
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
slydog
December 20th, 2011
4:59 pm
I have a prediction: The Falcons will draft either Dewayne Allen or Orson Charles in the second round.
BigTimeTechFan
December 20th, 2011
5:00 pm
Sorry by this story does not add up:
Coach JANCEK made $145,755.81 in 2008
Coach JANCEK made $156,314.40 in 2009
Richt gave JANCEK $10,000 in 2009 for not getting a raise???????
1. Looks like he got a raise to me
2. Like someone making $150,000.00 a year is a charity case and
3. $10,000.00 check will make a difference.
Follow the money past the coaches and where does it go????
SMU use a method like this but money came from big booster instead of head coach
Also
Is this breaking fed tax law, if it is for compensation did he pay taxes??
Follow up AJC there is a bigger story here
Auburn DVM
December 20th, 2011
5:03 pm
I have to say that this is a bunch of crap!!!!! I am glad he did it. When in the world will the NCAA just get a life and perhaps try to regulate the deficit or something. I have had the pleasure of meeting coach Richt and I think that this is just one of his Godly characteristics. If I were making that kind of money and my staff was in need, I would do it over and over again with an utter disregard to this so called secondary violation!!!!!
Hadenough
December 20th, 2011
5:04 pm
This is a non-story.
SuperB
December 20th, 2011
5:04 pm
All of those “violations” are just plain silly. What isn’t silly was letting Ohio State play those ineligible players against Arkansas in last year’s Sugar Bowl– and letting the Buckeyes play in a bowl game this year.
Douglas Dawg
December 20th, 2011
5:06 pm
Screw the NCAA….. do they have nothing better to do…ie Ohio State… PSU…. come on really… CMR is a class act.
Bad Dawg
December 20th, 2011
5:07 pm
TampaGator, if the Florida game was UGA at full strength then there isn’t much hope for the future. I was talking about Florida being at their best in a showdown against UGA. I think most UGA fans would think Auburn was the best game UGA played all year by far. That was the only time this season the staff and the players clicked on all cylinders. The Florida game was so so. Getting down 17-3 is unacceptable if you ask me. That huge 4th down conversion on 4th and forever and the screen to Demps on the first play. Then a kickoff return for a td. The good was Murray and his receiver made clutch plays when it counted and Richard Samuel helped run out the clock. The most I got out of that game is that this team was not quitters and not afraid of Florida like previous Georgia teams.
Ok NCAA - Don't you have better things to do?
December 20th, 2011
5:07 pm
Get real NCAA – It’s Richt’s money. If he wants to give it away it is no business of yours!! What you should have done is dealt with Ohio State!!!!!
Joseph Stalin
December 20th, 2011
5:09 pm
… He would make a great socialist.
GATA
December 20th, 2011
5:09 pm
Hey BigTimeTechFan…
the bigger story here is if Paul Johnson keeps getting stuffed by Grantham every year while he continues his wack antiquated high school offense, he will be living in a van down by the river!
bosshawg
December 20th, 2011
5:13 pm
least he asked for more money for his people thats more than anybody in our department would do go dawgs.
Old Girl wants to Work for Richt
December 20th, 2011
5:14 pm
This old girl will work for Richt and he can just give me cash. No checks needed. Give me a good job description and I will follow. My resume will read, “two master’s degrees and completing doctorate but i WILL WORK FOR FOOD AND CASH!!)
GATA
December 20th, 2011
5:17 pm
I for one am glad to finally see the NCAA doing something about these rampant instances of abuse, such as purchasing meals for 5-year olds. This has gotten way out of control and is symptomatic of the ills of society at large. As long as these atrocities continue to go unchecked, college athletics will be forever tarnished and degraded. Please, NCAA, stay the course and don’t be distracted by minor incidents such as Penn State. Stay on your high horse!
A person SMART enough to know......
December 20th, 2011
5:18 pm
Ok NCAA – Don’t you have better things to do?
December 20th, 2011
5:07 pm
Get real NCAA – It’s Richt’s money. If he wants to give it away it is no business of yours!!
Yes, and it was Bilbo’s money and he should be able to buy Bey Bey Thomas a suit if he wanted to, too. It shouldn’t have cost TECH an ACC Title! That is not what you dawgs were saying a few months ago calling TECH Cheaters.
UGa should get busted HARD just like you said tech should.
NCAA SUCKS
December 20th, 2011
5:18 pm
and that’s the truth.
ga gator
December 20th, 2011
5:21 pm
Gator 1989, Galen was also guilty of paying for a running back from New Jersey to travel home to attend his grandmother’s funeral and loaned a DB money to pay child support. So it was a bit more than Richt. The NCAA looks more critically at benefits that are payed to un-paid athletes than they do to coaches.
RiffRaff
December 20th, 2011
5:23 pm
With all the terrible crap going on at other universities this is almost a “feel good” story. Suck it NCAA.
