Poor Silvio



  • Crimsonorblue22 said:

    @Texas-Hawk-10 is this new about shoe reps being called boosters?

    I have no idea and I haven’t seen anything about why the NCAA considers Gassnola a booster.



  • This came up awhile ago in some older articles and seems to be the approach that the NCAA is going to take.



  • @BShark better include all schools



  • Crimsonorblue22 said:

    @BShark better include all schools

    Ha! Nike hid it better sadly. And now Adidas is back to normal too.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 I think anybody who gives a kid money to attend a particular school is considered a booster for that school.

    Here’s the NCAA definition.

    http://www.ncaa.org/enforcement/role-boosters

    Boosters, referred to by the NCAA as “representatives of the institution’s athletic interests,” include anyone who has:

    Provided a donation in order to obtain season tickets for any sport at the university.
    Participated in or has been a member of an organization promoting the university’s athletics programs.
    Made financial contributions to the athletic department or to a university booster organization.
    Arranged for or provided employment for enrolled student-athletes.
    Assisted or has been requested by university staff to assist in the recruitment of prospective student-athletes.
    Assisted in providing benefits to enrolled student athletes or their families.
    Been involved otherwise in promoting university athletics.
    

    Once an individual is identified as a “representative of the institution’s athletics interests,” the person retains that identity forever.

    I don’t think they need to be sanctioned by the university. They are just trying to provide a boost to the school, whether or not they’ve been asked to.



  • Jeff Long says that the NCAA would consider reinstatement if KU announces Gassnola was a booster.

    Sorry Silvio, kansas doesnt like you that much



  • Just a follow up, Long was told to say Gassnola was a booster to help facilitate a process for reinstatement



  • The full statement by the NCAA announcing what they laughably term Silvio’s “reinstatement decision” says that the decision was based on facts provided by KU. Whether de Sousa was not a party to the statement of facts would be pretty much the only factor that would allow him to challenge the factual basis for the decision. If he was, his only challenge would be to the severity.

    From NCAA.com:

    NCAA provides reinstatement decision for Kansas’ Silvio De Sousa February 1, 2019 6:05pm

    University of Kansas men’s basketball student-athlete Silvio De Sousa must sit out the remainder of the 2018-19 season and the 2019-20 season because his guardian received payment from a university booster and agent and agreed to receive additional funds from the same person.

    According to the facts provided for purposes of the reinstatement request, De Sousa’s guardian received payment of $2,500 from an agent and booster of the school. He agreed to accept additional payment of $20,000 from the same individual and an Adidas employee for securing De Sousa’s enrollment at Kansas.

    According to the guidelines adopted by the NCAA Division I membership, when a prospective student-athlete allows a third party to involve himself in the recruitment process, the prospective student-athlete is then responsible for the actions of that person, regardless of whether the prospective student-athlete had knowledge or if benefits were received. Membership guidelines state the starting point for these violations is permanent ineligibility, but the NCAA staff recognized mitigation based on the specific circumstances of this case when making its decision.

    When a school discovers an NCAA rules violation has occurred, it must declare the student-athlete ineligible and may request the student-athlete’s eligibility be reinstated. The NCAA staff reviews each student-athlete reinstatement request individually based on its own specific facts. This decision may be appealed to the Division I Student-Athlete Reinstatement Committee, which is comprised of representatives from NCAA schools.



  • @mayjay are they saying KU admitted to all of that? Future payments, sorry I’m confused.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 It looks like it. But whether SDS signed off on that is not known. It does imply from the explanation that the NCAA accepts SDS’ story of not knowing. But the FBI actually cleared Bowen, and that didn’t matter, either.



  • So confusing



  • It doesnt really seem to matter if you prove your innocent. Once a rule is broke it’s over. All or nothing



  • Soooo, the NCAA told us about a month ago that the only way they would consider reinstating DeSouza is if we declared him ineligible, and also we “declare” the Adidas rep T.J. Gassnola a “booster”. And like complete idiots, we did that. That way, the NCAA could ban DeSouza for 2 years, and they could come after our wins, conference title, and Final Four appearance because a KU “booster” gave a guardian money. So, we were misled into screwing ourselves to the wall. This was a despicable act by the guardian, and the NCAA, and might be the most egregious act on the part of the NCAA since it’s inception. Somebody has the knives out for us, and stuck it in deep. Here is our brilliant Athletic Director explaining his complete ignorance of what bastards he was dealing with:

    If our conference title, wins and Final Four get set aside, I think Jeff Long should be shown the door.



