Friday, April 9, 1999 - The Michigan Daily - 13 U ophers' MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - The words sounded almost desperate when trouble came, a proud man clinging to his carefully built reputation. "Don't you know me, what I stand for as a man, as a person?" Clem Haskins said on the night he was confronted with accusations of aca- mic fraud in his basketball program at innesota. 9 Last month's claims by a former tutor, and accusations since then that Haskins gave hun- dreds of dollars to a former player, have tarnished the character and threatened the career of an old- school coach who only two years ago was held u as a model for winning the "right way" in the murky world of big-time college basketball. * The investigation of Haskins' program is expected to take several months, but speculation is rampant that it could end with the university *king a new coach. Haskins declined to return several telephone calls in preparation for this story. "I hope somewhere in this whole thing the people of Minnesota remember he did a lot of positive things," said Butch Moening, who coached former Gophers star Sam Jacobson at Park High School and now is athletic director there. Haskins came to Minnesota after another CAA probe in 1986. While the program he left hind at Western Kentucky became the subject of another investigation in 1988, Haskins rebuilt the crippled Golden Gophers on the strength of his no-nonsense personality and his ability to coax the most out of his players. But last month's accusations suggest plenty of gray area in the world of right and wrong that Haskins espoused. "I'd be very surprised if this is true in its entire- ty," said Western Kentucky sports information director Paul Just, who has known Haskins since coach starred as a player at the school. "But u never know what's in between. That's the catch on these things." There never seemed to be anything in between with Haskins throughout his 13 seasons with the Gophers. . He inherited a program that had been hit with NCAA restrictions following an investigation of Jim Dutcher's tenure. The Gophers lost 21 con- laskins' job in turmoil secutive Big Ten games early in Haskins' career, but the team regrouped. Haskins led Minnesota to the Final 16 in his third season and a regional final in his fourth year, where a 93-91 loss to Georgia Tech kept the Gophers from their first trip to the Final Four in 1990. The Gophers sputtered for the next several years, but Haskins finally took them to the Final Four in 1997, where the best season in school history (31-4) ended two wins short of a champi- onship. But it is that era, the time between Haskins' biggest successes on the national scene, that has come into question. At Haskins' request, the university allowed the academic counseling unit for the men's basketball team to be separated from the counseling units for the school's other teams and put under control of the athletic department. It was in this insulated environment that former tutor Jan Gangelhoff says she did research 'papers, take-home exams and other course work for at least 20 players. "In the two years I was there, I never did a thing," former guard Russ Archambault, a little- used freshman on the Final Four team, told the Saint Paul Pioneer Press when it first reported the accusations. Haskins has denied Gangelhoff's claims. He also denies later ones by Archambault, who said Haskins gave him cash -$200 to $300 at a time. Haskins kicked Archambault off the team during the second half of the 1997-98 season for violat- ing unspecified team rules. This is the second time in his coaching career that Haskins has been accused of paying players. In 1988, two years after Haskins moved to Minnesota, eight former Western Kentucky play- ers told the Courier-Journal of Louisville that cash, clothes, and other improper benefits were given to members of the team through boosters and coaches between 1981 and 1986. Haskins, who coached at his alma mater from 1980-86, denied those accusations. In 1989, the NCAA determined there was no need for an investigation of Western Kentucky's program, citing insufficient reliable evidence. University president Thomas Meredith also pointed out that no one named in the claims - including Haskins - remained at the school. "I am firmly convinced that our current bas- ketball program is operating within the guide- lines set by the NCAA;' Meredith said in his 1989 report to the NCAA. When it came to school work, Haskins admits he had a shaky foundation. He grew up as the son of a poor farmer in rural Kentucky and didn't start school until 8. He first attended a one-room school for blacks until the third grade, and he often missed large chunks of school to work on the farm. But because of his enormous basketball abili- ty and his hard work in the classroom, Haskins overcame that slow start. He has been a strong advocate for academics during his coaching career and believes in the importance of his play- ers earning their degrees. At Western Kentucky, Haskins set up the same type of academic counseling structure he later brought to Minnesota. Former Western Kentucky athletic director John Oldham, who coached Haskins in college and gave him his first coach- ing job, lauds Haskins for that move. "I thought I did a good job by ... staying on top of (players) to go to class," Oldham said. "But coach Haskins was the one to