
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
59bulldawg
December 20th, 2011
7:54 am
Totally amazed . . . in a good way! When was the last time you heard of a boss stand up for his charges in this manner? I may from time to time have problems with his coaching and/or coaches but this is a man who “walks the talk”! No wonder kids want to play for him!
tide roll
December 20th, 2011
7:54 am
Can’t believe the 5 yr. old couldn’t spring for himself.
BullDawg789
December 20th, 2011
7:58 am
The “Death Penalty” for UGA is just months away. They will catch us and when they do, it’s all over.
christmas dog
December 20th, 2011
7:58 am
this is not news. It is lazy reporting by a mullet wrapper. report something worthwhile.
coach hewitt
December 20th, 2011
7:59 am
btgt69
December 20th, 2011
7:49 am
rules are rules,, no such thing as secondary violations,,, they are all wrong,,, the uga corruption history from Butts, Dooley, Harrick , Kemp continues,,,,,,,,
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Hey bug….Remind me again who’s on probation now?? UGA or the trade school?
Fair and Balanced
December 20th, 2011
8:00 am
No good deed goes unpunished. Where does the NCAA find these Pharisees who write these stupid laws?
RMikel58
December 20th, 2011
8:02 am
I suppose if you go to the mens restroom and stand at a stall urinating while mistakenly talk to a prospect you dont even know then that constitutes a violation.
The NCAA has too many rules like they have regulations up in Washington. Each is BS and designed to produce fines and money for that institution.
Doing a good deed will get you punished just as Washington does with Producers in society.
coach hewitt
December 20th, 2011
8:02 am
Former AD, but current horn dawg, Damon Evans refused several pay requests that Richt thought justified for his coaching and support staff?… I’m so glad Evans is gone…
Captain
December 20th, 2011
8:03 am
The shame of it is Pres Michael Adams, as Chairman if the Athletic Asoc., and former Athletic Dir Damon Evans, were so damn CHEAP they weren’t willing to pay the going pay scale or do the right things in the case of Johnson and Eason. Anyone want to venture a guess how many paychecks, pay raises, or paid for bowl trips Adams and Evans missed? As history has shown us with Adams he gets every penny he can including $1.79 reimbursement for a soft drink at a speaking engagement and a $4.53 light bulb reimbursement. Thank goodness AD Greg McGarity is a professional who is running the athletic department in a much better businesslike manner.
Now that the AJC’s crack investigative team has filed their Open Records requests at The University of Georgia exposing these horrible violations CAN YOU APPLY THE SAME STANDARDS TO GEORGIA TECH? The same GT which is on NCAA probation AGAIN, the same GT which the AJC was clueless was under NCAA investigation because the AJC never files open records requests. The AJC is so busy being the Public Relations Dept for GT they won’t dare investigate them. Isn’t it about time to put the pom poms down and take off the GT cheerleader skirts and sweaters?
Todd Grantham
December 20th, 2011
8:03 am
Wonder if NCAA would think it should be illegal if their boss was giving them a raise out their own pocket? Guess I’ll just take it out of Franklins &#$ next yr.
tide roll
December 20th, 2011
8:03 am
Uga needs to reimburse Richt. What a half ass school. 31 years and counting. Is it any wonder? You’ve got an administration that refuses to create the type of chemistry that lends itself to winning a National Title.. And all this time we’ve been blaming Richt. How’d you like to have to compete in the SEC while at the same time having to compensate deserving coaches because your administration refuses to.Talk about lack of support. It can’t help but have a negative effect. What a school. What a program. Sheesh.
Rodster
December 20th, 2011
8:06 am
Is there anyone who thinks the NCAA adds value? The minutia in NCAA reg’s is ot of control. I bet a good management consultant could reduce the important rules that would keep everyone on the up-and-up to a few, easy to understand pages.
Niceville Dawg
December 20th, 2011
8:08 am
The NCAA didn’t waste any time or money or lawyers on this one….this was an INTERNAL investigation that was self-reported.Yes,stupid rules,but they didn’t waste any time with it.
Dap01
December 20th, 2011
8:09 am
Auburn pays its players. Saban steps over convulsing students. CMR gives his assistants his own money. I am ok with CMR.
