Monetary gifts from Richt among secondary NCAA violations reported by UGA

Mark Richt has given more than $50,000 of his own money the last three years to current and former staff members when UGA's athletic administration refused to step up with compensation. (UGA photo)

Mark Richt has given more than $60,000 of his own money the last three years to current and former staff members when UGA's athletic administration refused to step up with compensation. (UGA photo)

ATHENS – Mark Richt’s generosity and compassion toward his staff has landed the Georgia football coach in hot water with the NCAA.

Richt made personal payments of more than $25,000 to coaches and support staff due to what he perceived as inadequate compensation for those individuals. Richt’s actions were determined to be secondary violations of NCAA rules regarding supplemental pay, according to a recent NCAA review of an lengthy internal investigation conducted by UGA.

According to those reports, obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution through the Freedom of Information Act, Richt paid former recruiting assistant Charlie Cantor $10,842 over an 11-month period through March of 2011, former linebackers coach John Jancek $10,000 in the summer of 2009 and $6,150 to director of player development John Eason in July of 2010. All of the payments were made by checks from Richt’s personal bank account after UGA’s previous athletic administration declined his requests for increased compensation for those parties.

However, Richt unknowingly violated the provisions of NCAA bylaw 11.3.2.2, which regulates supplemental pay for staff members. Both Richt and the staff members who accepted his payments received letters of admonishment from UGA and must undergo additional rules education, according to the documents.

Richt was unavailable for comment on Monday. Athletic Director Greg McGarity declined to discuss details about the case, but acknowledged that all the violations discovered were deemed secondary and that the NCAA considers it a closed matter as of Nov. 30th.

“The report stands on its own,” McGarity said on Monday. “There’s nothing to add. We’re moving forward.”

Richt’s unsanctioned payments were just a few of several violations discovered by UGA in an internal investigation led by attorney Mike Glazier of the NCAA-specialized lawfirm of Bond, Schoeneck & King of Overland Park, Kan. In all, the Bulldogs admitted to committing at least 10 secondary violations in separate reports submitted first to the SEC office in Birmingham.

The NCAA enforcement staff reviewed those reports and responded with its findings in a Nov. 30th letter to SEC Commissioner Mike Slive. In summary, the NCAA agreed with assertions of Georgia and the SEC that all the violations were secondary. As a result of actions already taken, “no further action should be taken by the NCAA in the matter,” wrote Christopher Stroebel, NCAA director of enforcement for secondary violations.

Also revealed in the report:

  • Georgia was determined to have violated game-simulation recruiting rules during an unofficial visit last January by prospective student-athlete Marshall Morgan. Morgan is a place-kicker from Coral Springs, Fla., who has committed to sign in the class of 2012. Coaches played a video of the Georgia fans’ doing the traditional cheer, “Go Dawgs, Sic ‘Em,” on the Sanford Stadium videoboard, while Morgan pretended to kickoff. Richt self-reported the incident retrospectively after learning that the “missing man formation” the Bulldogs’ orchestrated for Isaiah Crowell last January constituted a secondary violation.
  • Defensive coordinator Todd Grantham had impermissible contact with an unidentified recruit in May of 2010. After signing in at the front office of a high school, Grantham walked down a hall looking for the school’s football coach. Unable to locate the coach’s office, Grantham was approached by a young man who asked if he could help him find his way. As it turned out, that individual was the prospect Grantham was there to recruit. Their “small talk” on the way to the coach’s office exceeded the NCAA’s limits for “greetings” during a non-contact period and Georgia was found to be in violation of NCAA bylaws 13.02.4 and 13.1.1.1 regarding contact. As a result, Grantham was withheld from off-campus recruiting activities from Nov. 27-Dec. 3, the number of evaluation days for the football staff for spring of 2012 was reduced from 168 to 158 and Grantham was ordered to attend a two-day rules seminar next summer.
  • An unidentified football prospect (his name was redacted because he is now enrolled at UGA) received impermissible overnight lodging and transportation during an overnight visit last year. The prospect was scheduled to spend the night with a student-athlete in a university dormitory, which is sanctioned, but made a “spur-of-the-moment decision” to stay with another student-athlete at an off-campus apartment. Off-campus lodging and transportation for which is impermissible.
  • Last month, Georgia provided two free meals to Tyriq Gurley, the 5-year-old little brother of 2012 running back prospect Todd Gurley. Meals were permitted for Gurley and his parents but not for siblings on the official visit. The Gurleys reimbursed UGA $21.33 for the child’s meals and UGA reported a violation of bylaw 13.6.7.7.

