But the entire issue of what Pitino knew is such a meaningless red herring in the Katina Powell case.
Some fans talk about that, but for the most part it's gone so far beyond that with the McGee stuff, the "Coach Mike" stuff, and the players who've come forward to acknowledge that it happened that most people--fans, experts, pundits--are into the realm now not of "Did he know," but "He should have known."
It would certainly be way worse if a line could be drawn directly to Pitino, but what you're talking about at UofL is a textbook case of lack of institutional control. There's not been a more egregious example of that in recent history that I can think of. Syracuse is close but even that doesn't touch it. The closest analog would have to be Penn State football.
When the evidence is this present and this obvious, who the hell cares if he knew or not?
The Memphis/UMASS stuff was almost completely predicated on whether or not Cal knew because it was an issue of playing an eligible player.
Some fans talk about that, but for the most part it's gone so far beyond that with the McGee stuff, the "Coach Mike" stuff, and the players who've come forward to acknowledge that it happened that most people--fans, experts, pundits--are into the realm now not of "Did he know," but "He should have known."
It would certainly be way worse if a line could be drawn directly to Pitino, but what you're talking about at UofL is a textbook case of lack of institutional control. There's not been a more egregious example of that in recent history that I can think of. Syracuse is close but even that doesn't touch it. The closest analog would have to be Penn State football.
When the evidence is this present and this obvious, who the hell cares if he knew or not?
The Memphis/UMASS stuff was almost completely predicated on whether or not Cal knew because it was an issue of playing an eligible player.
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