ooo LUG \ Massmino tries to clear his name in latest UNLV scandal The Sporting News The controversy involving Nevada- Las Vegas Coach Rollie Massimino and his once-secret supplementary con- tract continues to percolate. Among the most recent developments: Despite calls for his resignation by Board of Regents member Lonnie Hammargren, Massimino says he will not quit. Instead, Massimino says he intends to fulfill the remainder of his original contract, which runs through the 1996-97 season and includes a pro- vision for three more years at Massimino's option. Massimino, who earns a Regents- approved $511,000 per year, says he will not sue the university for the bal- ance of the supplementary deal, which adds another $375,000 annually to the package. Interim UNLV President Kenny Guinn has hired Morton Galane, a prominent Las Vegas lawyer, to over- see the internal investigation into the details of Massimino's contracts and also advise the school on its legal and financial obligations. Guinn says the secret supplemental contract violated state law, thus rendering the deal null and void. In other words: UNLV isn't paying a dime if it doesn't have to. Reserve forward Brian Hocevar and junior-college transfer Dennis Jordan have decided not to enroll for the up- coming semester. Jordan was consid- ered by the UNLV coaches to be a player to watch. NCAA legislative officials say that a preliminary look at the contract re- vealed no violation of NCAA rules. According to the NCAA, the con- tract was a "state disclosure issue." Translation: UNLV's own people - specifically former school president Robert Maxson, former legal counsel Brad Booke and Athletic Director Jim Weaver - knew about the contract from the start. This is good news for Massimino, who could have been canned if he violated NCAArules during his watch. It isn't such good news for Guinn, who was exploring the possibility of doing something about Massimino's bor money deal. The aftershocks of the secret con- tract have left scars on Massimino., Friends of Massimino say the whole incident has deeply hurt him, to the point that he fears for his reputation. "I'm just disappointed because I think I've worked hard and my name is the most important thing to me," Massimino told the Las Vegas Re- view-Journal. "Honoring the na given to me by my father and mothe the most important thing to me." Massimino maintains he did nothing illegal or improper and that if the deal is sour, it's because of the failings of Maxson, Booke and Weaver, who engineered the pack- age in the first place. Nonetheless, Massimino says he won't go to court if Guinn refuses to pay. "I'm just excited about what wd* doing," Massimino says. "If I don't have a choice, then I don't have a choice." SMU football still recovering from Major Leagu eH America's favorite team is back. The original cast returns for a hilarious. new season! Starring Charlie Sheen, Tom Berenger, Corbin Bernsen, Bob Uecker, Randy Quaid and David Keith., Rated PG-3-Comedy ©1994 Warner Home Video @1994 Morgan Creek Productions, Inc. NCAA's first and only U - HOM 1NE VIDEO Los Angeles Times Like Hester Prynne's scarlet letter, it's always there. S for Southern Methodist,S for scandal. No school's football program had been given the death penalty by the NCAA before SMU got it in 1987. None has since. The guilty are gone now and play- ers are no longer given cars and cash. But the legacy remains. "We try to put it behind us," said Tom Rossley, who became coach three seasons ago. "We try not to make men- tion of it too much, but it's obvious that a lot of people want to talk about it." It's as much a part of the school's history as Don Meredith and Doak Walker. "It's difficult because, on the one hand, you want to put the past behind you," said Charles Howard, SMU's compliance officer. "But on the other hand, you want to learn from it so you don't repeat your mistakes." The lessons are part of the legacy, and also part of the reason for dimin- ished expectations. SMU is 11-45-2 since resuming football with a 1989 team that included 74 freshmen and lost to Houston, 95-21. Even today's seniors, recruited two years into the new era and largely un- wanted by other programs, became cannon-fodderby necessity. There sim- ply wasn't anybody else. "It was tough for me because I was one of those guys who didn't get a chance to be redshirted," said Erwin Wilburn, a wide receiver. "I got thrown into the fire early." In the second quarter of the first game of his freshman season, Wilburn became an instant starter when Brian Berry was injured. Arkansas won that game, 17-6, in a season in which SMU beat only Tulane. Tulane was the only other school that recruited Erwin Wilburn. The Mustangs lost their season opener to Arkansas last week, 34-14, and areheavy underdogs against UCLA tomorrow in the Rose Bowl. Even the innocent are scrutinized because of the lingering thought: Could it happen again?It's the reason Howard feels a stab of fear every time he sees a player driving a car, and it's one of the causes of the lack of football talent at the university. The NCAA requires at least a 700 score on the Scholastic Assessment Test. SMU requires a 900, with special cases under that referred to a review committee. "As a small, private school and because of our academic standards, it makes it real difficult for us to get junior college players, which is the thing you'd think you'd want to