The NCAA has limits on the number of hours players can be required to do work within their given sport. These limits are designed to retain the perception that student-athletes are purely students first. They are rules some fans assume are regularly broken by big-time programs.If a group of current and former Michigan players have their way, football coach Rich Rodriguez is done getting away with breaking these rules. The Detroit Free Press has all the alleged details.
After a 3-9 season in 2008, hopes are high for a quick turnaround at Michigan. Rodriguez has found quarterbacks to run his spread offense, and the team as a whole now has a full offseason of work under the coach's program.
This, it seems, is where the problem begins. The NCAA indeed has limits on the amount of offseason work players can be required to do. Naturally, players who want to put in more time are more than welcome to. However, it has to be voluntary and not "mandatory."
At the school's news media day, the Free Press asked freshman Brandin Hawthorne what winter conditioning was like. Hawthorne, a linebacker from Pahokee, Fla., enrolled in January.Now, neither player was complaining. Neither player was trying to get Rodriguez or the school in trouble. Instead, it seems the players are just doing what they're told, and not terribly concerned about Michigan's coaches willfully breaking NCAA rules.
"It's crazy," said Hawthorne, who was not complaining about his coaches and was apparently unaware of the time-limit rules. "I work out at 8. We'll work out from, like, 8 to 10:30. We come back later, have one-on-ones, seven-on-sevens, a little passing. Then I'll go watch a little film."
The Free Press also asked freshman receiver Je'Ron Stokes about Michigan's off-season program. Stokes, from Philadelphia, arrived at the Ann Arbor campus in June.
"Hooooo!" Stokes said. "A typical week is working from 8 a.m. in the morning to 6 or 7 at night, Monday through Saturday."
And that was starting in June?
"Yes, sir," Stokes said. "We do the weight room at least three times a week, and seven-on-sevens and one-on-ones. Speed and agility on the other days. Every day we have something new to get ready for the season. The coaches have done a great job of stressing the importance of getting us ready for the big season that we're about to have."
The saying "Workouts aren't mandatory, but neither is your playing time," is thrown around, according to the report. The paper also mentions the idea that other schools are committing the same violations. The NCAA will undoubtedly welcome that defense.
The Free Press compared that atmosphere to that of former coach Lloyd Carr.
But veteran players told the Free Press that Carr and his director of weight training and conditioning, Gittleson, strictly followed the NCAA rules. Players were expected to spend up to eight hours a week pushing themselves in the weight room during the off-season, but anything beyond that was truly voluntary. They also were encouraged to fit their workouts around their class schedules.Workouts weren't the only issue brought up by players.
Under Carr, off-season seven-on-seven drills were run by players, without coaches or staff members present, players said. The only staffer there would be a trainer, in case anybody got injured, as allowed under NCAA rules.Obviously, Michigan fans are going to be upset by this story. They may drop threats to the Free Press about canceling subscriptions or boycotting advertisers. However, the story seems to have been well-researched, and it doesn't just come across as a hatchet job against the evil outsider (Rodriguez) and his program.
Several players said Rodriguez's coaches were more likely to insist they participate in seven-on-seven scrimmages, which have become more frequent. They also said that members of the program's quality-control staff frequently watched seven-on-sevens.
"They usually just watched and would write down who wasn't there," one player on the 2008 team said.
... Quality-control staffers are not allowed to attend voluntary drills, according to the NCAA.
Instead, it's clear that this is a cultural problem in college sports. You're going to have a hard time convincing any follower of the sport that teams across the country don't break the rules about mandatory workout time. Paul Gattis of the Huntsville Times -- the heart of the SEC, mind you -- notes a lack of surprise.
Rodriguez issued a statement to the Free Press, saying he follows the rules regarding practice and offseason workouts.
The story may prompt an NCAA investigation, or the school could conduct its own. As the Free Press notes, it's almost impossible to predict what kind of punishment could come down to a program found guilty of these types of violations. However, major violations typically lead to loss of scholarships and probation. Because of the nature of these violations (if they're proven by the NCAA's standards), Rodriguez could also lose practice time.
Needless to say, this isn't the kind of attention Michigan fans want on the football program. The Wolverines open the regular season Saturday in Ann Arbor against Western Michigan.




















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
8-30-2009 @ 10:57AM
Jim said...
LMAO!! Go Blue!! NOT. Serves you right for hiring that piece of crap, overated Rich Rodriguez!! As a died in the wool Buckeye fan, THANK YOU!! Couldn't happen to a better program!! GO BUCKEYES!!!
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8-30-2009 @ 11:29AM
JOHN LECZNAR said...
Sounds to me like baiting, slanted & irresponsible reporting.
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8-30-2009 @ 11:42AM
randy said...
Nothing new!Play football....that's what they are here for.Dont tell me that an a.d at any school does'nt know this is going on.teachers teach,coaches coach.Stop crying wolverine's,heads or tail's you call.
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8-30-2009 @ 12:04PM
rjkofnovi said...
Thanks for your kind words of support Jim. Typical shortsighted Buckeye fan. If this turns out to be true and the NCAA decides to act on it, your signature game against Michigan in November will become even more meaningless than it is already. Then your annual a**whipping in a BCS bowl game will once again proved how overrated the Big Ten conference is.
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8-30-2009 @ 12:46PM
cdbplc said...
