
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:
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.
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 $6,000 to Jon Fabris in December of 2010 when Fabris was unable to find a job after his UGA severance package expired.
In each case,the payments were not considered against NCAA rules because they were done with the knowledge of the athletic administration, according to the report.
McGarity wrote in the report that he included details of those actions by Richt because “the University believes Coach Richt acted out of a generous heart and certainly without any intent to violate NCAA rules.” McGarity explained that Richt and his wife Katharyn maintain two checking accounts, one that is used primarily by his wife for household expenses. The other, monitored by Richt, is what they call their “Giving Account.”
690 comments Add your comment
clark
December 21st, 2011
11:09 am
like so many ” BIG GROUPS” some body’s have given the ncaa way to much “power”
i think we need rules but not “animal farm” rules. this is silly and should be a waste of the ncaa time. I wish i was able to do what mark did. trying to help his staff.
some one needs to investigate the ncaa!!!!!!
a alabama fan from montgomery
UGA fan..not fanatic
December 21st, 2011
11:44 am
When will AM win a big game?
StackedDeck
December 21st, 2011
11:53 am
Is the AJC that hard-up for “so-called news”? #$%^&*…Coach Richt is a fine man and Coach. He did what he felt was the right thing to do at the time…something others, in the ranks, wouldn’t think about doing.
All the NCAA knows how to do, is “napalm” programs. Coach Richt can be my ‘wingman’ anytime.
GO DAWGS!!
UGA / 74′
SECfan
December 21st, 2011
12:00 pm
BIG DEAL! I am SICK of the NCAA – Richt is great and I like having him in the SEC – he is one of the good guys. Supports our military, cares about his players, his staff.
Hate that our football programs bring in so much $$$$ the non-coach staff is overlooked, but Richt sees that the water boy is just as important has his top coordinator. Morales and integrity … – Thanks for being a stand up guy Richt
Now let’s overhaul the NCAA and actually punish the right folks (like at OSU … punish the actual violators and stop taking education scholarships from kids that dream of playing at their favorite colleges), fine the coaches, the players that made the violations, the violators – don’t take money from the ENTIRE conference that effects the other schools when one doesn’t play in a bowl game. Think about the businesses that are effected when you sanction organizations for 5 years – the family owned bookstores, restaurants in the college town because you know ticket sales plummett and folks don’t attend games …. you aren’t punishing the school you are punishing the innocent. Get it together NCAA … we are sick of you
MiamiDawg
December 21st, 2011
12:12 pm
Those Fiesta bowl executives were accused of much more ‘financial irregularities’ and nothing happened there but a good man with no bad intents tries to do what he feels is right and those idiots, aka NCAA, have to drop the hammer on him. I sincerely hope that the days of the NCAA are limited.
Morning Reads for Wednesday, December 21st
December 21st, 2011
12:19 pm
[...] few that I like… – Say what you want about him, but Mark Richt is a really classy guy. – In case you haven’t seen it, here is the trailer for The Dark Knight Rises. Peter Suderman [...]
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
12:26 pm
Totally silly, NCAA.
Now, Greg McGarity give Mark Richt his EXTENSION NOW
A person SMART enough to know......
December 21st, 2011
1:25 pm
Dawg fans really love me. only -49 on my vent.
Why doesn’t Richt just take less money so there will be money to pay the rest of the staff? He wouldn’t have to break the rules and pay them himself.
Score: -49
tideofunc
December 21st, 2011
1:29 pm
i’m a BAMA fan; kudos to Coach Richt for being such a good person.
AltahamaDawg
December 21st, 2011
1:33 pm
Because the problem was political and that would not have solved it. Do you really believe they had simply run out of money?
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
1:41 pm
My sister says : “How can I be out of money, Dad ? I still have an entire booklet of checks, remaining.”
Everyone please say a Prayer for Pat Summitt.
Gatorzone
December 21st, 2011
1:42 pm
I can understand the NCAA on this, but Richt is a good guy to take care of his coaches…
A lowlife coach could funnel money to players and recruits by doing this, but I believe Richt was clearly doing this to take care of his staff..
Extend!
December 21st, 2011
2:05 pm
AD McGarity: Please give Mr. Richt a big bonus and long-term contract extension.
Signed,
The Rest of the SEC Coaches
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
2:08 pm
No.
I really want him to get the extension, now.
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
2:09 pm
I like him.
I have always liked him.
Everyone likes him.
He is a great recruiter.
He is also a good guy.
