Statement from Art Briles’ attorney, Scott Tompsett. He says The NCAA decision “clears the way for Mr. Briles to return to coaching college football.” pic.twitter.com/1aNtuCxRhe
— Pete Thamel (@PeteThamel) August 11, 2021
Statement from Art Briles’ attorney, Scott Tompsett. He says The NCAA decision “clears the way for Mr. Briles to return to coaching college football.” pic.twitter.com/1aNtuCxRhe
— Pete Thamel (@PeteThamel) August 11, 2021
Art and his lawyers were not that stupid. They left with $17.9 million of Baylor's money. It should have been more. Hornets is not the word I would use to describe Baylor's leadership.Adriacus Peratuun said:
How can he & his lawyer be SOOOOOOOOOOOO stupid.
Sit quietly, let it go away, apply for jobs. Poking the buzzing hornet's nest is beyond idiotic.
Except I wasn't referencing his settlement. I was referencing his stated desire to get back into coaching CFB.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Art and his lawyers were not that stupid. They left with $17.9 million of Baylor's money. It should have been more. Hornets is not the word I would use to describe Baylor's leadership.Adriacus Peratuun said:
How can he & his lawyer be SOOOOOOOOOOOO stupid.
Sit quietly, let it go away, apply for jobs. Poking the buzzing hornet's nest is beyond idiotic.
Adriacus Peratuun said:
How can he & his lawyer be SOOOOOOOOOOOO stupid.
Sit quietly, let it go away, apply for jobs. Poking the buzzing hornet's nest is beyond idiotic.
COI on Art Briles:
— Max Olson (@max_olson) August 11, 2021
- "Incurious attitude" toward potential criminal conduct by his players was "deeply troubling"
- "Failed to meet even the most basic expectations of how a person should react to the kind of conduct at issue in this case."
- Not technically an NCAA violation pic.twitter.com/bdxCPIKehC
I know he had a different lawyer at the time....but a few months after this originally broke that lawyer set him up to be interviewed and that did not go well. Seems like he's not been given the best guidance on weathering this storm.Adriacus Peratuun said:
How can he & his lawyer be SOOOOOOOOOOOO stupid.
Sit quietly, let it go away, apply for jobs. Poking the buzzing hornet's nest is beyond idiotic.
Describes any P5 head football coach.boognish_bear said:COI on Art Briles:
— Max Olson (@max_olson) August 11, 2021
- "Incurious attitude" toward potential criminal conduct by his players was "deeply troubling"
- "Failed to meet even the most basic expectations of how a person should react to the kind of conduct at issue in this case."
- Not technically an NCAA violation pic.twitter.com/bdxCPIKehC
Art Briles via text:
— Mac Engel (@MacEngelProf) August 11, 2021
"Small window of hope, feels Large."
And more ..#Baylor #SicEm #NCAA
https://t.co/PnNZb1Frdt
boognish_bear said:
For whatever reason Mac Engel over the last few years has taken an interest in seeing CAB in a different light than most in the mediaArt Briles via text:
— Mac Engel (@MacEngelProf) August 11, 2021
"Small window of hope, feels Large."
And more ..#Baylor #SicEm #NCAA
https://t.co/PnNZb1Frdt
Ex-Baylor coach Art Briles: "NCAA found no wrongdoing or violations for a reason."
By Mac EngelAugust 11, 2021 01:35 PM
Former Baylor head coach Art Briles was cleared by the NCAA in its ruling on Wednesday regarding its investigation into the school for sexual assault claims during his tenure. The school received a light punishment from the NCAA.
Baylor's great year continues with a title in men's basketball, and a satin pillow slap from the NCAA in an investigation that should have ended years ago.
On Wednesday, the NCAA finally announced its ruling from its investigation into the Baylor athletic department and former football coach Art Briles that began back in 2018 regarding sexual assault claims, and a failure to comply with Title IX laws.
In case you are wondering, it's now August of 2021.
Baylor always figured the best way around all of this was to fire Art Briles. In the end, they were right, but their callus methods cost them millions, and the best football coach they ever had.
