BleedGopher
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per Sam:
On Monday night, Kansas will play for a national championship here in New Orleans, a game the Jayhawks are favored to win, and if it just so happens to play out that way, be prepared for the NCAA Tournament’s most abnormal postgame moment.
NCAA president Mark Emmert would stand on a makeshift stage at the Superdome and hand the men’s basketball championship trophy to KU coach Bill Self, which would sort of be like bumping into your ex after an ugly breakup.
Except these two are tied together, whether they like it or not, the subjects of a story lurking in the background of the tournament’s title game.
In what seems like forever ago now, the NCAA in 2019 alleged Kansas had committed five Level I violations, and named Self and assistant Kurtis Townsend personally in accusing them of “intentionally and willfully engaging in NCAA violations.” Self and his lawyers have adamantly disputed the allegations, which revolve around payments made by Adidas representatives, KU’s apparel sponsor, to potential recruits. Self referred to the accusations as innuendo and three years later, after the involvement of an independent review process, we still await a resolution.
So the games go on.
Go Gophers!!
On Monday night, Kansas will play for a national championship here in New Orleans, a game the Jayhawks are favored to win, and if it just so happens to play out that way, be prepared for the NCAA Tournament’s most abnormal postgame moment.
NCAA president Mark Emmert would stand on a makeshift stage at the Superdome and hand the men’s basketball championship trophy to KU coach Bill Self, which would sort of be like bumping into your ex after an ugly breakup.
Except these two are tied together, whether they like it or not, the subjects of a story lurking in the background of the tournament’s title game.
In what seems like forever ago now, the NCAA in 2019 alleged Kansas had committed five Level I violations, and named Self and assistant Kurtis Townsend personally in accusing them of “intentionally and willfully engaging in NCAA violations.” Self and his lawyers have adamantly disputed the allegations, which revolve around payments made by Adidas representatives, KU’s apparel sponsor, to potential recruits. Self referred to the accusations as innuendo and three years later, after the involvement of an independent review process, we still await a resolution.
So the games go on.
Go Gophers!!