In this day and age, that is an extension by itself.
Ask Alabama (PROBATION), South Carolina (PROBATION), Georgia tek (PROBATION) just to name a few on all sides surrounding Mark Richt.
joseph
December 21st, 2011
2:10 pm
Classiest violation ever.
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
2:10 pm
I’m not perfect either.
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
2:14 pm
The only bonus I care about is a clause added that reads, bonus for longevity at end of current contract and bonus for wins over teams who end up top 25 that season he beats them and an extra additional bonus for wins over teams who end up top 10 for the season he beats them.
I realize that gives him free reign on his staff, as it should be. Bryan McClendon is good for another 3 years with me for commitment of Keith Marshall. It’s his staff.
robmdawg
December 21st, 2011
2:52 pm
how many bowls
will this cost us?
Basketball 101
December 21st, 2011
2:54 pm
Regardless of Richt’s good intentions, this is another blunder along the lines of the “missing man” performance. Richt provides cash to staff members on a selective basis. There are IRS implications, as well as how this money was used–i.e. was it turned to cash and used for improper purposes? Probably not, but Richt has shown repeatedly that he disregards rules at will. Either Richt doesn’t know the rules, or he doesn’t care. This is just another can of worms, and apparently McGarrity sees it as that.
IslandDawg
December 21st, 2011
2:56 pm
Glad CMR didn’t get hit with a sanction for being a good guy and a good boss!
If I added all of it the total is $53,796.50 – hope the IRS doesn’t get involved too.
Would like to be on CMR’s Christmas list
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
2:57 pm
Your school is on NCAA PROBATION in FOOTBALL while you write that drivel.
Mark Richt is NOT on NCAA probation, therefore, he DOES follow rules.
Your school is the 1 who does NOT.
Thank you.
Designated Read: Indoors, thunder rolls – Campus Union
December 21st, 2011
2:59 pm
[...] according to a recent NCAA review of an lengthy internal investigation conducted by UGA.” Of course they were. Reminder, via Mark Schlabach: UGA’s athletic department turned a $50 million-dollar profit [...]
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
2:59 pm
Mark Richt can give monies to whomever he desires.
It is the responsibility of the staff members who cashed the checks every month to turn it in April 15 as INCOME since that is what it is, and their responsibility to pay the taxes on it.
Some might have to write amended returns for last year, or the year before.
Not Mark Richt.
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
3:00 pm
Actually, it is a legitimate business expense for him.
He doesn’t have to claim it if he doesn’t want to.
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
3:02 pm
Mark Schlabach, as when he worked here as the UGA beat-writer, is just wrong. These staff members are EMPLOYEES of the State of Georgia.
UGAr2
December 21st, 2011
3:07 pm
Since there is not much left to Georgia Tech maybe we need to change Glory Glory to Ole’ Georgia! From to HELL WITH GEORGIA TECH to; TO HELL WITH THE NCAA!
Thomas Brown
December 21st, 2011
3:12 pm
When was there anything to Georgia tek except 31 percent Asian men and 29 percent “women” ?
TampaDawg
December 21st, 2011
3:21 pm
It has got to be close to the season to celebrate our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ being born. Only something that awesome can make me agree with every post I have seen from Thomas Brown today. Nice stuff but I have one question for you since I am out of the loop at the moment. What’s up with Pat Summitt?
TampaDawg
December 21st, 2011
3:26 pm
Basketball 101
December 21st, 2011
2:54 pm
Regardless of Richt’s good intentions, this is another blunder along the lines of the “missing man” performance. Richt provides cash to staff members on a selective basis. There are IRS implications, as well as how this money was used–i.e. was it turned to cash and used for improper purposes? Probably not, but Richt has shown repeatedly that he disregards rules at will. Either Richt doesn’t know the rules, or he doesn’t care. This is just another can of worms, and apparently McGarrity sees it as that.
————————————————————-
This is EASILY the stupidest post of the day. Disregards the rules at will??? With all the other teams that get probation REGULARLY and UGA does not, you somehow come up with that? As for the IRS, you have no idea if those coaches claimed this money as income because if they did, there is nothing to report. Point is, since you don’t know, you are just running your trap trying to find something negative to say. If you have anything useful, post it, but if it’s more of this crap, go back to the bama blogs with it. Heck even most of the Tech posts I have seen on this are respectful of this action.
Tech Alum
December 21st, 2011
3:28 pm
Even though I’m a Tech fan, I think Coach Richt is a class guy, Looks to me like he did the right thing.