The Detroit Free Press has a big problem. It is a failing newspaper, that has dropping revenue and circulation and has mortgaged its future on "hits" to its online site. Go there any day of the week, and Michigan football stories are among the biggest hit-generators.
The Freep has had a terrible record of late with bad reporting on former U-M players, with bogus stories about Justin Boren and Kurt Wermers departures' from the program. (Boren's dad wanted a scholarship for his other son, and Wermers had become academically ineligible without telling the Free Press.)
This is more trumped-up desperation reporting from the Freep.
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8-30-2009 @ 1:04PM
Andrew said...
Serves him right for leaving WVU like he did shows what kinda guy he really is.
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8-30-2009 @ 1:05PM
Andrew said...
Serves him right for leaving WVU like he did. It Shows what kinda guy he really is. Piece of junk
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8-30-2009 @ 1:14PM
cdbplc said...
The headline, "Michigan Players Allege Rules Violations by Rich Rodriguez" is almost deliberately deceptive.
The Free Press reporting included some players who spoke for attribution, none of whom complained about Rodriguez, and all of whom siad they were voluneering for workouts. The Free Press also used a number of "current and former" players who would not allow their names to be used. For fear of coaches' "retribution." But of course that makes no sense at all in the case of "former" players. What retribution do "former" players have to fear?
We do know that the Free press has been interviewing Kurt Wermers and Justin Boren, former players, who have been positively shown to have zero credibility.
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8-30-2009 @ 1:27PM
Mr.G said...
Thanks for your kind words of support rjkofnovi.Typical shortsighted Buckeye basher.Ohio State is 4-3 in BCS Games, with a National Championship to their credit.They lost to eventual National Cahampions Fla and LSU,also lost to Texas on a last minute TD.Hardly an annual ass whipping.Maybe your team (whoever that is),has done better.If so,congratulations,if not,maybe you should be bashing your own team.Big10 overrated compared to who?True,the Big10 has fallen behind the SEC,but I'm just not seeing another Conference that's clearly better over the last few years.Is anybody really rating the Big10 ahead of the SEC these days?I don't hardly think so.You're just another blowhard.
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8-30-2009 @ 2:18PM
tjstieg said...
M GO BLUE!
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8-30-2009 @ 3:24PM
tdolan1035 said...
Way to go LITTLR BLEW good luck you may be able to keep your 3 wins from last year
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8-30-2009 @ 3:27PM
rlbrooks726 said...
Rich Rodriguez likes to bend/break the rules. It's win at any cost for him. Many Michigan players have left the program because of his attitude, foul mouth and lack of respect for the players. Rich might have been successful back in the days of Woody and Bo...but times have changed. I guess Rich will have to find out the hard way.
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8-30-2009 @ 3:37PM
cdbplc said...
Ya see? Here we have rlbrooks726, blindly repeating some of the stories that the Free Press was party to, and which have been shown to have been demonstrably false.
It was the Justin Boren story that first gave rise to the wholly unsubstantiated stories about "foul language" and lack of "family values" in the Rodriguez program.
All of which turned out to be laughably ironic insofar as Boren's own dad used to yell and swear at him so forcibly at halftimes of his Pickerington (OH) H.S. games, that Boren himself joked, "I thought somebody might call the cops."
And Boren's "family values"? It turned out that the Boren family had wanted and expected a Michigan scholarship for young Zach Boren, a middling 2-3 star FB/LB. The day after Michigan passed on offering Zach (who stunk in recruiting camps at Michigan), Ohio State made that deal, and took both Borens on a 2-fer basis. Zach Boren is, by an order of magnitude, the least-recruited member of his OSU recruiting class.
So, there, rlbrooks726; there's something for you to think about besides "foul language" and "fmaily values."
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8-30-2009 @ 3:43PM
josephzman63 said...
I always thought he was a crooked piece of sh_t. I hope that Michigan fires him soon. Maybe then they'll be able to restore a little bit of dignity to a once proud school.
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8-30-2009 @ 3:57PM
shulawt said...
Had to be di*kheaded comments out of Cumblowus, Ohio on this. Our coach might suck, but at least he doesn't look like a body double for a gay porno in his little "sweater vest". You people are the stupidest, most arrogant bunch of convicts in training I've ever seen. Best day of my life, i p*ssed on Woody!
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8-30-2009 @ 4:23PM
gene6500 said...
this guy is the biggest idiot
to coach michigan hes a disgrace send him bac to wv
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8-30-2009 @ 4:33PM
rironhorset said...
Should have stayed at WVU, idiot.
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8-30-2009 @ 5:11PM
phillyfan said...
sounds like a couple of whiney freshman who never had to work at anything before
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8-30-2009 @ 5:07PM
shalebrook said...
"As ye sow, so shall ye reap. He who sows the wind, reaps the whirlwind."
sorry to get biblical on you others-I am not a particularly avid church goer, but my point is this-this is the way that Rich Rod has acted at WVU so it should come as no surprise to U of Michigan followers that he would pull the same crapola here. You wanted him, you knew he was an unscrupulous b*****d and now you got him. Enjoy.
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8-30-2009 @ 5:10PM
shalebrook said...
I should add that the allegations and quotes came from 5-6 Michigan players, so if you have a beef with anyone go search them-the players-out and tell them they are all liars.
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