Those minor violations were added to a list that included Crowell’s “the missing man formation,” the impermissible participation of football lettermen Randall Godfrey and David Pollack in the commitment announcement ceremony of then-prospect, and the routine overpayment of four graduate assistants due to a clerical error last spring, and several instances of inadvertent “pocket dialing” of prospects during impermissible periods earlier this year.

While all the violations are minor and seem trivial in nature, McGarity was profusely apologetic in his seven-page letter to Slive.

“I want you to know that I am disappointed and embarrassed to be reporting multiple secondary violations in our football program,” McGarity wrote. “It is my hope, however, that after reviewing our self-report of each of these matters, you will come to the same conclusions that I have.”

Ultimately, Slive and the NCAA agreed with Georgia’s assessment. But McGarity is vowed to step up the Bulldogs’ educational efforts regarding NCAA policy. In addition to regularly-scheduled classes, he has instituted monthly and quarterly meetings for coaches and support staff.

Clearly the most intriguing findings were those that detailed Richt’s under-the-table payments to staff when the previous administration refused his requests. Not only does it illustrate Richt’s determination to do what he perceived as right for his staff members, it offers a glimpse into the dynamics of the relationship between Richt and former AD Damon Evans.

  • Richt decided to pay Cantor money out of his own pocket after determining that Cantor was underpaid for his position compared to comparable programs against whom Georgia competed. Richt asked for a $10,000 raise. However, the University was in the midst of a campus-wide pay freeze and was experiencing furloughs, so Evans declined. Richt subsequently paid Cantor $834 a month over 13 months via personal check.
  • Richt did the same thing in the summer of 2009. Richt asked the administration for a raise for linebackers coach John Jacek after he was offered the coordinator’s position in the summer of 2009. Richt’s request was declined, so he wrote Jancek a personal check for $10,000 on June 30, 2009.
  • Eason received a $6,150 pay cut when Richt moved him off the coaching staff into an administrative role. Richt wrote a personal check for that amount to Eason in July of 2010.

McGarity contends it wasn’t rogue behavior on Richt’s part. The UGA AD included exhibits in his report of instances in which the athletic department sanctioned monetary gifts from Richt.

In December 2009, due to “difficult economic conditions being experienced by the University,” the athletic department decided to not provide “bowl bonuses” to non-coach staff members. Richt went to senior associate AD Frank Crumley and asked him to provide a chart of who would have normally received bonuses and in what amount. Crumley provided that list and Richt paid 10 people – sports medicine director Ron Courson, video coordinator Joe Tereshinski, strength and conditioning coaches Keith Gray and Clay Walker, football operations manager Josh Brooks, high school relations director Ray Lamb and four administrative assistants — $15,227 out of his own pocket.

Richt also paid the $15,337.50 five-year longevity bonus to former assistant Dave Johnson when Johnson left Georgia in 2008 just short of his fifth anniversary and the administration refused to pay. Richt paid $6,000 to Jon Fabris in December of 2010 when Fabris was unable to find a job after his UGA severance package expired.

In each case,the payments were not considered against NCAA rules because they were done with the knowledge of the athletic administration, according to the report.

McGarity wrote in the report that he included details of those actions by Richt because “the University believes Coach Richt acted out of a generous heart and certainly without any intent to violate NCAA rules.” McGarity explained that Richt and his wife Katharyn maintain two checking accounts, one that is used primarily by his wife for household expenses. The other, monitored by Richt, is what they call their “Giving Account.”

690 comments Add your comment

surfdawg

December 20th, 2011
6:42 pm

SMART actually we root for GT to win the ACC Championship because usually that equates to us being ACC Champs since we are constantly tearing up that tater

G. Tampa Bedwetter

December 20th, 2011
6:46 pm

Oh No, the “good man” has broken the rules again ???? Is he stupid or just above the rules ??

leg humper

December 20th, 2011
6:55 pm

Tech fan and I usually play on this site with all you too serious dawgs. After reading this article, I had to comment. Pay CMR whatever he wants, this man in not only a good man, but also a good coach. All you fans who wanted him fired should be ashame. Life long tech fan but if I had a son, I would want him to play under CMR.