put the money where his mouth was. He was the first to hire an academic advisor." Oldham said Haskins would do whatever it took to see his players succeed in school. "I think he would do anything he could to help a kid academically, because he wanted his kids to graduate,' Oldham said. "I don't think he would cheat, but I think he would do everything but cheat" But not many Minnesota players have been graduating. NCAA records showed the school's male basketball players have the worst record of earning diplomas in the Big Ten - about one of every four who entered as freshmen from 1983 to 1991 graduated, compared to a conference aver- age of about one in two. In 1997, the university returned oversight of basketball player counseling to an academic ser- vices unit instead of the athletic department. McKinley Boston, the school's vice president of student development and athletics, cited poor communication as the major reason. Elayne Donahue, who often clashed with AP PHOTO Minnesota basketball coach Clem Haskins has dealt with numerous problems this past season Including a scandal involving several of his top players. Haskins before she retired recently as director of academic counseling, gave another reason: She said the university was afraid the arrangement, would jeopardize its NCAA accreditation. Haskins' words from his 1997 autobiography "Breaking Barriers" suggest the tug between his values and the pressure to succeed. "It's not how many games or championships I've won, it's the lives that I've touched along the way,' Haskins wrote. "Along the way, of course, you need to win enough games in order to earn the respect of people. "Respect. If there's one thing that I've always strived for in my life it's that I want to earn peo- ple's respect." After the story broke last month, Haskins held fast to the moral high ground, even though the contrast between his words and the allegations against him leaves a cloudy picture of what mat- ters most to him. "We don't put winning and losing ahead of what's right," Haskins said. "Some people sell their souls to win. I don't do that. Never have, never will." Minnesota athletes now rest at the bottom of Big Ten graduation rates Basketball fraud linked to small number of basketball diplomas STAYING IN THE SUN ER? WRITE FOR THE DAILY. CALL s-DAILr. Olympic panei OUKs gag order ST. PAUL (AP) - Minnesota basketball tems' scholarship athletes have the worst Word of earning diplomas in the Big 10 Conference, an analysis shows. One in four freshmen recruited from 1983 to 1991 eventually graduated from the university, the Saint Paul Pioneer Press reported today. The average for Big Ten basketball pro- grams over the same period was about one in two, the newspaper reported in an exam- ination of NCAA data. In a separate analysis, the Pioneer Press und that only two of 21 students linked to alleged academic fraud in the basketball program have received degrees. The university has hired two law firms to investigate claims by Jan Gangelhoff, a for- mer office worker and tutor, that she did about 400 pieces of course work for players from 1993 to 1998. Gangelhoff was scheduled to go over some of that work today with investigators. The Pioneer Press also reported that new mputer files it received from her bore the me of Charles Thomas, a member of the 1997 Final Four team; his name had not been connected to the allegations previous- ly. Thomas declined comment when reached by the newspaper. Gangelhoff's allegations in March result- ed in the suspension of four members of this season's basketball team, including two starters, right before the Golden Gophers' first-round NCAA game, a loss to Gonzaga. The Star Tribune of Minneapolis reported earlier that the grade-point average of Minnesota's men's basketball teams has trailed the average of other men's teams at the university over the past 15 years. The newspaper also reported the basket- ball team's average six-year graduation rate of about 25 percent was well below the Division I basketball average of about 44 percent. The Pioneer Press' report today explored graduation rates in more detail. Under coach Clem Haskins, who was hired in 1986, the Gophers' graduation rate declined slightly in comparison to three previous years. The grad rate for freshmen entering from 1986 to.1991 was 23 percent. Penn State and Northwestern graduated 80 percent or more of their freshmen bas- ketball players during the same period. The average at other Big Ten schools ranged from 31 percent to 74 percent. WCCO-TV examined graduation rates for freshmen basketball players who entered Minnesota from 1988 to 1991, and reported Wednesday night that they gradu- ated at a rate of 27 percent compared with 41 percent of all Division I men's basketball players. "This is disturbing," university President Mark Yudof told the Pioneer Press. "We are going to have to look at this intensively." Yudof said the university has raised admission standards that might affect the graduation rate in the future, but results wouldn't be expected to show up until after the year 2000, he said. The Pioneer Press examined nine years of data collected by the NCAA. Athletes who transferred to other schools were counted as not graduating from their original university. SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - The Salt Lake Organizing Committee adopted a gag order on yesterday prohibiting