Just Sayin
December 20th, 2011
5:23 pm
Kind of like Richt and UGA not reporting Thomas’s and Crowell’s failed drug test when the knew about on thursday before the Florida game.
the truth...
December 20th, 2011
5:23 pm
aha….Damon Edwards refused the payments?
Guess he had to keep he budget low so he could afford lots of red panties!
Bad Dawg
December 20th, 2011
5:23 pm
Calm down a person smart enough to know. What do you want the NCAA to do strip UGA of the SEC East division title? They are secondary violations that were reported. Nothing major is going to come out of this like say Ohio State.
Fire Richt
December 20th, 2011
5:24 pm
This spin doesn’t wash with me. Where are the 1099’s and did they pay taxes on this income?
Bad Dawg
December 20th, 2011
5:26 pm
The only new stuff is Richt paying his assistants. These other violations have been know about for months.
ga gator
December 20th, 2011
5:27 pm
It looks like McGarrity has hired the right Law firm to handle such investigations, one which specializes in NCAA violations. UF did something similar when they hired away from the NCAA back when they were in trouble in the late 80’s, the Lead Investigator which handled the UF investigation (Jamie McClusky) to be their Compliance Officer.
brock
December 20th, 2011
5:32 pm
Some rules are made to be broken, and this was one. Kudos to Coach Richt! Great story.
Always a Jacket
December 20th, 2011
5:35 pm
The NCAA is disfunctional and overreaching. Yes it is against the rules, but the rules should not be there. Mr. Richt is class guy. As long as he is not paying players, this is none of NCAA business.
BirdDawg24
December 20th, 2011
5:35 pm
so thats it , thats the rules violations , well rules are rules , but that being said . coach richt is a class act , im glad he is our coach.
Coach Steve
December 20th, 2011
5:38 pm
“…if the administration won’t give you a raise, I’ll give it to you out of my own pocket”. What kind of man does this? A man of incredible integrity. Love that Mark Richt…Don’t we all wish we had bosses like this?
A person SMART enough to know......
December 20th, 2011
5:40 pm
Always a Jacket how do you know he wasn’t paying a player? That is why this RULE is in place.
Festus
December 20th, 2011
5:42 pm
How do I get on the payee list? Could use some extra cash for the holidays. Small unmarked bills would be neat. Nice to know that it isn’t hard times for everyone. Jocks eat first.
A person SMART enough to know......
December 20th, 2011
5:44 pm
Why didn’t Richt tell the Bosses he would take a pay cut in the amount the other people needed? If he did then they would get paid and his Integrity would be intact. He could have done this the proper way.
A person SMART enough to know......
December 20th, 2011
5:54 pm
UGa would really take a recruit and his family to McDonald’s? Damn no wonder UGa has all that money. They must never spend it. I am sure Mickey D’s really impresses the recruits.
BillDog
December 20th, 2011
5:57 pm
TWO THINGS STAND OUT HERE:
1. WE WERE LUCKY TO BE ABLE TO GET RID OF DAMON EVANS AS A.D. HE WOULD NOT GO TO THE ADMINISTRATION FOR HIS STAFF.
2. MARK RICHT IS A FIRST CLASS INDIVIDUAL. HE MAY BE A LITTLE “SOFT” ON SOME OF HIS COACHES (BOBO), BUT THE MAN LIVES BY THE PRINCIPLES HE TALKS ABOUT.
HE IS PERFECT, BUT WE COULD DO A HELL OF A LOT WORSE FOR A HEAD COACH!
BillDog
December 20th, 2011
5:59 pm
OOPS!!! HE IS NOT PERFECT, BUT WE COULD DO A HELL OF A LOT WORSE.
Tech Guy
December 20th, 2011
5:59 pm
Mark Richt is a good peson and coach. UGA is fortunate to have him.
Tech fan
December 20th, 2011
6:00 pm
Richt is a stand-up guy, and a good man all-around. As for the NCAA, what a bunch of jerks. You’ve got nothing better to do than enforce a silly rule against a recruit’s little brother receiving a free lunch on a campus visit?
Stinger
December 20th, 2011
6:05 pm
Needs to be fired. They need an honest coach just like Auburn has.
Arx Ferrum
December 20th, 2011
6:05 pm
Hmmm. He paid assistant coaches out of his own pocket because he felt they deserved more than the school was offering? Holy cow! Fire him! The last thing college sports needs is someone with a conscience! My gawd man! This could lead to the giving of holiday cards and birthday greetings!
Ahem. Excuse me but… gak.
NCAA football is already in something of a no-man’s land, halfway between college/amateur athletics and being a farm system for the NFL. As such, the rules and their enforcement tend to ebb and flow with the team(s) in question and how the sports media plays… or perhaps, preys upon it. In the end, public opinion is driven by two main factors; team loyalties and the sport media’s presentation. Right and wrong have no firm footing here. It’s all about the money and the show.
Leave Richt alone.
catlady
December 20th, 2011
6:06 pm
Real hard to sanction someone doing the right thing by his staff. It’s downright WRONG!
