Arizona 'remains committed' to standards of integrity following explosive day in federal trial
The Star's Bruce Pascoe on UA's response to the federal trial, the national reaction and a Pac-12 schedule tweak.
UA responds to federal trial, Book Richardson's allegation
Updated
SCOTTSDALE โ Arizona says it is taking โvery seriouslyโ what was presented in federal court Wednesday, when former assistant basketball coach Book Richardson was heard on a wiretapped phone call played for jurors saying UA coach Sean Miller had agreed to pay former Wildcat star Deandre Ayton.
โThe University of Arizona takes the information presented in courtย todayย very seriously and remains committed to the highest standards of integrity and ethical conduct which includes competing within the rules of the NCAA and the Pac-12 Conference," UA said in a statement in response to the Star's request for comment. "We will continue to cooperate fully with the NCAA and withย other ongoingย investigations into this matter in the best interest of the university and the menโs basketball program.โ
Arizona athletic director Dave Heeke could not be reached during Pac-12 meetings at the Hyatt Regency Scottsdale, where athletic directors later attended an offsite Tournament of Roses dinner. UA president Robert C. Robbins tweeted Wednesday night that he was at Old Main celebrating the sponsors, volunteers and community partners involved with the Tucson Festival of Books.
Pac-12 commissioner Larry Scott, meanwhile, said he couldnโt comment yet on Richardson's allegation because it surfaced during the conferenceโs meetings, and said he didn't know exactly what UA's own investigation has revealed.
Scott said he has not discussed the issue with Heeke this week, and has not been in touch with UAโs legal team, which has had a representative sitting in on every day of the trial. But he said the Pac-12 has been in regular contact with Arizona officials and is โvery concernedโ about the issues that have been brought up.
The optics
Updated
Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott spoke at the Pac-12 meetings in Scottsdale on Wednesday about the federal proceedings involving coaches in the conference.
Mark J. Terrill / AP PhotoNational media reaction to Wednesdayโs proceedings included a CBS podcast entitled โThe federal trial has been worse for Arizona than maybe everyone was expecting,โ and a Yahoo Sports story with a headline reading โHow much longer can Arizona employ Sean Miller?โ
During a roundtable interview Wednesday with national and local reporters, Scott was asked if retaining coaches alleged to have broken rules during the proceedings would send a message that nothing will change about the underbelly of college basketball.
โThere are a lot of people in college sports, including myself, that hope that there are some definitive findings or a conclusion one way or another as a result of this trial,โ Scott said. โI think, in a strange way, it's potentially a very positive development for college basketball. The FBI has had tools and the ability to look into things that would be difficult for the NCAA, given their subpoena power, wiretaps, etc.
โThe conversations Iโve had with our basketball coaches and our administration is that weโre really hopeful that there are some conclusions that come out of it one way or another and not just open-ended questions that donโt have concrete conclusions.โ
Still, Scott acknowledged that the frequent references to cash payments in allegations that have surfaced during the trial indicate that proving violations is difficult.
โIf itโs possible, this process may have created some sympathy for the challenges that NCAA enforcement has,โ Scott said.
Stiffer schedules possible
Updated
School leaders are expected Thursday to discuss scheduling parameters for menโs basketball, including possibly moving to a 20-game league schedule and a nonconference scheduling standard that could involve opponents' expected strength.
โNo one is just kind of sitting there saying we donโt have to tweak or change anything and just hope things improve,โ Scott said.
The idea to move to 20 conference games first surfaced in early 2018, but the conference decided to keep the traditional 18-game schedule for 2019-20.
The Pac-12's coaches met during this year's Final Four.
Tags
More information
- In closing arguments, prosectors say Christian Dawkins' defense is 'just a lie'
- Arizona confirms NCAA investigation into men's basketball program 'is underway'
- Transcript details from Christian Dawkins' testimony on Sean Miller
- On stand, Christian Dawkins said he had 'pretty good relationship' with UA coach Sean Miller
- Greg Hansen: UA president's leadership needed as Wildcats navigate college hoops scandal
- On secret recording, former UA assistant says Sean Miller 'bought' Deandre Ayton
- Attorneys for University of Arizona watching 'every day' of federal basketball trial in person
- Witness: I never saw ex-UA assistant Book Richardson take bribes from men on trial
- Secretly recorded conversations show Book Richardson talking about chasing players, paying families
- Financial advisor testifies about relationship with former Arizona assistant Book Richardson
- Arizona sets date with St. John's to round out 2019 nonconference schedule
- Pac-12 will move to 20-game men's basketball schedule in 2020-21
- Pac-12 schedule change 'brings more relevance' to conference slate starting in 2020-21 season
- Following trial, Dawkins says he 'never' talked to Miller about bringing Ayton to UA
- UA President Robert Robbins says 'Sean's our coach' after federal trial ends
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