I have been around "big time" college basketball for most of my life and you are spot on. It's a dirty little secret that is really not a secret at all. There have always been "certain" schools that have paid recruits to come to their schools and then salaried them while players. That is simply a fact. Some schools did it all the time, some went in and out of that dark place periodically. You can often track a particular institution's participation in illegal payments by watching sudden and dramatic shifts in the their on court performance. I am somewhat surprised but not shocked at the allegations that Furman was a participant . FU fits the description of a small school that comes out of nowhere, attains national prominence for a short period of time and then falls back to relative obscurity when the skullduggery ends. People on this board who were here at the time are making these assertions and they sound very plausible and sincere. There was a time that schools that are now considered mid major or less were nationally ranked. LaSalle, St. Louis, Bradley, U of San Francisco, Southern Illinois to name a few were among the top teams in the country. They achieved that because they had better players than the bigger schools. How and why? Where are they now? Keep in mind that UCLA did not win all those championships because of John Wooden. If Lew Alcindor (Abdul-Jabbar), Bill Walton, Gail Goodrich and Walt Hazzard were playing for the Little Sisters of the Poor College, they would have been national champions as well. I suspect the Furman coach at the time knew what was going on and wanted a piece of that action. He had to get the payment money from somewhere and that is where your theory of "willing ignorance" on the part of the administration comes in. At FU or any other institution.Davemeister wrote: ↑Thu Jan 23, 2020 10:53 amThere is a term which explains how such things could happen at a school like Furman. It's called "willful ignorance". A willingness to look the other way or sweep things under the rug.
Everybody liked Big Time basketball and NOBODY wanted to rock the boat by pointing out inconvenient truths.
And it could have been worse for FU. These under the table payments were the foundation of the basketball point shaving scandals. IF a kid was taking money, he damned well knew he was doing something wrong. He was a fertile mark for the gamblers then to offer him even more money to effect the score of the game against the point spread. He didn't even have to throw Grand Old Ivy completely under the bus. Just win by less points than were being laid. The best teams in the country were CCNY, Long Island University, NYU, St. John's, Manhattan and Seton Hall - all in and around NYC and every Tues and Thursday nites there would be a double header at Madison Square Garden featuring 2 of the local nationally ranked team against one of the then power house teams from around the country in front of a packed house of 17k -18k people. In that packed house there were as many guys wearing fedoras and munching on a cigar as there were crew cut college kids. That atmosphere was perfect for some funny business and soon many of those scholar/athletes/ employees were shaving their little hearts out. I mean if you are taking $10 under the table to go to the damned school, why not reach under for another $20? Remember, these were poor kids for the most part from the inner city CYO gyms and outdoor courts - both White and Black. I don't recall FU being at the Garden in their halcyon days of the Williams era and I haven't heard that on this thread. Good miss. That's a big stain.
Its too bad that the program is tainted as some knowledgeable people around here are saying but I can assure you the Dins are in very good (or is it bad?) company as far as prestige is concerned. I don't think that Georgetown, ND, North Carolina, Kentucky, UCLA...to name a few come to the table with clean hands. Doesn't make it right. But in the words of Mahatma Ghandi - "S--T HAPPENS". Let's forget it and worry about how the hell to beat Wofford.