Archive for Tuesday, May 13, 2008

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

NCAA investigating allegations involving USC’s Mayo

Organization says a report that the basketball player received thousands of dollars in cash and benefits was ‘new to the NCAA’ and will be reviewed in conjunction with school and Pac-10.

The NCAA today opened an investigation into whether former USC basketball player O.J. Mayo received tens of thousands of dollars in cash and benefits from an agent’s representative before and during the one season he played for the Trojans.

The allegations were made by former Mayo confidant Louis Johnson during a segment of the ESPN show “Outside the Lines” broadcast Sunday.

USC responded to the report by releasing a statement Sunday saying that the NCAA and Pacific 10 Conference had reviewed Mayo’s situation before and during his enrollment at USC “and did not identify any amateurism violations.”

That review, conducted by the school’s compliance office in conjunction with conference and NCAA authorities, was extensive with a scope far beyond perfunctory NCAA Clearinghouse procedures, said a source with knowledge of the situation who wouldn’t speak unless guaranteed anonymity.

In its own statement to The Times today, the NCAA said the allegations made on the television show were “new to the NCAA. This information was not available when the NCAA examined Mr. Mayo’s academic and amateurism status prior to his collegiate enrollment, and we will review the information in conjunction with the institution and the Pac-10 conference.”

ESPN reporter Kelly Naqi said in an online chat today that she had already been contacted by NCAA investigators.

Dave Hirsch, an assistant commissioner for the Pac-10, said today that conference officials wouldn’t comment on potential or pending investigations.

Johnson told ESPN that Los Angeles events promoter Rodney Guillory provided Mayo with a flat-screen television, cash, cellphone service, meals, clothes and other benefits dating to when Mayo was in high school. Johnson said Guillory was acting as a representative of Bill Duffy Sports Management, the agency Mayo has said will represent him as a pro.

The agency released a statement today saying that Duffy met Mayo for the first time shortly before Mayo selected BDA as his agency and signed with agent Calvin Andrews last month.

BDA Sports Management’s recruitment of O.J. Mayo did not involve any conduct by Calvin Andrews, Bill Duffy or any other BDA employee that could have remotely jeopardized O.J. Mayo’s collegiate eligibility,” the statement said. “Everything in the recent report that suggests otherwise is false.”

Times staff writer Gary Klein contributed to this report.

 ben.bolch@latimes.com

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