Chief
December 20th, 2011
8:10 am
Looks like we need to send some brown bags to UGA.
Sports Fan
December 20th, 2011
8:10 am
As a Tech fan I see this as a non-relevant story. CMR is a classy individual. NCAA should def change the way they administer their programs. Do they really expect a school to not feed a prospects little brother???
ramblingbuzz
December 20th, 2011
8:11 am
Even the federal gov’t is not as anal as the NCAA. The NCAA needs to focus on the major violations and forget trying to regulate the minutiae.
Vampire Bill
December 20th, 2011
8:11 am
I hope my boss reads this article !!
Rodster
December 20th, 2011
8:12 am
But that is the point, while the NCAA did not initiate the investigation, just the threat of it requires schools to retain very expensive, full time professionals to monitor the possible violation of these stupid rules.
The Hat
December 20th, 2011
8:13 am
Great guy! Now only if he could coach football.
Old Gold Britches
December 20th, 2011
8:15 am
Give us a break NCAA! You can’t give your own monies to your coaching staff? Coach Richt obviously did this from his heart. Another plus for Coach Richt! He is a class act.
SuperB
December 20th, 2011
8:19 am
Chip Towers: Very disappointing! I normally enjoy your columns. Don’t you hace anything better to do?
ramblingbuzz
December 20th, 2011
8:19 am
@Captain….Dude, your take on the AJC and GT is out of left field. Do you know any of the facts in the GT case? The reason the AJC didn’t know about it was because it was so trivial to begin with. A definite case of NCAA overreaction. But hey, never let the facts get in the way of your fan(atical) attitude.
Paul in NH
December 20th, 2011
8:21 am
I think Richt did the right thing for the coaches. People’s anger towards the NCAA is misplaced – they should be angry at the former AD. UGA’s Athletic Association is one of the most profitable in the US and they were nickel and diming the little people.
AltamahaDawg
December 20th, 2011
8:22 am
Enter your comments here
Brad
December 20th, 2011
8:23 am
It’s wonderful when even a list of NCAA violations merely reinforces what a good person your coach is…..
AltamahaDawg
December 20th, 2011
8:23 am
sure, go ahead
Mountain DAWG
December 20th, 2011
8:24 am
The “game situation” rule is ludicrous. It’s not like this kicker or Crowell actually lined up in Sanford Stadium, or anything. Next thing you know, you won’t be able to talk about “playing football at UGA” or look attend a game without it being defined as a “game situation”. NCAA is out of control. Don’t these guys have anything else to do, like figuring out a way to crown a TRUE national champion with a payoff system like every other college sports program?
tide roll
December 20th, 2011
8:27 am
One of the main reasons UGA refused to pay these coaches is due in large part to your President Adams, and your former Governor Sonny “Goober” Perdue, having this pipe dream of making UGA a “Research Institution” along the lines of The University of Chicago, Duke, UNC, and Stanford. It was an ill advised and more than anything an ARROGANT AND POORLY THOUGHT OUT DECISION.. Now, after committing millions to Capital Improvements and hiring “research” professors AT A PREMIUM, Adams is finding out it’s a little too competitive out there for research grants. Combine that with the lack of tax dollars and the competition for those dollars by other in state schools like President DAN PAPP’S up and coming KENNESAW STATE UNIVERSITY, and UGA has some financial challenges, to say the least. Now you see Adams and his cronies at the University desperately seeking research dollars by putting out hilarious press releases touting that UGA has discovered a cure for cancer! So typical. Adams and Goober owe the people of the State of Georgia an apology for their ARROGANCE. No wonder they can’t pay coaches. What a pipe dream.
AltamahaDawg
December 20th, 2011
8:27 am
Try that again,
2 pages of really great comments, many from stand up rival fans……
And then there is pathetic little Dogs smells. His comments speak volumes about what kind of man he is.
Fleischman in Chi Towns Bed
December 20th, 2011
8:31 am
HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA!
Saint Richt cheats
Happy Holidays flea bags!
