Cam Newton Scandal

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I apologize if this has been posted but I was wondering what the RX'ers feelings are on the potential scandal of Newton being shopped around for 6 figures during the recruiting process.

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Dan Wetzel; Yahoo Sports:

So the best player on what may be the best team in college football was getting shopped around as a recruit last December for the low, low price of just $180,000.


At least, that was the deal presented to Mississippi State, according to an ESPN.com report Thursday. The Bulldogs were getting a discount for quarterback Cameron Newton because he supposedly liked their coach. The true rate, according to the Website, was $200,000. It was set by a recruiting middleman named Kenny Rogers.


Mississippi State didn’t bite. Newton went to Auburn, has become the Heisman Trophy favorite and turned a reeling program into a potential BCS champion. Auburn isn’t commenting other than to assert Newton is still eligible to play.

Newton’s family said they neither received any money nor authorized anyone to sell out their son. So who knows what’s true about a bombshell revelation that could change the complexion of the entire season.

The real issue though is this: if Auburn did pay someone $200,000 for the signature of Cam Newton they got an absolute steal.


He’s worth millions and that’s before they’re done counting the receipts on all the No. 2 jerseys sold or add up the extra donations from old men who get loose with a checkbook when they see a young man such as Newton carry the ball.


This is the real business of college football and only the most naive inside the sport even pretend that it is not.


It’s happening nearly everywhere with nearly everyone because no amount of NCAA legislation can stop the wheels of capitalism. The market will determine the value of a product and 29 touchdowns, nine victories and zero losses is worth a great deal more than tuition, room and board. It’s been that way for nearly a century.


As recruiting stories go, this is exactly how coaches quietly say it works – except for the 10 percent discount for Mississippi State. That was probably just a ploy to up the bidding. If Auburn did pay, then they paid $175,000 and Mississippi State was just getting played.


Recruiting agents don’t do double-coupon day. Nor should they, because coaches, athletic directors and the rest don’t agree to 10 percent pay cuts either.


In the end this is the same old story. College football’s power brokers write a bunch of lip-service rules in an effort to maintain the sports’ “amateurism” so they can continue to beat federal, state and local taxes.


When you pay neither taxes nor the players there’s a lot more cash laying around to line your pockets.


So the economy gets driven underground, where this bizarre open marketplace for players operates with everyone’s either tacit understanding or blind ignorance.


You know why Kenny Rogers could, according to ESPN.com, brazenly tell Mississippi State they needed to come up with 180 large for a junior college quarterback?



Because any number of schools had already driven the number up that high. For all we know, it went even higher after the Bulldogs said no.


College football sure is fun to watch. The hangover begins once you realize how it actually operates and how the men in charge maintain their cushy status quo.


It’s a foolproof system. When a scandal finally breaks, the guys in the suits can blame the player and his family and the middle man. They’ll all be vilified. Hands will be wrung. Heads will be shaken. Someone might even get prosecuted. The machine will just churn on.


Every NCAA scandal is blamed on one of three characters: 1. the greedy kid and/or his family, 2. the dirty agent, 3. the bumbling assistant coach. Over and over and over. Decade after decade. They know the fans will buy it every time.


Meanwhile they keep building fancier offices for the athletic directors. They keep rewriting the coaches’ multimillion dollar deals. They keep chartering more private planes for the conference commissioners. They keep taking care of their crony bowl directors to the tune of $600,000-plus salaries.


Cam Newton? He might as well call Reggie Bush for some advice. He’s the one who’s going to get hung out to dry here.


There is no telling if he even knew, in this specific case, what was going on. Which isn’t to say he doesn’t know, in general, what does go on. You can say this for certain: a player of his ability had every opportunity in the world to take as much money as he wanted from agents and boosters. Whether he did or not was up to him.


It was all around him though and this is the confusing world the players operate in. Everyone’s making money but them. Everyone’s offering money to them. Yet if word breaks that anyone anywhere near them took any money, it’s their reputation that gets trampled.


Auburn has known about the allegations for months and continued to play Newton. The SEC became aware almost a year ago, according to ESPN.com. The NCAA has been investigating at least a month according to multiple reports.


So if Newton is told to sit now, it’s just a PR ploy to focus the negative spotlight on the player and away from the system that wasn’t too concerned when they could still sell the purity of the student-athlete.


And if Newton does continue to play, how awkward will it be if he wins the Heisman and Auburn wins the BCS and everyone will wonder if it’s all coming back?
At least Reggie Bush and USC got to uncork the champagne before the fairy tale broke bad.


Cam Newton does everything fast. This scandal even got here ahead of schedule. Expect the same old head-in-the-sand, blame-game excuses from the suits to follow just as quickly.