LakeDawg

December 20th, 2011
6:57 pm

I’m for cracking down on cheater schools as much as anybody, but I fail to see where an unfair advantage is gained by these “violations.” They’re so minor that the NCAA in effect said “you reported them, so there is no sanction.” If that is the response, why are they violations in the first place?

Bah Humbug

December 20th, 2011
6:57 pm

Some of that stuff just make you wanna cuss. NCAA violation? For real though?

Bad Dawg

December 20th, 2011
7:01 pm

Smart, honestly I could care less if Georgia Tech still had their ACC championship trophy, it has no bearing on me as a dawg fan. There is no question Georgia Tech earned the title in 2009 but unfortunately it was stripped from them by the NCAA. Richt and UGA according to the rules were in the wrong and they will be dealt with by the NCAA accordingly. You will get to celebrate once the NCAA hands out its punishment, just give it some more time.

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
7:02 pm

So all you trolls are eat up with envy because our guy can get away with stuff based on his being a “Good Guy”.

Guess what. That’s right!

GATA

December 20th, 2011
7:02 pm

ncaa is damn JOKE, but it is actually worse than that. What the hell are they doing about the child abusing felons at State Penn? They are in bed with the BCS who year after year screws around with college football to position themselves for maximum gain, and runs around like Barney Fife treating petty nickel and dime stuff like it’s some scandelous crime. Who is holding them accountable??

DAWG

December 20th, 2011
7:03 pm

The NCAA needs to investigate crap that matters. As far as I am concerned what the head coach does with his money is his business and I for one applaud him for what he did. Kids today need someone to look up to for direction in their lives and mark is the man.

BiggDawgK

December 20th, 2011
7:04 pm

person too stupid to live

CMR probably did write checks to the underpaid Professors but since it didn’t involve a NCAA violation the ajc nor anyone else is going to do a story on it. CMR sold his lake house so he could have more money to donate to charity. You sit in a basement collecting undeserved welfare payments and make snarky comments about your betters.

I bet your family is so proud of you.

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
7:05 pm

What exactly is the “tax” on loans?

LT A Blogger

December 20th, 2011
7:06 pm

It’s about time somebody stood up to this man! I say well done NCAA.

This is probably just the tip of the ice berg!

These missionary trips to help so called “less fortunate” Guatemalans. Recruiting trip I’m sure- they do play futball there.

He’s probably taking in stray kittens and puppies as well.

dawg4u

December 20th, 2011
7:08 pm

The best compliment that I can pay to CMR is to say that I am not at all surprised that he would do this to help out his fellow coaches. Richt probably would have never wanted this information to get out not because of the NCAA but because he is a down to earth and humble man. I am glad and proud to have him as our coach!

sports

December 20th, 2011
7:11 pm

Leave it to Towers and the rest of that jealous bunch at the AJC to try and dig up dirt on Georgia every chance they get.

A person SMART enough to know......

December 20th, 2011
7:13 pm

Income. So whatever the rate is for the tax bracket the person is in.
I could careless what RICHT does with his money, but HOW he did this was against the rules. All the dawgs love to complain about everybody else if they do something that isn’t perfect. If happens now It is OK because it was RICHT. Crowell was smoking and people on here said,”It is only dope and it should be legal anyway.” What Richt did was very nice, but there were ways to do it within the rules.

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
7:16 pm

So who should pay this “income tax” for the loan? Richt claimed it as income paid it once, “loaned” it to somebody and they need to pay tax, on money they received on a laon, which is Richt’s responsibility by your logic?

So you paid income tax on your motgage?

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
7:20 pm

So then if its income to the other person, how is it a loan?

I’m guessing that Richt gets WAY better tax advice from his CPA, than you are at disguising that you are just making it up at this point.

A person SMART enough to know......

December 20th, 2011
7:24 pm

ALTDawg the person that received the loan would have to claim it as Income and would be the one to pay taxes on it.

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
7:27 pm

“all the Dawgs” don’t do any such thing. Over generalize much? And IF another school coach did this, I would bet most Dawg fans would say what a lot of the level headed rivals have said about Richt.

BTW< what I heard about Crowell from overwhelming majority of Dawg fans wasthat it was stupid, and he deserved the suspension. Not sure where you were reading comments.

Sounds like you are making up stuff.