Posas
December 20th, 2011
8:31 am
Looks like the UGA administration is throwing rocks at a guy who is on his way to another job.
dawgfan
December 20th, 2011
8:33 am
I’m with Captain. I still don’t understand how Georgia Tech was being investigated by the NCAA for TWO YEARS and we never heard a peep out of the AJC about it. Even the most delusional of Tech fans has to admit there is some kind of double standard at work here. Its just a matter of what that double standard is. Either the AJC scrutinizes UGA more or Georgia Tech isn’t as forthcoming about all of its transgressions. Its probably a little bit of both.
AltamahaDawg
December 20th, 2011
8:34 am
Ye, we get it. Adams is a white guy.
Glock 45
December 20th, 2011
8:34 am
Dogs Smell
December 20th, 2011
7:28 am
If this were any other SEC coach you homers would be slamming him. God only knows if this were Saban or Miles you Homers would be in a frenzy. This is the same coach that after an 0-2 start you wanted him gone.
Totally agree!
Wet Willie...keep on smiling
December 20th, 2011
8:36 am
This is why our country is in the shape it is today. You don’t punish to good to make the bad look better. The let everyone play two innings is bullsheet and I could car less who’s feelings get hurt. Good job Mark Richt. Just do what is right and you can’t go wrong.
Posas
December 20th, 2011
8:36 am
It’s the set up for him to leave. Politics.
UGA is not days away from signing him to multiple years and they know it; so they need to discredit him.
Mr. Dawg
December 20th, 2011
8:37 am
In short, it’s an NCAA violation to for a Head Football Coach to give personal gifts to staff members. That’s a joke. I don’t get the game simulation rule at all. Nothing about that gives a competitive advantage.
layinlow
December 20th, 2011
8:38 am
So according to the NCCA laws, 5 year old sibling’s must starve while everyone else eats a nice big meal? Does the 5 year old also have to sleep outside in the cold instead of receiving lodging? Was the child required to walk back to North Carolina so they wouldn’t violate transportation laws?
SEC Fan
December 20th, 2011
8:38 am
On a more recent note, why did the GT player get suspended for the Bowl game? Even rumors of suspensions for UGA players get the front page. GT player suspended and nothing? How many secondaries at GT? Bet the AJC didn’t do any FOI requests to get that data.
DrDawg
December 20th, 2011
8:41 am
No good deed goes unpunished.
AltamahaDawg
December 20th, 2011
8:41 am
Life is gooooood being Dawg Fan, when even our secondary violations causes our little band of troll followers to admit how jealous they are.
Raise your hand now, don’t be shy, let us see it…..
RGP
December 20th, 2011
8:42 am
The NCAA is great at nick picking the little stuff like minor violations. How bout AU and Cam?( quote ” The money was too good”).
tide roll
December 20th, 2011
8:43 am
w
dogsuxbig one
December 20th, 2011
8:45 am
Hi, my name is Mark Richt and I’m going to sit down here and write some checks out of my personal account to some of my assistant coachs and I don’t even think I’m in violation of any NCAA rules. Mark Richt should be ashamed for acting like some 16 year old who doesn’t know or doesn’t bother to ask if he was getting ready to break any rules.
SickandTired
December 20th, 2011
8:46 am
I’d like to see a complete audit of the “giving account”.
Larry
December 20th, 2011
8:47 am
“under the table payments”. What an irresponsible comment!
Under the table is considered unethical or illegal…neither apply here. This was simply a good man coming out of his own pocket to help an underpaid employee. Nothing illegal or unethical about this, and the NCAA rule he unknowingly violated in doing so what not actually intended to prevent this. It was intended to prevent systematic corruption.
seriously!
December 20th, 2011
8:48 am
Enter your comments here
DawginLex
December 20th, 2011
8:48 am
A man of honor who treats his staff like human beings and actually cares about them to the point of writing personal checks to them.
We are lucky to have him
trupert
December 20th, 2011
8:50 am
Meanwhile, Poor Trent Richardson of Alabama who has two kids and a mother who is also poor is somehow able to afford 21 tatoos and a new Yucon with custom wheels, not to mention all those other free gifts from Mega Booster Al-Betar?
I wonder if Saban and Alabama will self report any of that? I only hear Crickets.