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Report: UConn exceeded call limits
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ESPN.com news services

Connecticut potentially committed NCAA rules violations in its recruitment of former guard Nate Miles, Yahoo! Sports reported Wednesday.

The Web site reported that according to multiple sources, between 2006 and 2008, Miles was provided with lodging, transportation, restaurant meals and representation by Josh Nochimson, a former UConn student manager who had become a professional sports agent and formerly represented ex-Huskies star Richard Hamilton.

According to the report, one of UConn's assistants knew about the relationship between Nochimson and Miles as early as fall of 2006, and that phone records show UConn coaches made thousands of phone calls and text messages to Nochimson over the next two years.

The program may also have exceeded the number of phone calls allowed to Miles under NCAA regulations during its recruiting, Yahoo! Sports reported, citing phone records obtained under the Freedom of Information Act.

The NCAA allows a single phone call per month to a prospect or his family in a player's junior year of high school. Yahoo! Sports reported that according to records, UConn coaches exceeded that limit over several months in 2006 and 2007 in the program's recruitment of Miles. In December of 2006 alone, former UConn assistant coach Tom Moore made 27 calls to Miles' guardian and a person Miles referred to as an uncle as well as three calls to Miles.

The Web site also reported that Moore, currently the coach at Quinnipiac, made Nochimson aware that UConn was recruiting Miles and that he knew Nochimson and Miles had talked.

According to records obtained by Yahoo! Sports, over a two-year period, five different UConn coaches traded at least 1,565 phone and text messages with Nochimson, including 16 from coach Jim Calhoun.

UConn athletic director Jeff Hathaway and Calhoun declined comment through a university spokesperson, according to the report. Nochimson also declined comment.

Miles, who was expelled from UConn this fall after being accused of assaulting a female student and violating a restraining order by calling her minutes after the order was issued, is now at the College of Southern Idaho, a junior college.

According to the report, player agents have increasingly become involved in players' lives while they are still amateurs, in the hopes they can land them as NBA clients when they turn pro. The trend has grown to agents steering players to specific schools, with college coaches reciprocating by delivering the player back to the agent when he decides to turn pro.

"We're concerned in terms of agents steering certain kids to certain [schools]," Rachel Newman Baker, the NCAA's director of agent, gambling and amateurism activity, told Yahoo! Sports. "We're concerned about agreements under the table between agents and even our college coaches."

In 2006, Moore was in Chicago watching Miles at a prep tournament when he told his former student manager, Nochimson, who was there to scout potential future clients, that UConn was recruiting the 6-foot-7 shooting guard. By that evening, Miles said he had met Nochimson, according to the report.

The fact that Moore knew Nochimson and Miles were talking was an NCAA violation, according to the report. Asked if he had lost sight of the fact that Nochimson was also a representative of UConn's athletic interests under NCAA rules, Moore said "Probably. I looked at him as a young professional working as an agent, doing what he does in his career."

Miles gave conflicting statements about his relationship with Nochimson, according to the report. After at first saying he'd never heard of Nochimson, Miles said he had been his adviser. But he denied that Nochimson had ever provided him with meals or other benefits. When asked if Nochimson had arranged for him to attend IMG's Basketball Academy and Pro Training Center in Bradenton, Fla. -- which the center's director, Mike Moreau, confirmed was the case to Yahoo! Sports -- Miles ended the interview.

Nochimson has moved to decertify himself as an agent after Hamilton fired him and accused him of stealing more than $1 million from him, according to the report.
"Don't sweat the small stuff." "I am responsible for the effort -- not the outcome. "
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ESPN is again mucking in the mud---those of us in the region know of the Miles kids problems--not to say things didnt go wrong along the way but the kid was thrown out of school --never played a game

Nothing happens on the Storrs campus that the local papers do not pick up on--sometime I think the local reporters wait in the bushes on the campus

Also is the public aware that the ladies hoops team has and Academic All American as wellas the team haveing a 100% graduation stat as well as being undefeated to date
Shame on UConn for their failed attempts to "spat" on the system

Shame on sports agents and advisors who light the fires

Shame on ESPN who lurks the seedy bushes while ingnoring many of the good happenings within college athletics

and finally......

I'm confused Confused on the HSBBW rules of engagement.

A previous thread was deemed unacceptable to throw names around because privacy concerns but when ESPN is quoted.

quote:
Miles, who was expelled from UConn this fall after being accused of assaulting a female student and violating a restraining order by calling her minutes after the order was issued, is now at the College of Southern Idaho, a junior college.


it's ok?
Last edited by rz1
quote:
Originally posted by rz1:
I'm confused Confused on the HSBBW rules of engagement.

A previous thread was deemed unacceptable to throw names around because privacy concerns but when ESPN is quoted.


it's ok?


I dunno if it's OK. Is it all that important that we know either player's name?

I think the moderator may have been a little trigger happy in the previous post. I didn't get to read the link before it was deleted. If I had been more interested I'm sure I could have figured it out.

This thread is marginally related to our high school baseball interests, so I guess it will remain undeleted. The subject person is most likely not a minor, whereas the previous person was probably under 18.