  • This is so very confusing to me. Surely we had legal help and this is in writing. Why would this be legal and can they go back on their word, legally? They are admitting it isn’t true.



  • KUSTEVE said:

    If our conference title, wins and Final Four get set aside, I think Jeff Long should be shown the door.

    Dude calm down. Long isn’t going anywhere and he shouldn’t. The NCAA doesn’t need KU to admit Gassnola was a booster to come down on the school. They have plenty of evidence to make that conclusion on their own, regardless of KU’s actions through Silvio’s reinstatement process.



  • Can u imagine going thru this w/sz?



  • To put any of this on Long is Ludicrous to put it nicely. He was likely doing what was recommended by our legal team. He also has in his contract he cant be fired from findings of this FBI probe.



  • Yup. As i was saying earlier, something wasn’t making sense about the punishment and statements. we were missing facts. That new fact about the “booster” designation adds some clarity. The punishment starts making sense.

    I was dumbfounded at first that KU would admit to such a thing (Gassnola was a booster), but if you think about it some more, maybe it was intentional. Maybe that simply focuses the punishment to one person (Silvio), and not the institution (Kansas – vacated wins, etc).

    I sense that our AD is spewing some subtle B.S. as well. Who the eff knows.

    What i do know is that we should now disappear Silvio from the program to wrap this up. the longer it lingers, the fewer potential recruits consider KU.

    Nothing about this smells right still…



  • @kjayhawks I’m not going to get into a back and forth with you on this- if you want to shift the blame to the “attorneys” instead of the person who is in charge of the athletic department, then that is your right. But, the fact remains that by declaring Silvio ineligible, and falsely declaring the Adidas rep as a “booster”, the NCAA can now set aside every win we had when Silvio played, including our conference title, and our Final Four Appearance. Furthermore, they can come after our program with both barrels, and they most certainly will. I wouldn’t be surprised if they don’t put us on probation… and probably will ban us from post season play. I don’t think many fans have quite grasped how profound this will affect our program, including you. If you’re fine with what’s certainly going to come, more power to you. But I’m not. If Long had done nothing, we would still have Silvio on the bench. What is ludicrous, imo, is the terrible position he has put our program in.



  • @KUSTEVE I’ve been worried about this all along, I agree with all if your statement except that this is on Long. I highly doubt Long did that without input from dozens of folks including Bill Self.



  • They had to keep this from self and Silvio. Crazy. I still think the legal dept took care of this.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 “part of it in the dark” from Self and SDS. Is interesting



  • @kjayhawks that’s why I’m so confused. I was why are we talking a booster, Maryland booster? It seemed like it was one in the same person, but I couldn’t understand it. So weird.



  • @KUSTEVE Did you know that our AD actually benefits from KU going on probation? Here’s the provision -

    “Should the University be placed under any federal, state, NCAA, or Conference investigation leading to restrictions or probation for its football, men’s basketball, women’s basketball or women’s volleyball athletic programs for matters occurring prior to the Effective Date of the Executive, the term of the contract shall be extended equal to the length of the penalties.”



  • @HighEliteMajor which is what I was getting at, Long inherited this mess. He had zip to with it and I’m okay with saying maybe he shouldn’t have done this or that I’m sure there are a gods plenty on his team both interally and out sourced that are telling him just what the hell to do. Not get this really interesting on here but I’ve heard a ton of rumors of Pop retiring and Self to San Antonio as early as at this seasons end.





  • @KUSTEVE @kjayhawks Not to interrupt a blood feud…but there may be a subtle point you guys are missing…and it certainly needs more interpretation:

    It could be that the “booster” designation as described was for purposes of Silvio’s eligibility this year only, and may have no outcome on past KU games, etc.

