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

honest_abe

December 20th, 2011
8:51 am

great coach, better man. i just can’t imagine any of these other high profile coaches in the sec doing anything like this. awesome story!

Waldy Butts

December 20th, 2011
8:53 am

Keep my name out of it HOSS

lil LEON

December 20th, 2011
8:55 am

saban and miles would never do this, so there would never be any reason to slam them.

Evansdawg

December 20th, 2011
8:55 am

You people calling out “corruption” and “crooked program” are wishful that it was far more severe for UGA, but deep down you really wish you had someone in your program that cared that deeply about his staff, and his dedication to those he works with. Indeed, this gives a sharp glimpse into the relationship between Evans and Richt, but it does not mean that they disliked each other. Richt knows that UGA can provide pay that equals that of similar schools and he wanted to keep his word to his coaches and their families. He used HIS OWN MONEY. This tells me one fantastic thing about Coach Richt…he’s not going to cut and run for more money as the majority often do. Mark Richt is our coach and every Dawg should rejoice in that fact. The man is nothing but exemplary class. These rules are more like ‘Big Brother’ anyway and they go way too far. The big difference between UGA and South Carolina’s infractions is that SC’s were discounts given by boosters and hotel operators. For UGA it came out of Richt’s own money. I’m actually PROUD OF THIS!!!

Glock 45

December 20th, 2011
8:56 am

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.
_________________________________________________________________________

And what kind of man is that? I bet you were one of those idiots that was screaming for CMR to be fired back in September. There’s more to life for most people than a football team. I guess after the bowl game you’ll go into hybernation until September 2012.

DawgInaTruck

December 20th, 2011
8:58 am

“…it offers a glimpse into the dynamics of the relationship between Richt and former AD Damon Evans.”

That statement speaks volumes. CMR has too much class to discuss it publically but the relationship between those two had really soured over time. Those red panties were the best thing to ever happen to our football program in the current generation.

flo-ri-duh

December 20th, 2011
9:01 am

What would the NCAA do with a REAL violation – take him before a firing squad? What a waste of time and money. We need to get rid of the big NCAA over inflated pompous jerks. Maybe they can go to work for Obama. As for Damon Evans…. he was a Dooley hire and a disaster. Glad he is gone and his red panties with him. What an embarrassment.

Evansdawg

December 20th, 2011
9:02 am

You self-righteous idiots that are slamming UGA for this would be praising your own coaches for doing the exact thing. EVERY SINGLE SEC school reports secondary violations….all of them. But, the very jealous haters will all call CMR a cheater and call for his head…when deep down they wish they had a coach with an ounce of Richt’s class. Yes Techno Nerds, Paul Johnson (who belongs in division II) commits secondary violations as does Les Miles and Nick Saban. I think we all know that Spurrier does the same and quite possibly worse.

TDone

December 20th, 2011
9:02 am

I thought Muttland had all kinds of money.

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
9:02 am

I’m guessing that the Evans did know he was going to do it, (as it’s pretty clear by the details, this was quite normal) but was not in a position to “officially” condone it, making it perfectly within the rules, because of the political climate created by the pay freezes and furloughs going on.

DawginLex

December 20th, 2011
9:03 am

Dogs smell is just mad because they hired the wrong Dooley

reasonable dawg

December 20th, 2011
9:04 am

The trolls are really having to reach to spin this story into something bad about CMR and UGA. They are so pathetic. What’s next? Bad things about Santa?

So What!!!!

December 20th, 2011
9:05 am

Big $#?%ing deal! Get a life AJC. Way to go Mark Richt. Man has class which is more than I can say for the AJC and whoever wrote this piece of crap.

Bama in Atlanta

December 20th, 2011
9:05 am

Hmmmmm, I’m not sure which job is more trivial…..investigator of secondary violations for the NCAA, or price checker at the Everything’s A Dollar store.

Ken

December 20th, 2011
9:07 am

Ponzi scheme will come out next

Burdell

December 20th, 2011
9:08 am

Well played, reasonable dawg!

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
9:08 am

The funniest comment was the “I bet you would all betTrashing Saban or Miles for doing this”.

1. I’ve seen nobody stating this was “cheating” in the first place, so why would we be trashing them.
2. I believe most Dawg fans do not no consider either a bad man, and they probably have done this.
3. Are you suggesting that thier fans wouldn’t be singing thier praises if this were reported?
4. Did you really have a point? or that’s just all you could come up with?

billcanoe

December 20th, 2011
9:09 am

Another Georgia Tech fan weighing in – I think Mark Richt did the right thing in paying his assistants, and it’s nonsense to me that it’s a secondary violation simply because the administration didn’t know about all of the payments. The NCAA needs to get a life.

