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March 1, 2006

Introducing "Tech Kemp" (Former GT advisor alleges NCAA Coverup)

The Germans have a word for it. "Schadenfreude." It means to delight in the misery of others.

I'm on record as having said that half of the fun of winning is the other guy losing. On days when I get news like "Spurrier to Retire" or "Tech to Vacate Wins," the emotions that fill me are on par with those I felt as an 8-year old boy running down the stairs on Christmas Day to open presents.

Today, the AJC is reporting that a former GT academic advisor is suing Tech for wrongful termination. He says that GT "deliberately concealed some of the NCAA violations" in an attempt to avoid scandal. The coverup would be another, much larger NCAA violation to go along with Tech's existing probation.


Tech Kemp is my Red Rider BB Gun

For those that don't remember, the entire Jan Kemp case at Georgia came about because Georgia wrongfully terminated Kemp. She blew the whistle to the NCAA about the lack of academic credentials for some Georgia athletes. So, Georgia fired her. Thus her suit.

This case reeks of the same situation. In 2003, Shane "Tech Kemp" Olivett's (Tech's advisor) says that he wanted to tell the NCAA about Tech's academic problems. The same problems that resulted in GT's current probation. Violations for which GT has already been proved guilty.

The advisor says that Braine, Gailey, and New were told in 2003 of the violations and elected to cover them up. However, GT did not report the violations at the time. In Jan. 2004, someone (it looks like it would be this same advisor) blew the whistle to the NCAA on GT's 8 year stint of eligibility driven violations.

From the AJC:
President Wayne Clough, athletics director Dave Braine and another Georgia Tech official deliberately concealed some of the NCAA violations that led to the school being put on NCAA probation, a former Tech academic adviser alleges in a wrongful termination lawsuit.

Tech, already stung by the May 2003 announcement it had dismissed 10 football players from school, decided it couldn't afford the public relations hit it would take from further academic bad news, Shane Olivett's suit alleges.

At a July 2003 meeting to discuss the eligibility of five or six football players, football coach Chan Gailey "explained that he could not weather another academic related scandal and try to recruit quality student-athletes to Georgia Tech," the suit says. "[Associate AD] repeatedly warned Defendant Braine that another eligibility scandal, if brought to the public's attention, would ruin Georgia Tech's athletic and academic reputations."

Olivett argued Tech had an obligation to self-report rules violations, but Braine and New rejected his advice, the suit says. Clough, who was not present at the meeting, and Braine "made the decision to conceal these facts from the NCAA and the public," the suit says.
The good news for Tech is that it's Olivett's word against Gailey, Clough, New and Braine. Unless there is documentation that proves he told them about the violations, and they covered it up.

The bad news for Tech. Someone DID know that GT was in violation of NCAA rules. Someone did blow the whistle to the NCAA. Those are facts.



Why wouldn't the person who blew the whistle just tell Braine about the problem? Wouldn't that be the easiest way to handle things? If Olivett can prove that Braine, New, Gailey or Clough knew that Olivett was the whistle blower, he's got a great case.

GT may or may not win this case. Who cares. But this is the type of case that if it goes to trial, all of your dirty laundry gets aired. Either way. It's good times.

Paul "Mein Schadenfreude" Westerdawg

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's like Christmas in February!

For longer than I care to remember, the patrons of GTU have maintained a haughty, holier than thou air of moral superiority. Sure, they sniffed, UGA may beat us like rented mules since the Lyndon Johnson administration, but it's only because GTU will not sink to the depths of academic fraud that UGA regularly sanctions.

Of course, that is all errant nonsense. The chickens, it appears, are finally coming home to roost.

UGA caught hell for the misadventures of Jim Harrick, Jr in a PE class that NO ONE in the athletic program needed to remain academically eligible. No one delighted in our misfortune that the loveable hypocrites at GTU.

I said it when the NCAA found they had been cheating for years and put them on probation: Imagine what they'd say if WE had done all that. They claimed it was mostly inadvertant, that someone in their academic support office had just made a mistake.

Uh-huh.

I guess this puts the lie to all that, doesnt it, nerds? Let's see how you handle this. Will you fess up and take your punishment, or will you kick and scream all the way to the courthouse, where I suspect you'll take a beating that makes 51-7 look like a kiss on the lips?

I can hardly wait. No matter what you do, that sinful pride is gonna take a biiiiiiiiiig hit. It couldnt happen to a more deserving program.

Unknown said...

Verily.

Nathan said...

A: This is pretty bad, whether it's true or not. Braine is/was a worthless bozo and in the last 5 years managed to piss away whatever credibility GT has ever had. Needless to say, at this point I'm not sure I'd piss on him if he was on fire.

B: It's still not even close to the Harrick "adventures" at UGa. That's one of the worst academic fraud scandals in the history of the NCAA. And it's not like we've been keeping Leonard Pope level students eligible either.

Unknown said...

Nathan,
It's much worse than HarrickGate.

Harrick and his son were two lone men trying to run an outlaw program and cover it up. UGA was investigating them before the NCAA did. They just kept covering their trails with more lies. It wasn't until Cole was on ESPN that Adams and Dooley knew how bad it really was.

The GT thing....if true....means that it was a conspiracy beyond Gailey all the way to Braine to intentionally coverup NCAA rules violations.

All we did wrong (according to the NCAA) with Cole was give the moron $300, pay a $1200 phone bill in Hawaii and give 3 kids an A in a PE class that they didn't need to graduate.

We're guilty of being reckless and stupid. Not of institutional corruption.

Tech Kemp is alleging an NCAA violation version of a RICO act level offense

Unknown said...

Nathan,
It's much worse than HarrickGate.

Harrick and his son were two lone men trying to run an outlaw program and cover it up. UGA was investigating them before the NCAA did. They just kept covering their trails with more lies. It wasn't until Cole was on ESPN that Adams and Dooley knew how bad it really was.

The GT thing....if true....means that it was a conspiracy beyond Gailey all the way to Braine to intentionally coverup NCAA rules violations.

All we did wrong (according to the NCAA) with Cole was give the moron $300, pay a $1200 phone bill in Hawaii and give 3 kids an A in a PE class that they didn't need to graduate.

We're guilty of being reckless and stupid. Not of institutional corruption.

Tech Kemp is alleging an NCAA violation version of a RICO act level offense

82 said...

I thought the only academic wrong doing the Harricks were guilty of was passing basketball players in a single credit elective basketball class with subpar attendance? How is this similar academically?

Astronaut Mike Dexter said...

Yeah, the only way this would be comparable to the Harrick situation is if Harrick's basketball players had been in danger of flunking out of school, Harrick went to Dooley and Adams and said, "I'm going to create a short-bus-level PE class for these guys so they can graduate, is that cool by you?" and Dooley and Adams had said, "Yes, that sounds like a capital idea."

 
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