board members from releasing any confidential information - a rule punishable by expulsion. The vote came two months after SLOC president Mitt Romney, taking the reins as CEO of the organizing commit- tee, promised a new era of open- ness in the Olympic movement. The gag order was adopted after some members com- plained they were learning more from press accounts than Olympic managers. But Romney said press leaks often occur when SLOC letters and faxes are sent to board mem- bers. He urged them to show restraint, especially with budget material. The confidentiality order was a much-discussed impromptu item during a meeting at the Utah Capitol of SLOC's 20- member management commit- tee. The committee also approved Romney's hiring of Fraser Bullock as executive vice presi- dent and chief operating officer. Bullock will begin work May 1. He replaces Dave Johnson, who was forced out in January amid revelations that Salt Lake boost- ers had used gifts, cash pay- ments and other favors to win the 2002 Winter Games. "I'm just going to focus like a laser" on SLOC finances and organizing, said Bullock, 44, managing director of Alpine Consolidated, a Utah firm that specializes in business consoli- dations. He worked with Romney at Boston-based Bain & Co, and the friends have known each other for 18 years. The board's new confidential- ity order will not apply to its several ex-officio members who can't be replaced under any cir- cumstance. They include Gov. Mike Leavitt and Salt Lake City Mayor Deedee Corradini or their designees. "Clearly, we're not going to ask the governor to resign" for divulging information, said board member James Swartz, who sponsored the gag order. It passed by a vote of.15-0 with Romney abstaining. "The secrets of the company are the assets of a company," said Barry Sanders, SLOC's outside attorney. "To tell a secret is to squander an asset." The order was refined several times before the voting: The final version wasn't limited to board members, so it apparently also applies to SLOC employ- ees. It requires those who obtain "any communication written or verbal" that is marked confiden- tial to be kept so. The rule is punishable by expulsion, but it is not clear how SLOC will determine or prove a violation has occurred. Duke assistant takes crack at Missouri job COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) - The job of revitalizing Missouri goes to a man exactly half Norm Stewart's age. The school is hoping Duke assistant in Snyder, a boyish 32-year-old hired to a five-year contract on Wednesday, will relate to players his predecessor might have driven away in the past. Unlike Stewart, who resigned under pressure six days earlier after 32 sea- sons - saying his style was not to be a social worker - Snyder believes the coach-player relationship doesn't have to be adversarial. He said the same thing to his players in an informal first chat a few minutes sore a campus news conference. "I told them I'll treat them with respect and I know they'll treat me with respect," Snyder said. "I hope I can be many things to them. Yes, I hope I'm their friend. Being their friend doesn't preclude you from disciplining them." Players liked what they heard, and gave their new leader a standing ova- tion, along with the rest of the fans in endance at the news conference. W reshman point guard Keyon Dooling, who clashed with Stewart last, season and considered transferring, did- n't attend Stewart's farewell news con- ference. He was all smiles Wednesday. "You could feel the vibes,' Dooling tad. "There were a number of good He's also proved himself as the top assistant and recruiting coordinator the last four years under Mike Krzyzewski at one of the nation's perennial powers. Duke lost in the NCAA championship game this season. Snyder heeded advice from Krzyzewski, whom he called his men- tor, and sought a school "worthy of my passion." He also had been considered by Vanderbilt, San Diego State and Notre Dame, but knew he'd made the right choice when he surveyed the adoring crowd. "Seeing this here today, I'm con- vinced it's my turn to show you I'm worthy of your passion," he said. Krzyzewski, who underwent hip replacement surgery on Sunday, said during the Final Four he felt Snyder was ready to become a head coach. "I have had incredible high expecta- tions for him as a player, then a coach, and as a friend," Krzyzewski said. "He has surpassed my expectations in every way." Snyder doesn't exactly inherit a team on the skids. Missouri was 20-9 last season and lost to New Mexico in the first round of the NCAA tournament. But the previous three seasons sig- naled the end for Stewart, who was a combined 51-47 in that period. Another the first day of the late signing period, which continues through May 15. Missouri is hoping to close the deal on three top recruits. Snyder was respectful of his prede- cessor, to a point. "What an unbelievable job he did," Snyder said. "I'm very fortunate to have an opportunity to be his successor, to hopefully build on that foundation that his sweat and hard work laid." On the other hand, Stewart's half- court offense is headed for the history pages along with the coach who rolled up 634 victories at Missouri. "I want to see us. push the ball, Snyder said. "I want to run. Can we run, guys?" Thursday and o Friday Night Happy Hour Touchdown Cafe I liUliib5UIUIU unty UuUI ulp nu vUygoa