The intent of our moderators to keep a more positive image on this site is fine with me. Knowing the name of a high school kid who has done wrong just isn't important to me. If such a person is in my kids' school, I'll hear about from other sources.
Last edited by infidel_08
quote:
A previous thread was deemed unacceptable to throw names around because privacy concerns but when ESPN is quoted.

I think you are taking things out of context. In the previous thread, the focus of the original post seemed to be on the names and schools involved - not the underlying issue at hand. Note that the topic was not closed btw. Also, that topic was blasted all over the forums with the admonition for others to blast it all over as well. It seems that the focus was on the "gossup" and not the issue at hand. We can discuss controversial topics all day long here at the hsbbweb. We are not going to provide a platform to AIR dirty laundry however.

It seems like every time we make a moderator's decision in the name of decency, we get called out on it. In the case of BigHit's post, it seemed to me the focus was on UConn's activity as opposed to focusing on the names of the players involved.

Look, these are judgment calls obviously. No one is trying to curtail free speech. We are just trying to be decent about things. Last I checked, none of our parents were UConn basketball parents. If someone is, then I apoligize for not removing the young man's name in question. I invite people to sign-up for the moderator's job. It is a thankless type of position I assure you.
quote:
Originally posted by CPLZ:
It would seem in many cases, that NCAA basketball coaches wear the recruiting violation as a badge of honor.
Sonny Vacarro (the godfather of summer basketball) said there are only four coaches in all of NCAA basketball he's never heard any accusations of cheating. Vacarro disputes college basketball passed Bob Knight by. He said Knight refused to cheat and wouldn't allow his recruiting coaches to do legal things he considered unethical.
quote:
Originally posted by ClevelandDad:
quote:
A previous thread was deemed unacceptable to throw names around because privacy concerns but when ESPN is quoted.

I think you are taking things out of context.
I understood, it was more of a "devils advocate" pov

In the previous thread, the focus of the original post seemed to be on the names and schools involved - not the underlying issue at hand.
Again understood. It just seems there is a varying level of moderation at times and some on this site may feel complelled not to post if they think it has to pass a "moderator muster" before it is opened to discussion. Personally, I feel if you are deemed important enough to be named in the press, or be quoted in any medium, this site included, you should be open for differing opinions, and be expected to defend your comments. If you can't accept that responsibility, don't go there. The problem here is some of us Cool don't have the saavy to beat around the bush. Message boards lack the f2f conversations and many times a poster will be judged on an honest statement that is percieved as rude and obnoxious.

Note that the topic was not closed btw. Also, that topic was blasted all over the forums with the admonition for others to blast it all over as well. It seems that the focus was on the "gossup" and not the issue at hand.
While I agree that the poster made it his mission to "blast", IMO, there was an issue of those accussed of crimes having a blind eye turned when athletic ability out weighs moral make-up. That would be a hard topic to discuss without an actual situation IMO.

We can discuss controversial topics all day long here at the hsbbweb. We are not going to provide a platform to AIR dirty laundry however.
CD, AGREE 100%. However, I remember when I was younger, last week, where I had to take a good sniff of the shirt before I determined if it was dirty. You never know if it was just thrown in the wrong pile and you end up washing a perfectly clean shirt

In the case of BigHit's post, it seemed to me the focus was on UConn's activity as opposed to focusing on the names of the players involved.
It seemed to me that M**** Wink name was not only mentioned but his history was also highlighted. Here again the story would not be credible without sustained data.

Look, these are judgment calls obviously. No one is trying to curtail free speech. We are just trying to be decent about things.
If we're asking the site membership to think twice before making some indecent comment, maybe the moderators should also take a membership pulse before "pulling the string". That is by no means critisism, rather food for thought.

Last I checked, none of our parents were UConn basketball parents. If someone is, then I apoligize for not removing the young man's name in question.
Why would a school affiliation make a difference? If it were my sons school, not only would I like my opinion heard, but, it is a learning experience fo9r others in the future. IMHO, The "decency" line of demarkation on this site should be when someone publically uses your sons or families name in a negative light.

I invite people to sign-up for the moderator's job. It is a thankless type of position I assure you.
You guys do just fine IMHO , but as you may call others out , you should have "open arms" to the opinions of the membership because they are not personal digs, they are a barometer of the memberships thoughts.
Last edited by rz1
I do beleive that it was Julie who claimed that she removed the link.

With that in mind, whether I agree or not, I respectfully support her decision.

I may not be the sharpest knife in the drawer, but I do see a difference in posting a HS players name who has not yet been convicted of those charges vs an article naming a player who got caught in between a wrongful recruiting situation. The responsibility does not lie with him, but on the program recruiting him.

JMO.
quote:
Originally posted by TPM:
....but I do see a difference in posting a HS players name who has not yet been convicted of those charges vs an article naming a player who got caught in between a wrongful recruiting situation. The responsibility does not lie with him, but on the program recruiting him.


That poor baby cry those big boys taking advantage of him.

IMHO, after being accused of assaulting a female student and violating a restraining order by calling her minutes after the order was issued, this kid was not a choir boy to begin with. I agree that athletic programs are by no means righteous but many times I think they will go as far outside the box as the recruit leads them. Why can we accept the fact that if you are driving a car when a crime occurs you are also guilty of that crime, but, when a recruit gets "perks" he is just a little boy being taken advantage of?
Last edited by rz1

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