    I’m no expert of course, but it reads that way. that could mean the NCAA will not go back and punish KU for past wins, championships, etc.



  • @jayhawkcsg Let’s hope your right, no Blood fued here, I get along with @KUSTEVE fine. We just disagree.



  • @HighEliteMajor I’m really at a loss to wrap my head around it once I heard Long’s explanation. I thought it was really weird when we all of a sudden decided to declare Silvio ineligible. And the Adidas rep suddenly becomes a “booster”. And that’s what Long thought would get Silvio declared able to play? What that did was allow the NCAA to take away our victories from last year for using an “ineligible” player, and it will allow them to put us on probation because a 'booster" gave Silvio’s “guardian” money. So, we now will be blamed and held accountable for the 60,000 that our “booster” paid to get Silvio to play Maryland. As crazy as it might seem, the only person that comes out smelling like a rose is Jeff Long. You might be on to something.



  • @kjayhawks Ha. good. Yep, let’s hope nothing else comes of this crap. doubtful, but fingers crossed.



  • @jayhawkcsg but if it’s just like a hypothetical, not a true statement, and all parties know it isn’t true, why do we have to do it.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 No clue. Stupid lawyer crap most likely. It’s either that or our AD is the dumbest AD on the planet. I prefer to think he’s not.



  • So called felon rep not legal booster, said he was going to give fenny 20,000 to pay off Maryland booster. He didn’t even give him money. Low down felon, who now is known as a ku booster just said that, never gave him money, right.🤔?



  • @KUSTEVE You could be right, I’m just not sure Long needs an extension based on that. He already has a crap load of money and is highly respected in this profession. I would think this could very well be his last stop and he would want to end his career with a solid FB and B.B. program.



  • @jayhawkcsg Don’t mistake passion for malice. I agree with KJ 99.9% of the time. He bleeds Crimson and Blue, just like me. To tell you the truth, I hadn’t researched what went down at first, and just assumed the NCAA had set Long up. And that’s probably true.Then I saw Long’s explanation…OMG. i just can’t figure out why you would admit the only two things that could put our program on probation…one of which ( declaring the Adidas rep as a booster ) was a lie.



  • @kjayhawks You’re right, he did inherit this. We just don’t know how he steered the ship, or his role, after arriving. We only know what we hear.

    @KUSTEVE One thing to consider. In legal proceedings, there is a process for a Motion to Dismiss. That is at an early stage. But to get the dismissal, you have to assume the allegations of the other side to be true, and thus the judge would rule that the case cannot proceed even on the alleged facts. That may be a bit of what’s going on here. KU wanted a resolution. So to do so, they had to accept the concept of Gassnola being a booster. Essentially, assuming the worst case fact scenario, can we get him reinstated? If Gassnola is really a booster?

    That an attempt to provide a possible explanation.

    That aside, you don’t do that when the adversary can use the admission against you, just as it appears that they did. That is very hard for me to fathom. Now, what I don’t know for sure is if the NCAA used that “admission” against us, or if they made that independent determination.

    If they did use the admission against us, I’m not quite sure what to say at this point.

    Why would we have to make such an admission if it could be the dagger that delivers the death shot?

    Long called a it hypothetical. It’s not a hypothetical if the “admission” is used against you.

    Again, this is just spit ballin’ a bit.

    When this first came out and read the NCAA statement, I didn’t comprehend that Gassnola and the “booster” were one in the same.



  • @HighEliteMajor i will surprised if we don’t have an avalanche of consequences, from vacated wins, titles, FF, to probation in the future. It might turn out to be the single most idiotic response to an NCAA investigation in the history of the NCAA.



  • @KUSTEVE I mentioned the word “foreboding” the other day. It does feel that way. I will be surprised if the penalty is less than 1) Vacate FF and wins that DeSousa participated in, 2) No tourney in 2019-20, and 3) a loss of a scholarship or two.

    And I know you were a bit upset with me when I said this a while back, but this path is why I have feared that our coach might leave. I wonder if the NCAA comes after Self, what they may know, and what Self’s reaction might be. Regardless of any of that, a normal person might say he can enjoy life better away from such hassles.