Baylor needed to update its attitude towards sexual assault claims, which it has done, but how the school arrived to this point would provide a semester's worth of material for a college PR class.
The "penalties" for Baylor include four years of probation, recruiting restrictions, a vacation of records and a five-year show-cause order limiting all athletically related duties for the former assistant director of football operations.
The best part, a $5,000 fine. For Baylor.
If you are doing the math at home, both Baylor University and now the NCAA have admitted that Briles did nothing wrong in this case.
He has not had a major coaching job since he was fired in May of 2016.
"I'm no doubt, the most scrutinized and investigated college head Coach in last 25 years," Briles said via text message. "NCAA found no wrongdoing or violations for a reason.
"Small window of hope, feels large. Mom (and) Dad smiling today in Heaven."
Baylor always had hoped it could rely on the North Carolina model to escape major penalty, which is exactly how this played out.
North Carolina escaped any NCAA penalties in its academic fraud case back in 2017 because there was nothing the athletic department did that technically violated the rule book.
There are no exact rules in the large NCAA rule book that Baylor technically violated.
The closest rule Baylor violated would have been the vague "lack of institutional control." In this case, the behavior of certain members of the Baylor board was in question.
To penalize a school for the behavior of its board members would have potentially set a precedent, and start a legal fight the NCAA does not want.
The NCAA wrote about its findings, "Baylor admitted to moral and ethical failings in its handling of sexual and interpersonal violence on campus but argued those failings, however egregious, did not constitute violations of NCAA rules.
"Ultimately, and with tremendous reluctance, this panel agrees. To arrive at a different outcome would require the (committee) to ignore the rules the Association's membership has adopted -- rules under which the (committee) is required to adjudicate. Such an outcome would be antithetical to the integrity of the infractions process."
Baylor's case may have been aided, immeasurably, by the fact that current BU president Linda Livingstone was recently named to the NCAA's 23-member Constitution Committee.
Former Baylor athletic director Ian McCaw, who is now the AD at Liberty, resigned from his position at BU amid the fallout from this.
He said via text message, "It is tragic that Baylor's decades-long, campus-wide sexual assault scandal arose due to systemic failings in campus safety and institutional adjudicatory processes as outlined in the 2014 Margolis Healy report."
The Margolis Healy report detailed many of the problems Baylor either denied, and have since tried to deal with, regarding sexual assault claims from its students.
Briles' lawyer, Scott Tompsett, said in a statement, "Art Briles has been completely exonerated and cleared of all NCAA violations alleged against him. As the NCAA Committee on Infractions explained, the conduct at issue was pervasive and widespread throughout the Baylor campus, and it was condoned or ignored by the highest levels of Baylor's leadership.
"The NCAA's decision today clears the way for Mr. Briles to return to coaching college football."
The NCAA's decision is also the biggest win for Baylor in a year where it won a national title.
The big tree has fallen in the forest and nobody heard it except for Baylor fans. This ruling clearly displays that Baylor Football is no longer a threat to the Bluebloods after Baylor leadership dismantled the program. It is what it is. Go Bears!!!!! Beat those mighty Texas State Bobcats!!!!Adriacus Peratuun said:Except I wasn't referencing his settlement. I was referencing his stated desire to get back into coaching CFB.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:Art and his lawyers were not that stupid. They left with $17.9 million of Baylor's money. It should have been more. Hornets is not the word I would use to describe Baylor's leadership.Adriacus Peratuun said:
How can he & his lawyer be SOOOOOOOOOOOO stupid.
Sit quietly, let it go away, apply for jobs. Poking the buzzing hornet's nest is beyond idiotic.
The former is done. Current statements don't impact it.
The latter remains a goal. Today's actions clearly impact it.
Hornets.......social media outrage machine, not Baylor. SMH.
And they face no consequences.ScottS said:
Our BOI overreacted.
ScottS said:
BTW, there were posters on this board that were painting CAB to look worse than Hilter. Where are they today?
ImABearToo said:
Remind me again the number of arrests and convictions of football players during Art's stint at Baylor?