Steve Spurrier met disassociated South Carolina booster Steve Gordon once and knew quarterbacks coach G.A. Mangus had a prior relationship with Gordon and the Student Athlete Mentoring Foundation, but he remains cautiously optimistic about the outcome of the NCAAs investigation into his football program, he said Tuesday.
I hope were not in serious trouble, the No. 12 Gamecocks coach said. I dont think were going to be. You work these things out and do what they say. Thats what our university is doing. Hopefully, things will work out.
South Carolina received a Notice of Allegations on Monday from the NCAA that outlined $55,000 in extra benefits the NCAA alleges were given to Gamecocks athletes or prospective athletes. The letter charges the school with failure to monitor two potentially improper situations.
After Spurriers weekly news conference Tuesday, he told The State he met with Gordon once when Gordon brought several prospects to South Carolinas campus. Spurrier knew Mangus had a relationship with Gordon and Kevin Lahn of the SAM Foundation when Mangus was the coach at Delaware Valley College in the Philadelphia area from 2002 to 2005.
The SAM Foundation is at the center of one of the three charges leveled at South Carolina by the NCAA. Gordon, its president, and Lahn, its treasurer, are USC graduates. The organization provided $8,000 in recruiting inducements and extra benefits to freshman wide receiver Damiere Byrd and other unnamed athletes who were being recruited by the Gamecocks but did not attend USC, according to the NCAA.
Byrd is serving a four-game, NCAA-imposed suspension that will end after Saturdays game against Vanderbilt.
I feel confident G.A. abided by NCAA rules in recruiting Damiere Byrd, Spurrier told The State.
Spurrier declined to discuss specifics of the investigation. They tell us not to talk about these things, he said.
Spurrier and Mangus have been asked to attend South Carolinas hearing before the NCAAs Committee on Infractions in February in Los Angeles. School president Harris Pastides, athletics director Eric Hyman and compliance director Jennifer Stiles also are expected to attend the meeting.
Pastides, Hyman, Mangus and Stiles are not able to comment on the investigation, said Luanne Lawrence, the schools vice president for communications.
I dont think its embarrassing to get a letter, Spurrier said. I think some stuff can happen. Unfortunately, it happened, and well try to handle it the very best we can.
Spurrier appeared before the infractions committee in 1990 when he coached Florida. That hearing regarded allegations made against the Gators former coaching staff. Spurrier said he isnt upset to be making his first trip to address allegations that involve his program, and he did distance himself from any potential wrongdoing.
Has my name been mentioned doing anything wrong? Huh? Has it? My names not on that sheet, he said. I follow the rules as closely as I possibly can, and if I ever break one, I turn myself in.
Spurrier has one violation on my record at South Carolina, he said.
We were recruiting Kyle Nunn. David Reaves and I were down there at the high school. I said, Do you play basketball? He said, Yeah, Ive got a game tonight. I just went out for the team, and weve got a game tonight, Spurrier said. I said, We cant talk to you today, so we got up and left, and I turned myself in.
It is against NCAA rules to talk to a recruit the day he is competing in a high school event.
Thats what you call an accidental secondary violation, and I dont know of any coach who doesnt have one of those, Spurrier said.
The NCAA issue is not a distraction for players, running back Marcus Lattimore said.
We rarely talk about it, he said. We are really not the ones in the spotlight like the Miamis and the Ohio States and all that. When it does come up, we really dont talk about it that much.
