks, the director of Student Athlete Support Services at Auburn, set up the courses. Mr. Starks said scheduling was not his responsibility but that of the dean’s office. Mr. Williams said he appreciated the convenience of the two courses, because he was traveling around the country auditioning for N.F.L. teams at the time.

The academic journey of the former Auburn defensive end Doug Langenfeld illustrates how Professor Petee and the athletic department helped athletes remain eligible.

When Mr. Langenfeld arrived at Auburn in 2003 from a junior college in California, he wanted to major in nursing. To do so would have required him to take a heavy load of 21 credits his first semester. Instead, he said, Mr. Starks suggested he major in sociology. Mr. Langenfeld asked for advice from Mr. Williams, who claimed that the major was “easy if you studied.”

In the fall of 2004, Mr. Langenfeld found himself in an academic bind. More than two months into the fall semester, he realized that he had been attending the wrong class because of a scheduling error. Mr. Langenfeld approached Professor Gundlach about adding a class, but Professor Gundlach said he could not help him because it was too late in the semester.

Mr. Langenfeld then went to his academic counselor in the athletic department, Brett Wohlers, with a plea: “I got dropped from a class and need a class to stay eligible for the bowl game,” Mr. Langenfeld recalled in a recent telephone interview. “I need a class, and I’ll take any class right now. I don’t not want to play in my last bowl game.”

He said Mr. Wohlers told him about a “one-assignment class” that other players had taken and enjoyed. So in the “9th or 10th week,” Mr. Langenfeld said, he picked up a directed-reading course with Professor Petee. Semesters typically run 15 weeks.

Mr. Langenfeld said he had to read one book, but he could not recall the title. He said he was required to hand in a 10-page paper on the book. Between picking up the class and handing in the paper, he said, he met several times with Professor Petee in his office.

“I got a B in the class,” said Mr. Langenfeld, who started in the Sugar Bowl against Virginia Tech. “That was a good choice for me.”

Outstanding. Even better, just before the story fully came out, Will Collier, an Auburn alum who blogs at VodkaPundit offers the offensive defense — The NY Times is out to get Auburn, conspiracy of Alabama fans, and by god, the NY Times investigated the story with serious ethical lapses. The actual facts are irrelevant — in fact once the article came out, he became a little quieter. What’s funny is the effort that went into his “investigation,” of the conspiracy and plot against Auburn — and this guy likes to mock the 9/11 conspiracy loons.

I mean nevermind that Auburn was trying to sit on this until another Auburn professor blew the whistle to the NY Times and forced Auburn to start ass-covering investigating thanks to “an anonymous tip.” Actually, the fighting among professors is further evidence to the Auburn faithful that this is not a real scandal (not that most of it wasn’t predictable once the story broke).

$20 bucks says the NCAA ends up doing minimal sanctions.

Conference Slate

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 2:25 pm

Thanks to Matt from Orange 44 for the heads up. The Big East announced the conference match-ups for the 2006-07 season. Not the dates, just who is playing who. A now challenging question considering its 16 games for 16 teams. To refresh, as to the format. Each team gets 10 single opponent games (5 home, 5 away), 3 home-and-homes, and two teams skipped — but not the same 2 as last year.

So here’s Pitt’s conference slate:

PITT’S 2006-07 BIG EAST OPPONENTS
HOME GAMES (8)

Connecticut
Georgetown*
Louisville
Marquette*
Providence
St. John’s
USF
West Virginia*

AWAY GAMES (8)

Cincinnati
DePaul
Georgetown*
Marquette*
Seton Hall
Syracuse
Villanova
West Virginia*

TEAMS NOT ON THE SCHEDULE (2)

Notre Dame
Rutgers

* denotes home-and-home

Interesting that Marquette is the other home-and-home for Pitt, like last year. I guess the closeness of the games last year and expectations for Marquette make that a reasonable thing. No surprise that WVU and G-town are the others. WVU is Pitt’s rivalry team and G-town is going to be the other team expected to fight Pitt for the Big East going into the season.

Notre Dame and Rutgers get a break this year from Pitt. Seems reasonable since it’s been a few years since either beat Pitt. Providence, however, still has to take a beating.

Overall, I would call this a tough, but fair schedule.

Looking over the full conference schedule, in a quick scan and initial impressions.

Notre Dame will not be able to bitch about the schedule this year. They miss both Pitt and UConn on their schedule and their home-and-homes are with USF, DePaul and ‘Nova. The only tough road games are Syracuse, Villanova and G-town. Probably the easiest conference schedule.

West Virginia is a close 2nd, missing both Syracuse and Louisville. Their home-and-homes are Pitt, Seton Hall and Cinci. Their 3 toughest road match-ups are Pitt, Marquette and G-town.

Two teams that could benefit very well from the schedule and diminished expectations are Cinci and St. John’s. Cinci gets to skip Marquette and UConn, are spared a home-and-home with Louisville (very surprisingly — TV overruled rivalry there), and only three difficult road games at G-town, ‘Nova and Syracuse.

St. John’s especially, if they have more depth could be up near the top of the BE with the help of this schedule. No Marquette or ‘Nova. They have home-and-homes with DePaul, Providence and Syracuse, and that leaves just Pitt and Louisville as their other tough road games.

Georgetown got what I would consider the bad draw in scheduling. Their skip games are with USF and Providence — probably the worst of the BE this coming season. The home-and-homes are with Cinci, ‘Nova and Pitt. Other road games include Louisville, Syracuse and St. John’s.

UConn has a fair schedule, in toto, but it’s a brutal away schedule: G-town, Louisville, Pitt, Syracuse, St. John’s (looking for payback). Not to mention Rutgers and WVU. The home slate is softer with Providence, USF and Seton Hall.

More later if I run out of other subjects.

Beasley Watch

Filed under: Uncategorized — Chas @ 12:24 pm

Well, here’s that additional confirmation I was hoping that top player Michael Beasley might cast his roaming eyes towards Pitt.

To complicate matters further, David Cox, Beasley’s former AAU coach and longtime friend, was recently named director of basketball operations at Pittsburgh. Reports have surfaced that Beasley might end up at Pitt, and he did not completely deny them.

“It’s complicated,” Beasley said. “I’m committed to Kansas State but Pittsburgh could be an option.”

I don’t think the irony would be lost given that many feel Huggins has been using his relationship with J.O. Stright to get Herb Pope.

Of course, for Beasley, the immediate issue is picking a new prep school for this fall.

The 6-6 Walker was recently declared ineligible by the Ohio High School Athletic Association after an investigation determined he had exhausted his eight semesters of eligibility. He could end up spending a post-graduate year at someplace like Winchendon or The Patterson (N.C.) School.

Beasley, 17, was similarly declared ineligible at Oak Hill, Carmelo Anthony’s alma mater, and could also be on the move.

Byrnes — who also briefly coached former Paterson Catholic and Passaic star Jeremiah King and former Passaic Tech standout Hashim “Big City” Bailey and now coaches Don Bosco’s Trevor Harris – said he would love to have Beasley.

“I’ve talked to Michael about prep schools and about the possibility of him coming to The Winchendon School and Michael has an interest,” Byrnes said this week at the Reebok Summer East Classic at FDU. “We have very few beds left on campus. I’m begging my headmaster to save one more bed.”

Beasley said he wasn’t sure where he would spend the upcoming season.

Yeah, I would guess more than a few prep schools would like to have Beasley for a year.

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