TampaDawg
December 21st, 2011
3:28 pm
robmdawg
December 21st, 2011
2:52 pm
how many bowls
will this cost us?
——————————-
Uhhhh .. NONE! Barely secondary violations that never come with loss of scholarships or bowls.
AltahamaDawg
December 21st, 2011
3:33 pm
You guys clearly have not taken the SMART enough to know tax law seminar.
TampaDawg
December 21st, 2011
3:37 pm
As long as those coaches claim it as income or CMR claims it as a “gift” .. all is good because taxes will be paid.
Yellow Fuzz
December 21st, 2011
3:37 pm
“Do the right thing”. What a classy guy Richt is.
JayJay the Japanese Jet Pilot
December 21st, 2011
3:44 pm
I agree, it’s all a tempest in a teapot. Like the saying goes, “easier to ask for forgiveness rather than permission”, However, UGa, like most other major college programs has an assistant A.D. for compliance, that is ALL this guy does. Anytime money is used for ANYTHING in college recruiting, there will be a rule and bylaw for it. CMR did the right thing, but with his experience, he should have known there would be something in the rulebook regarding what he did.
AltahamaDawg
December 21st, 2011
3:44 pm
I don’t know, according to SMART enough to know, who has a copy of John Jancek’s 2009 returns, it was a “tax free loan”.
G-Dawg
December 21st, 2011
3:50 pm
Funny how the money could be tracked with Richt…but couldnt find a dime with the Newtons. Even after daddy admitted to it. NCAA and SEC’s Slive are worthless!!!
AltamahaDawg
December 21st, 2011
3:55 pm
I wonder what that “additional rules education” consist of?
JayJay the Japanese Jet Pilot
December 21st, 2011
4:06 pm
As far as the Newtons go, A CIA “Black Ops team” (no pun intended), couldn’t uncover the money trail going to Cam Newton. Still no a doubt in my mind that Chizik is neck deep in all of it. Wonder what the “Rent-a-Back” coach will do next season, with his D.C. and O.C. both gone. Look for Auburn to be the Tennessee of the SEC West.
AltamahaDawg
December 21st, 2011
4:06 pm
It’s probably a class called, Eventually Clean Up the Mess from the Former AD 101
olgator
December 21st, 2011
4:14 pm
That is the same thing that got UF sanctions and Galen Hall fired from UF.
Doctor Gator and Mr. Jekyll Island
December 21st, 2011
4:19 pm
I hate to disagree with OlGator, but Galen Hall wasn’t guilty of half of what was said. All that was simply an Infractions Millstone hung around his neck by the Bull Gators to get rid of him. . .There! And that’s ‘da truff!
AltamahaDawg
December 21st, 2011
4:22 pm
It wasn’t the multitude of infraction before that or the child support payments on behalf of Hall’s player?
I'M Just Saying.
December 21st, 2011
4:26 pm
Wonder what the real deal was with Cam Newton?? Seems as if he were taking money for real, Other players would have known.
NCDAWG
December 21st, 2011
4:26 pm
The NCAA should just be ashamed of themselves for this type of tomfoolery. Get serious with colleges/boosters, giving out 2k to buy atheletes, and this with the father admitting it not less, and deal with the known Infractions at Miami, then worry about a coach helping his own staff. I am beginning to believe the NCAA has it in for GA (like A.J. Green getting 4 games for selling a jersey when Darius get two games at Bama for recieving money). Geez NCAA, just go away.
hind tit
December 21st, 2011
4:44 pm
A five year old kid has to sit a watch the rest of the family eat because that would be a rules violation if they let him eat. Explain that to a five year old kid or any age kid for that matter. How black hearted can you get. Who get’s to judge the morals of these guys, satan.
AltamahaDawg
December 21st, 2011
4:49 pm
We all understand that the NCAA did not come looking for this, right ? WE discovered that (3) such payment from Richt were not properly documented (unlike the dozen before and after that were never an issue) and reported TO them as a precaution. To which they politely dismissed it all.
I’m all from bashing the NCAA, but this is one they actually got right.
NunYaBiz
December 21st, 2011
5:18 pm
It’s NunYaBiz what someone does with their personal funds as long as it’s legal. The NCAA should get out of the business of dictating how a coach spends his money. Nuff said…
Rick Wigington
December 21st, 2011
5:28 pm
How often do the NCAA nosebleeds change the sticks in their butts? If and when Bo goes, I wonder if we could lure the Omaha-born Richt back to Nebraska.