do to help allow younger players to mature and still get us back on a competitive level," Rossley said. After a 2-7-2 season in 1993, SMU could use a few. "Some people think we go too far in our admission standards," Howard said. "Theoretically, there's nothing wrong with that, but some people think there is." One is Craig James, with Eric Dickerson part of the "Pony Backfield" that brought Southwest Conference championships to SMU in the early 1980s. James, a memberofthe board of directors of the Mustang Club, a group of boosters, is an ESPN commentator. "Yes, we did go too far the other way, but did we have to?" he said. "I think the academic side of the institu- tion was so worried about the reputa- tion of the school that (the late) Ken- neth Pye, the president at the time, knew he had to implement a very tough standard for the athletes. We were try- ing to be the Harvard of the South. "SMU is an excellent academic school, but it's not Harvard and it's not Stanford. The kids we have to recruit, if they are qualified to go to SMU and they are that talented at football, they'd go to Stanford before they'd go to SMU. They'd go to Notre Dame or one of the high-powered schools that is a great academic institution too. So we're not being realistic with ourselves, in my opinion." He cites the case ofBam Morris, the Doak Walker Award winner as the nation's top running back last season at Texas Tech. His cousin, Ron Morris, played at SMU in the good -or bad- old days. "BamMorriscried when he couldn't go to SMU," James said. "It wasn't that he was illiterate or anything. He scored something like 750 or 800 on the SAT, so he couldn't qualify for SMU and he wanted to come here." Instead, he qualified to rush for 222 yards in Texas Tech's 41-24 victory over SMU last season. Games like that make it tough for Steve Wilensky, executive director of the Mustang Club, to raise money for athletics. Donations had risen to $1.6 million in SMU's heyday, then fell to $400,000 when football was felled. The Mustang Club was back up to $1.4 million two years ago when the word came down from the board of trustees, through Pye, that the club had eath penalty to raise $1.6 million a year to keep football at the Division I-A level. Three weeks after this year's fund drive be- gan, the Southwest Conference an- nounced it was breaking up. The haves - Texas, Texas A&M, Texas Tech and Baylor-would join the Big Eight. The have-nots would have to fend for themselves. That's how SMU wound up in Western Athletic Conference. "We're going to try to convince recruits that trips to Hawaii and San Diego are a lot nicer than going to Ames, Iowa, or Manhattan, Kansas," Rossley said. It may be a tough sell in Texas. When Texas A&M and other schools followed SMU down the sanctions trail - though the others were left bre4b ing after the investigations ended - athletes left the state in droves. Those who stayed were lured by the tradition of Texas A&M and Texas. "In the old days, we could recruit with A&M, Texas, anybody," James said. "I'm not aware that we are out- recruiting anybody now." Said Wilensky: "Well, we're get- ting some from Texas Tech and Bay' But we've got to go some to get the away from Texas and A&M." The question is whether SMU is willing to go some, or should. Days when money grew on recruiting trees and high school seniors would accept a Trans-Am from one school and drive it to another are vivid in the memories of those who went through them. So is the resentment. "Everybody looks atSMU like th* guys are driving Lincoln Continentals and all," James said. "Well, we were guilty of what we did, but I played (in the NFL) with players from every uni- versity in America and the cheating was all over. ... It just happened that SMU got selected and got hammered." And now it's up to Rossley, who takes what he is given and tries to win with it. He has an 8-24-2 record@ three-plus seasons and in August was given a four-year contract extension because he had met goals in graduation rates and his team was perceived as on the way up. "We're on a mission," he said. "I think we've grown to the point in the program where there are more people with their eyes on us and they're think- ing,'Maybe this team is about ready fo take a giant step.' " If so, it's the thinking that's changed. The eyes of Texas -and the NCAA - have been on SMU for a long time. That scarlet S stands out. Chasers It was supposed to be an ordinary prisoner transfer. But this was no ordinary prisoner. Starring Tom Berenger, Erika Eleniak, William McNamara, Gary Busey, Marilu Henner, Dean Stockwell, and Dennis Hopper. Directed bDenn is Hopper. Rated R-Action Comedy @1994 Warner Home Video @1994 Morgan Creek Productions, Inc. I A: WVNER ~tHOME VIDEO College coaches watching a lot of their own teams, but not others I I XJJ. I..L11. The Baltimore Sun You have to wonder if maybe the college coaches aren't watching a tad too much game film. In their USA Today/CNN poll, they voted Florida (football) Conference undefeated for nearly three seasons, Miami dropped a close one to West Virginia, 17-14, last year and many assumed the Hurricanes' were on the way down. "Anyone who Pluto. With the Tribe's great season interrupted by the strike, Pluto is think- ing about a name change to "The Curse of Fehr and Ravitch." BE VEWY VEWY QUITE:So ex-Presi- dent Bush's George Jr., Texas guber- r"" MEIJER COUPON 1 .-W..I -. -W-ON%-w"- | i U -