G-Dawg

December 20th, 2011
9:09 am

tide roll

December 20th, 2011
8:27 am

The only time I’ll agree with one of your posts!!

AlbanyGADawgCountry

December 20th, 2011
9:10 am

Now this scared me when I first looked at it, but after reading it. It makes say that guy could surely coach my boys (class of 2015) and my nephew (who is listed as one of thetop QBs in GA next year.) Go Dawgs!

Tech Guy

December 20th, 2011
9:10 am

Where are all the dawg trolls lambasting Tech for cheating now?

DC

December 20th, 2011
9:10 am

People saying this is a nonstory are kinda incorrect…its over $60K paid to coaches…and is a violation..that sounds like news to me…

But I agree with everyone here that Richt is a good man to do all this..and I’m sure it was a nice charitable write-off.

G-Dawg

December 20th, 2011
9:10 am

I’ve heard about T. Richardson’s situation. And i’m sure there’s plenty more out there with the whole program. Saban will pull a ole Petey (Carroll) sometime soon!! Nature of the beast!!

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
9:11 am

Why are you folks on the AJC so bad about this story? This IS a public story. You are demanding 24/7 reporting of all things Georgia, are you not? And they make Richt look pretty darn good here. I say thanks, well done.

Tom Heard

December 20th, 2011
9:13 am

CMR is a good man! No wonder he has a stable staff. He is a great example to the young men he coaches.

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
9:14 am

You can always get an attaboy bashing on Adams. That’s easy. His post was completely irrelavant to the story here, but what the heck.

G-Dawg

December 20th, 2011
9:15 am

Tech Guy…referring to Dawg Trolls on a Dawg site pretty much shows your inability to follow directions..or lack of detail.

Second, we dont give a dawg crap for your program…hence, we dont discuss GT issues here.

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

December 20th, 2011
9:15 am

And Dawgs say TECH cheats?
$300 for a suit from a Ex-Tech player to a Tech player and they want to take the ACC Championship?
USC has kids in a Hotel with Limo service. OSU and TattooGate, UNC tutor paper writting, UGA and many minor recruiting violations, Bama over signing. NCAA has NO real power.

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

December 20th, 2011
9:16 am

GDawg is smoking Crowell’s Stash early this morning.

Summit Dawg

December 20th, 2011
9:17 am

The NCAA should go to Hell, and take their stupid rules with them!!!!

slydog

December 20th, 2011
9:18 am

#1 This is so stupid, both by the NCAA and Coach Richt
#2 Richt knew better. It was just a matter either “self-reporting” or getting caught, whichever comes first. Question to you idiots who wrongly called AJ Green selfish for selling a worthless jersey: Was Richt being selfish by placing the welfare of his staff over those of his team and program? Was doing what’s right means breaking a rule, then does the coach get a pass and players don’t?
#3 This represents that the program is rife with coddling and lacks accountability. I could see if any of these folks were not making good money as it is. If they bought a house they couldn’t afford, UGA has plenty of housing available on campus…lmao.
#4Deserved incentives and bonuses are decided and paid by the Athletics Director, Athletics Department and the UGA Athletics Association. Although Richt has major input in this, he does not have final say so.
#5 McGarity feels hamstrung by this coach. Believe it or not.

slydog

December 20th, 2011
9:19 am

I just love the way Chip framed this “…generosity and compassion…”. Please

slydog

December 20th, 2011
9:20 am

Generosity and compassion..Please. This is called being slick and deceitful. Plain and simple.

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
9:20 am

We don’t really have too many USC, OSU, OR UNC fans constantly trying to take over our blogs, so we probably direct more of our fire at the ones that do.

“Personal attacks will NOT be tolerated hate-filled harassing posts unacceptable”

December 20th, 2011
9:20 am

Chip Towers, sir,

How about getting a Freedom of Information Act and do the SAME at Georgia tek, sir.

What a load of hogwash.

What are we supposed to do ?

Let a 5-year child STARVE because the NCAA says we cannot feed him on a visit ? The NCAA needs a life. High School prospects and their parents, we are ok to feed them here on an Official NCAA Visit. But, the 5-year old obviously cannot be left unattended, nor starved at the SAME MEAL.

We have to pay $ 21.33 for the 5-year old’s plate of food ? I would like to see that plate of food. I bet you he ate no more than about $ 1.00 worth of the $ 21.33 of food the NCAA deems is EXCESSIVE and VIOLATION of their bloody rules that now we have to pay for.