  • @HighEliteMajor It makes me wonder if this isn’t Long’s way of pushing him out. Maybe Long has another buddy that coaches basketball.



  • @KUSTEVE no way



  • @KUSTEVE You truly never know the motives of individuals. The insecurities. Or what is in their head.

    This also goes back a bit to one of my thoughts – if the NCAA hits our program hard, we should burn it down. Name names, give info, let everyone know where the bodies are buried. We certainly know what Zion got. I’m sure we know quite a bit. I’m sure we can make everyone very uncomfortable. Maybe we tell the NCAA that if they come at us hard, we’re not going to roll over and take it.

    Of course, I really don’t know how this leverage game works internally. KU, NCAA, etc. There may be other things going on that make this implausible.

    But I do wonder …

    @Crimsonorblue22 He’s spit ballin’ too. Just theorizing. I would seriously doubt it. But you never know. It’s worth considering. What do you think about the fact that Long benefits from NCAA sanctions?

    I think that contract provision is just ridiculous. You allow an employee to gain more compensation for a negative result? A result that he has his hands on, management wise?

    Again, I trust his integrity I guess. But folks have done far worse for more money.

    And I think @kjayhawks is right. Attorneys have their hands all over this.

    But are these the same attorneys that let Self go out and give that silly statement after the trial verdict? That was not written by a (competent) lawyer.



  • I suggested from the first evidence in 2017 that if the Adidas rep was involved in steering recruits to KU he could possibly be held to be a booster. Maybe that is why I have not been as surprised at what has transpired since. Booster basically means (IIRC) anyone with whom the university has a formal or informal relationship who helps recruit for, raise funds for, or promotes the school with the school’s knowledge. Schools are generally held responsible for supervising the conduct of boosters.

    Here, there is in my mind no question based on the evidence from trial that the NCAA has a strong case on which to find the rep was a booster upon whom KU relied extensively for contact and influence in recruiting. I think our only arguable defense is that the booster was engaged in unforeseeable criminal conduct.



  • @mayjay With that, how quickly do dots get connected to the top of the food chain? How could Self be ignorant of all of this if that’s really the narrative? I keep thinking of his statement after the verdict.

    And I know you’ll remember me mentioning this – I have felt from the start of the prosecution that the real target is the big fish, the pristine leader, Bil Self. Prosecutors love bringing such folks down. The higher the mountain, the harder the fall.

    How this would all work between the FBI and NCAA and KU, I don’t know. But the former seem to be working together a bit, and much to our detriment.



  • @mayjay what about the way they presented it to us? Kinda underhanded?



  • @HighEliteMajor I still don’t think that suspicion is correct, and nothing leads me to suspect Self would be a target of the FBI.



  • @Crimsonorblue22 I think our strategy has been designed to allow us to continue asserting innocence without subjecting ourselves to a “lack of cooperation” finding. A tightrope indeed, and one we may find is not well anchored.

    Edit: innocence and ignorance both



  • @mayjay so what can we do to help Silvio w/ not hurting ku?



  • @Crimsonorblue22 I have wondered something that is connected to your question: Can Silvio stay at KU on schollie while being ruled ineligible?



  • That said he could, and practice, hopefully travel w/them



  • @mayjay Another “target” I had thought of was the NCAA model. A political motivation. I just can’t imagine though that this sort of prosecution is solely designed to prosecute a few underlings in this swamp.

    @Crimsonorblue22 This was underhanded I think. I have never seen anything (nor every heard of anything) that requires an admission such as this. To admit that the employee of a third party (a shoe company in this case) was acting as a booster, and not as focusing on his duties as employee of Adidas, is outrageous to me. He was acting for Adidas. He could not care less if it was KU or Cal Poly Tech. Insert the name. It was a college that promoted Adidas best. That is much different than a booster – the guy that donates to the program, etc.

    DeSousa remains on scholarship. We can give scholarships to ineligible players. So this talk about this only hurting the player and others skating is baloney. DeSousa can’t play basketball. KU can’t have him play basketball. Both are hurt. But DeSousa still gets the free education if he wants it (at least this season).


Log in to reply