230gr Full Metal Jacket

December 20th, 2011
7:28 pm

While I will ALWAYS hate the Dawgs on the field, I’ve got to give kudos to CMR. He IS a class act and has always behaved as such. The NCAA needs to go find something serious to dig on (Auburn, South Carolina, Alabama, Miami anyone?) and leave this man alone. They seem to have it in for the programs in Georgia in general. I mean, come on, they penalize Green over selling a freakin’ jersey? A jersey folks!! Ya, THAT sure sounds like a serious criminal violation to me!! lol. Or stripping a title because Thomas received a jacket — which he immediately turned over to the athletic department? Where does the NCAA witch-hunt end? And why do they generally ignore when things happen at northern schools or schools ranked in the top-10 (Can you say $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$?). I have to side with the Dawgs here — and that doesn’t happen very often ;) .But right is right — and wrong is wrong. And what the NCAA has done in the last 2 or 3 years is pretty much WRONG straight across the board!!! I can’t stand UGA, but CMR is a heckuva guy and did what was RIGHT.
The leadership of the NCAA needs to go take a long walk on a short pier.

rascaldawg

December 20th, 2011
7:29 pm

To NCAA I say, ” HUMBUG”. To CMR I say, “Peace on earth; Good will to men”! Why is it not obvious that the NCAA is much like Congress; Useless and overpaid!

A person SMART enough to know......

December 20th, 2011
7:30 pm

ALT there were a lot of dawgs defending Crowell on these blogs. Many said it was stupid yes, but qualified it with it shouldn’t be illegal in the first place. i am guessing many of those were the under 30 crowd.

rascaldawg

December 20th, 2011
7:32 pm

To “SMART” above. Ever heard of $11,000 a year tax free gift? At least we still have it THIS year!

Buzzman

December 20th, 2011
7:34 pm

Come on NCAA, you are getting real petty, why don’t you go after some real problems such as recruitment at some of your top colleges. I’m not saying who they are, but you can figure it out. How does some of these colleges always stay on top??? figure that one out…….duuuuuuuuuuuuuu

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
7:37 pm

So lets clarify YOUR point:

“Richt gave out TAX FREE LOANS that is against the LAW not just the NCAA”

Assuming that we can get past your confusion on the difference between a “loan” (non taxable) and income (taxable), and assuming that you have some sort of personal knowledge of how all these guys filed their taxes.

It’s still a pretty big jump to say that Richt is the one that told them that they had no responsibility to properly handle the money.

CRO-MAGNON MAN

December 20th, 2011
7:37 pm

Beast from the East Eaten by Dawg
December 20th, 2011
7:08 am
WE’RE GONNA PUT YOU IN CHARGE OF THESE SECOND HAND VIOLATIONS SINCE YOU SEEM TO BE SO WORRIED ABOUT THEM. THESE COULD BE FOUND AT EVERY NCAA SCHOOL…JUST SHOWS WHAT A JOKE THE NCAA HAS BECOME….

squat

December 20th, 2011
7:38 pm

Dear Mark , I think that I’m under paid…$2000 a month will be fine….
GodBless

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
7:42 pm

NOPE, a “Lot” of dawg did not excuse Crowell by saying pot should be illegal. That was a completely different debate on revenue and law enforcement efforts. Everybody I saw pertaining to him said it is was it is, he knew it, screwed up.

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
7:42 pm

A person SMART enough to know......

December 20th, 2011
7:44 pm

Now that was an UGLY UGA cheerleader/dance team. Why did they show her on TV? Trying to prove that UGA has their fair share of ugly chicks too.

A person SMART enough to know......

December 20th, 2011
7:47 pm

ALT fine whatever.

A person SMART enough to know......

December 20th, 2011
7:47 pm

Mercer 30 UGA 30 at the half.

[...] We Need To Know Would You Vote Craig James For U.S. Senator? Young Held Out Of Sun Bowl For Tech Monetary Gifts From Richt Among Secondary NCAA Violations NCAA Gives Ohio St. Bowl Ban, Tressel Show-Cause ASU Covers $1M Buyout As Part Of Graham Contract [...]

Jim

December 20th, 2011
7:50 pm

Truly amazing. The NCAA has virtually nothing to say about the mess at Penn St. but all the time in the world to devote to this kind of stuff. The world is upside down and this represents further proof. I guess the rule of thumb is child abuse by a coach is someone else’s problem but by god, if you are charitable, we will get you every time. Somebody give the NCAA a lump of coal.