“INTRIGUING” Chip, sir, there is NOTHING intriguing about ANY OF THIS.

Now

GIVE MARK RICHT HIS EXTENSION NOW.

ckgator

December 20th, 2011
9:20 am

If this were any Florida / Auburn / Tech coach, you guys would be reading him the riot act. I agree that it could be worse. These are not Kiffin or Miami-type blunders, but rules are indeed rules.

Larry

December 20th, 2011
9:21 am

And way to go, Coach Richt!

That is the conservative way…give to those who need it by personal choice and responsibility versus the liberal way of having Nobama and his trusted followers over tax you and pay themselves to distribute your money for you!

You are a man’s man, Coach Richt!

Dawglasville

December 20th, 2011
9:21 am

Dogs Smell – Some Georgia fans wanted Richt gone.

We’ve got to know the rules, even if they are silly. I’m sure it was a live and learn experience. I know that Richt’s giving nature will not be undone by this. I, like most, are proud that he represents us,and have been proud since 2001.

slydog

December 20th, 2011
9:23 am

“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…”

These payments were so well-deserved and these folks performance were so outstanding, these two are no longer in the program; They were fired.

Matt in ATL

December 20th, 2011
9:23 am

CMR is a damn good dawg, and a damn fine man.

jbeggs

December 20th, 2011
9:25 am

This article will prove as a valuable recruiting tool. We finish in the top 10 in crutin’ again – book it.

Georgia | MrSEC.com

December 20th, 2011
9:26 am

[...] to records obtained by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution through the Freedom of Information Act, 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 wrote [...]

old dog

December 20th, 2011
9:27 am

The NCAA has done the same thing the EPA has done….gone overboard! Having rules about which side of one’s desk the pens can be on is ludicrous! I understand that there have to be rules and limitations, but the NCAA needs to dismantle and start over. What kind of organization ( a misuse of the term; sorry) denies a five year old kid a meal? There is such a myriad of B.S. rules that the Supreme Court could not figure them out, or probably even come up with when any of them are applicable. The NCAA is going through the same thing the federal government is going through. Too many people wanting to feel important by adding their little crap to the rules instead of good common-sense action, or inaction when applicable. Govern the programs, use common sense when necessary, and quit trying to see who can most trivialize what initially was started as a decent over-seeing body.

RxDawg

December 20th, 2011
9:28 am

Man… I want to go work for Richt. Do the Dawgs need a pharmacist?

shipyard dawg

December 20th, 2011
9:29 am

Nice Chip , Is this all you have. Why don’t you take rest of the year off.Merry Christmas.

DawginLex

December 20th, 2011
9:29 am

MR SEC article says

“If we were going to guess which coach in the SEC would get in trouble for being nice, we would have put our money on Richt.”

slydog

December 20th, 2011
9:30 am

I agree that the NCAA has gone overboard in making all these nitty bitty rules. But I see why they are in place. How do any of us know if this extra compensation didn’t find its way to a player or two? Since the rule is in place, follow it, unless we are about to embark on a full scale assault against it. The coaches have more accountability when it comes to following rules as opposed to the players.

Billdawg69/71

December 20th, 2011
9:31 am

btg69 – People in glass houses shouldn’t throw stones. I recall Tech just surrendering a conference championshi because of MAJOR, not SECONDARY, violations. Get your own house in order, before criticizing a man for taking care of his staff.

I have a Major problem with the UGA administration refusing to pay a competitive salary for staff when they are the first or second most profitable athletic Dept in the NCAA.

AltamahaDawg

December 20th, 2011
9:31 am

ckgator, NOPE, thats simply not true and you base that on pure personal rival fan pulled it out your butt opinion. You are just proving to BE what you accuse us of.

There is absolutely no reason to say that Georgia fans on the whole would be on your coach if he gave his people money out of his own generosity. No more so than the handful of hater on here trashing our guy right now.

Top Row Dog

December 20th, 2011
9:32 am

Actually, this is good reporting.We would not have known the generosity of CMR concerning his coaches. Proud to be a Georgia graduate and fan for a school that has never had NCAA Bowl or TV sanctions or games vacated.

CMR

3 and 1 against Alabama.
7 and 4 against Auburn.
7 and 4 against Tennessee.
7 and 4 against South Carolina.
5 and 1 Against Arkansas.
7 and 3 in Bowl games.
10 and 1 against Georgia Tech.

Undefeated in class and integrity.