IRS
December 20th, 2011
6:08 pm
IRS– shouldnt they be checking out this gifting and no taxes.
gtfan11
December 20th, 2011
6:10 pm
I’m not a UGA fan by any stretch of the imagination, but I can’t see what the big deal was regarding Richt’s payments to his staff. I could see an issue if he was giving money to the players, but he should be able to do what he wants with his own money to support his coaching staff. There are much more blatant issues that the NCAA needs to be addressing and worrying less about a coach trying to do right by his staff.
sean payton
December 20th, 2011
6:13 pm
HAS EVERYONE ON THIS G-DAM SITE MISSED THE ONE OVERWHELMING PROBLEM, THE SAME ONE THAT IS PERVASIVE THROUGHOUT OUR SOCIETY….. WAY TOO MANY G-DAM JEW KIIKE LAWYERS IN THIS COUNTRY….. THEY ARE EVEN ENTRENCHED IN OUR COLLEGE SPORTS!!!
A person SMART enough to know......
December 20th, 2011
6:13 pm
The funniest part is people thinking this is great and it is OK because it is Richt. This rule was put in place because coaches were paying player and filtering money. Richt might not have been doing that, but that is WHY it is a Rule. Richt could have done the same thing through different channels without breaking the rules.
MY Dawg
December 20th, 2011
6:13 pm
Ladies & Gentleman, are there any more questions ? A University refuses to do the right thing, so the Coach takes his own money and pays his assistants. How many coaches would have been spouting off about that? I can hear it now, ” I am a damn good coach”. Mark paid them and moved on to the next challenge at hand. It shows how dedicated he is to his staff, and the University of Georgia football program. I am glad he’s on our side……
Sick of GTBob
December 20th, 2011
6:14 pm
GTbob, knew you would have something to say…you love trolling UGA stories…you are a closet Dawg fan aren’t you?
rlm
December 20th, 2011
6:16 pm
Try cash next time Richt.
BigTimeTECHFan
December 20th, 2011
6:19 pm
State is reporting
Coach JANCEK made $145,755.81 in 2008
Coach JANCEK made $156,314.40 in 2009
Richt gave JANCEK $10,000 in 2009 for not getting a raise?
Can someone explain, surely the NCAA followed up?
A person SMART enough to know......
December 20th, 2011
6:20 pm
Why wasn’t Richt writing checks to the POOR Underpaid Professors that didn’t get raises? I mean it isn’t like College has anything to do with EDUCATION. The EDUCATORS don’t deserve to be paid more than a Coach to Morons now do they? Football people responsible for some 100 football players need more money than a Professor responsible for EDUCATING a few Hundred STUDENTS a semester?
UGa fans have their priorities in order for sure.
surfdawg
December 20th, 2011
6:24 pm
SMART you are so smart you don’t even know you are ignorant
Dawg'88
December 20th, 2011
6:26 pm
To those seeking to make this something bad….(aka the ajc and Tech fans)…read the proper response by someone more credible than this rag:
The audacity of Mark Richt
——————————————————————————–
By Chris Low
If you want some insight into how trivial some of the NCAA’s rules are, read through the report of Georgia’s latest internal investigation that uncovered a series of secondary violations by the Bulldogs.
That’s my first thought in hearing that Georgia coach Mark Richt was “guilty” of trying to help some of his former assistants and staff members with financial payments out of his own pocket that the school’s athletic association wasn’t willing to pay.
When I hear about nonsense like this, I can’t help but think back to SEC commissioner Mike Slive’s proposal aimed at getting rid of the ticky-tack NCAA rules and focusing more on bringing down the hammer on the egregious rule-breakers.
So what if Richt wanted to help out some of his longtime aides with money he felt they had coming to them?
It says something about Richt the man that he’d be willing to make such a gesture.
But then, Richt has always been more of a giver than a taker.
He shouldn’t be admonished, which was essentially the gist of his punishment. Rather, he should be celebrated.
College football needs more men like Richt, who endeavor to do more for others than they do for themselves.
I understand the rationale behind NCAA bylaw 11.3.2.2, which regulates supplemental pay for staff members.
But in this case, it was simply a head coach who makes $3 million per year trying to share the wealth with people who had worked so hard for him and people who weren’t making wads of money.
One of the things that really sticks out in the report is Richt going into his own pocket and paying more than $15,000 to non-coach staff members for bowl bonuses when the school refused to include those employees in their bonus structure because of “difficult economic conditions.”
I guess, technically, Richt is a rule-breaker.
He’s also a breath of fresh air in a sport that morphed into big business a long time ago.
A person SMART enough to know......
December 20th, 2011
6:32 pm
Dawg88 and you were not dancing when Tech lost it ACC Championship because an Ex-teammate bought a kid a $300 suit? It was all dawgs could do to call TECH cheaters. Richt gave out TAX FREE LOANS that is against the LAW not just the NCAA.