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None of this comes as a surprise to me. I laugh at the idiots who preach about how college sports is there to better these athletes as people & prepare them for life, yada yada... All it is, is a mafia type operation where the fat cats keep winning & the others are just pawns in their game.
 

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A few questions:

1) When did Mississippi St report the request for money? Was it before the season started or when Newton started playing well moving Auburn up the rankings?

2) Wonder what the congregation would think if it was proven that Newton's dad took some cold hard cash.
 

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Newton was a JUCO anyway. He'll be gone before anything comes of this (if anything does).
 

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Newton was a JUCO anyway. He'll be gone before anything comes of this (if anything does).

However, let's say he wins the Heisman and they win a National title then yes something comes of it (if it's true).
 

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how long until they start paying the student - athlete? (legally)

They should be doing it now. The players that go to college with serious pro aspirations aren't there to learn for the most part. The free education doesn't mean shit to a guy leaving after 2 or 3 years. They bring in millions for the school... might as well give them a few grand a month to live well.
 

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http://newamericamedia.org/2010/11/cam-troversy-in-alabama.php

Cam-troversy in Alabama


Washington Informer, News Report, Eric D Graham, Posted: Nov 15, 2010
NORTH CAROLINA (BASN) -- On the 25th anniversary of Auburn University Bo Jackson winning the Heisman trophy and hopes of a BCS Championship lingering in the atmosphere at Jordan Hare Stadium in Alabama, there is a new Cam-troversy brewing in college football, involving Auburn University's sensation quarterback Cam Newton.

Why? Because there are allegations of academic cheating, a $200,000 cash payment, and a stolen lap top. Oddly, this sounds more like an episode of Law and Order and not the preview for a college football game.

But this is the lead story, as the lines between amateur athletics and professional sports criss-cross at the crossroad with more cash and criticism for one to handle.

As a result, now the FBI is on the case.

Also, Newton’s phone records have been viewed, his father’s bank accounts has been checked, secret searches for a paper trail have begun, and even the sacredness of the "house of God" has been invaded as they attempt to find hidden evidence of evil and foul play.

Despite all of this, many people feel that this new sports scandal currently dominating the airwaves is simply a smear campaign and a modern-day witch-hunt orchestrated by a group of disgruntled former players in the SEC, who envy the new found success of Newton as well as Auburn's quest for BCS Championship.

The concept of “you are innocent until proven guilty”, however, does not seem to apply in the case against Newton. Because most college football fans and sports reporters have already given their verdict based on rumors, gossips and half-truths that Newton is guilty as Reggie Bush in this new age of whistle blowing.

"I am not going to entertain something that took place not three months, not six months, not even a year but two-years ago" said Newton during a recent press conference.

"I am not going to sit up here and say anything about it. Whether I did or did not. Because I do not want to beat a dead horse....because it is not going to affect me in any form or fashion."

Unfortunately, the "play-for-pay" allegations could actually affect Newton's draft status in the up-and-coming NFL draft as well as his chances of obtaining the highly-claimed 2010 Heisman Trophy as well as Auburn's chances to win a National Championship.

"We are not picking a Supreme Court Justice here, whose decision will affect the nation for decades." said Paul Finebaum, of the Paul Finebaum Radio Network.

"We are voting for the Heisman Trophy."

With this cloud of corruption hovering over the campuses of college football, however, it felt a little eerie when ESPN's award-winning 30-for-30 documentary series aired an episode involving former Oklahoma Sooner Marcus Dupree entitled "The Best That Never Was..", which brilliantly shows the ruthless recruiting tactics of some college football programs as well as the desire of a superstar college football player and his family to get paid during the process.

After viewing the story of Dupree -- even in 2010 -- things haven't changed that much, because it's business as usual in college football. Because instead of $40,000 for a double-wide trailer for the Duprees, it's now $250,000 for a house for the Bushes, and an alleged $180,000 for the Newtons.

Despite this exchange of cash for talent, the sad reality is, college sports and Capitalism as a whole, is simply a system of "pimps and hoes."

These large universities, coaches, and agents are the pimps. And they prostitute and exploit these young athletes by using their bodies, likeness, and talents while collecting billions of dollars in the end.

Hopeful, Cam Newton didn't fall victim in trying to "scam" the "scammer." Because it is hard to walk a straight path in this crooked world. But the truth will evidently come out. Unfortunately, the real crooks will probably get away.

And there will probably be another superstar athlete next year, who will walk away with a bag full of cash.

NOTE: In Saturday's 49-31 victory over Georgia, Newton became the first player in SEC history to pass for 2,000 yards and rush for 1,000 yards in a season. The win clinched a berth in the SEC Championship game on December 4th against South Carolina.
 

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