LAS VEGAS -- Bill Bayno came to UNLV pledging to win games and run a
clean program. He didn't win enough, and when the NCAA placed its latest
sanctions on the Runnin' Rebels, Bayno was the first one to go.
Only hours after the NCAA put UNLV's basketball team on four years'
probation, Bayno was fired as coach of a program that has floundered since
Jerry Tarkanian led it to a national championship in 1990 and an undefeated
regular season the next year.
School officials insisted the team's poor start this season had nothing to
do with the firing, saying Bayno was let go instead because he had not kept the
program clean.
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| Despite opting not to attend UNLV, Lamar Odom received a $5,600 payment from a prominent booster.(AP) | |
"The head coach is responsible for the integrity of the basketball
program," UNLV president Carol Harter said.
Bayno was fired late Monday night and replaced with assistant Max Good after
the NCAA notified the university that it would face harsher sanctions than it
expected for violations stemming from the recruitment of Lamar Odom in 1996 and
1997.
Among the allegations was that a local dentist and UNLV booster gave Odom
$5,600 in monthly payments while he was awaiting admission to UNLV. Odom
enrolled for a summer school class, but UNLV then refused to admit him and he
never played for the Rebels.
"The institution felt it was my fault," Bayno said. "But I wasn't charged
with anything. The NCAA cleared me of wrongdoing."
In addition to the probation, UNLV was banned from postseason play for a
year and had two scholarships taken away for two years. But the school, which
was put on probation in 1993, escaped the so-called "death penalty" that
could have been applied under NCAA bylaws.
"We don't have to put a team on the shelf. It's a drastic remedy," said
Jack Friedenthal, chairman of the NCAA Committee on Infractions. "It was a
while back and it occurred at a different time and level."
Odom's recruitment was similar to that of Lloyd Daniels in the 1980s that
attracted the attention of the NCAA and got UNLV its latest probation in 1993.
Daniels never played for UNLV either, and the controversy over his recruitment
helped lead to Tarkanian's forced resignation in 1993.
UNLV officials had argued that the payments to Odom were made after the
university said he could not play, but the NCAA found otherwise. The severity
of the sanctions finally levied, however, seemed to stun school officials, who
said they might appeal the postseason ban.
"We're not trying to whine about the penalty," Harter said. "We accept
most of the penalties. But we're under a level of scrutiny that I dare say is
extraordinarily difficult for an institute to survive."
The penalties came despite UNLV's attempt to minimize its problems by
imposing its own sanctions earlier this year.
The governing body also ruled that UNLV cannot participate in the preseason
NIT tournament as planned next season and ordered it to disassociate itself
from the dentist, David Chapman, and attorney and booster Steve Stein.
The NCAA said it was concerned the violations were "very similar" to those
in a 1993 infractions case involving UNLV, and expressed concern that
university officials did not appear to accept responsibility for some of the
violations.
"We want people to straighten up and fly right," Friedenthal said.
Bayno, in his sixth season at UNLV, was under growing pressure from fans and
boosters for fielding teams that often were loaded with talent but performed
inconsistently.
Under Bayno, UNLV was 94-64 in five-plus seasons but never got past the
first game of the two NCAA postseason tournaments it made. The Rebels, who face
No. 17 Cincinnati on Saturday, are 3-4 on the season after losing badly to
rival Nevada last Saturday.
"It's the nature of the business," the 38-year-old Bayno said of his
firing.
Athletic director Charles Cavaganaro said Bayno would be offered another job
in the athletic department for the final two years of his contract. Bayno made
$136,500 a year in base salary, and about $600,000 when other income was added.
Bayno had a clause in his contract, though, that allowed the university to
fire him if he had knowledge of NCAA violations.
"A position will be offered," Cavagnaro said. "But no one has a gun to
his head."
In its report, the Committee on Infractions said the university "should
have had a heightened sense of vigilance" about the basketball program.
The payments were made while Odom was in Las Vegas in the summer of 1997 and
was enrolled in a summer class while awaiting his formal admission to UNLV.
They continued, the NCAA said, after the university announced it would not
admit Odom in the wake of publicity over his recruiting status.
According to the report, Chapman gave Odom $400 to $800 two or three times a
week, paying him a total of about $4,000 before the university decided not to
allow him to enroll. He later gave him other money, the NCAA said.
Friedenthal said the university should have been aware of the relationship
because Chapman regularly visited the campus to play in pickup basketball games
with Odom and was a well-known booster.
"It's the kind of thing you just must watch for," he said.
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