Enjoying reading about all the money the SEC schools are throwing around to recruits thanks to the corruption trials that have been going on. My conclusion: Northwestern will probably never be a player for one-and-dones, or really a serious contender on the national stage, year-in and year-out. And that's okay. I'd rather struggle to win with integrity than get down in the mud with these guys. From the St. Louis Post Dispatch today:
"LSU brought embattled basketball coach Will Wade back from his school suspension, reassigned athletic director Joe Alleva and hired Scott Woodward away from Texas A&M to replace him.
That made LSU boosters very, very happy. It looked like Wade might be in the clear, despite federal bribery trial evidence of him discussing financial offers for recruits.
Wade also avoided having to testify in college basketball's second corruption trial, which was another big win for him.
While testimony in the second trial has centered on the pay-for-play antics of the Arizona program -- dooming head coach Sean Miller, it would seem -- Wade got dragged back into the mud due to his attempt to woo bagman, er, assistant coach Book Richardson from Arizona to work for LSU.
Richardson was under surveillance at the time. So there he is, on a video claiming Wade said this about key recruit Naz Reid: “Look, there’s a deal in place, I got $300,000 for him."
That's some serious coin, even by the SEC's lofty standards.
Richardson was recorded making another illuminating comment about SEC recruiting: "If I'm recruiting against Mississippi State, all bets are off" and that in the SEC, some players get "20, 30, 40 grand" when recruited."
"LSU brought embattled basketball coach Will Wade back from his school suspension, reassigned athletic director Joe Alleva and hired Scott Woodward away from Texas A&M to replace him.
That made LSU boosters very, very happy. It looked like Wade might be in the clear, despite federal bribery trial evidence of him discussing financial offers for recruits.
Wade also avoided having to testify in college basketball's second corruption trial, which was another big win for him.
While testimony in the second trial has centered on the pay-for-play antics of the Arizona program -- dooming head coach Sean Miller, it would seem -- Wade got dragged back into the mud due to his attempt to woo bagman, er, assistant coach Book Richardson from Arizona to work for LSU.
Richardson was under surveillance at the time. So there he is, on a video claiming Wade said this about key recruit Naz Reid: “Look, there’s a deal in place, I got $300,000 for him."
That's some serious coin, even by the SEC's lofty standards.
Richardson was recorded making another illuminating comment about SEC recruiting: "If I'm recruiting against Mississippi State, all bets are off" and that in the SEC, some players get "20, 30, 40 grand" when recruited."