A person SMART enough to know......

December 20th, 2011
7:56 pm

Some have been saying the NCAA is a joke for many many many years. You can’t love what the NCAA does to you opponent and hate what it does to you. If fans didn’t scream and pay for winners then coaches wouldn’t try to cheat and the NCAA wouldn’t need as much power.

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
7:58 pm

is “whatever” code for, cant really back that up I guess?

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
8:00 pm

Show me one Dawg fan using the “pot should have been legal anyway” as an excuse to go light on Crowell (just because he was own) , and I will show you 20 that wanted him kicked off the team for it.

Mark

December 20th, 2011
8:24 pm

True story: I played at an SEC school. A supporter provided all incoming freshmen football players with a nice leather Bible. The NCAA determined that was an impermissible gift and put a stop to it. And I agree that Coach Richt is a fine man. Frankly, I do not understand the criticism leveled at him by so many UGA fans. I would not blame him if he left you for a more appreciative fan base.

Kelly

December 20th, 2011
8:44 pm

Much ado about nothing.

AllVol

December 20th, 2011
9:06 pm

Wow, Coach Richt continues to amaze me with his faith and generosity. First of all, I’m a UT fan, so there’s no home cooking here. :) I applaud Coach Mark Richt for being a man of character and honor. He not only talks the talk, but he obviously walks the walk. He is indeed a very fine man, and someone for whom I would be proud to have my son play for. He is truly an asset to college football, and should be exalted for his integrity and generosity. The NCAA is a complete joke with their rule book, and Coach Richt should be saluted for being a role model and great leader of young men. For those doubters, be careful for what you wish for, as we would love to have Coach Fulmer back at Tennessee.

Tom

December 20th, 2011
9:08 pm

This is a black mark for the NCAA. With so much wrong-doing in college sports the NCAA has a rule about this? Mark Richt’s principles put him in a very unique category of men and women who care more about others than they do of themselves. I have a deep respect for Richt because of this. I can’t say the same for the NCAA.

Mobile Dawg

December 20th, 2011
9:22 pm

IRS allows you to gift an individual up to $13,000 per year each, with no tax liability. Sounds like the mistake Richt made was that he wasn’t smart enough to do it in a way that wasn’t known to the NCAA, or the University. The IRS could care less.

Fire CMR!

December 20th, 2011
9:24 pm

Are you freaking kidding me???? these rules violations are a complete joke and obviously, whom ever is making these code violations (5.2.001.33, et al) are stupid and need to find something better to do with there time. In the meantime, fire Coach Richt!

Hypocrisy

December 20th, 2011
9:33 pm

If it is ok for coaches to break rules, why can’t players also break rules?

TrueDog

December 20th, 2011
9:51 pm

Insubordination is about as bad as it gets. Going directly behind the backs of those who hired and overpaid him with this sort of scam. This is not a popularity contest. It shows signs of a lack of respect to the administration. Not to mention a covert attempt to gain popularity from the fans, knowing there would be a chance of exposure. Georgia’s success this season was a result of a soft schedule, not CMR. The best way he can recover from this, short of resignation would be to take a pay cut with the amount cut going to what the administration feels are deserving support staff and coaches.

A person SMART enough to know's family....

December 20th, 2011
10:03 pm

In response to the very pleasant poster at 7:04. No we are not proud of him at all. He is out of work and is a strain on the entire family. The moronic and pathetic things he posts are shameful to us all and quite frankly we blame all that lead based paint he ate when he was a child.

Cuz

December 20th, 2011
10:06 pm

This is chicken feces.

I am glad once again Mark Richt is UGA’s coach.

Pago Pago DAWG

December 20th, 2011
10:08 pm

CMR and UGA will be just fine, after all, ohio state just got away with a lot worse.

DS

December 20th, 2011
10:17 pm

90% of these “infractions” just continues to show what a bunch of stupid morons the NCAA is run by. A five year old and a greeting and idle chit-chat! WTF! All the more reasons for me not to watch any bowls!

Kerryb

December 20th, 2011
10:23 pm

This is proof that the NCAA has a bunch of stupid trivial rules. So, a coach runs into a player accidentally and talks to him on the way to the coaches office. Was he suppose to be rude to the kid and say he can’t talk to him? He would sure lose that recruit wouldn’t he? The NCAA is run by a bunch of Nazis.