A violation of the rules existed because daddy and Rogers tried to score mo money on their own. The NCAA felt it best to not hold a player accountable who was not involved and had no knowledge. How is this so hard to comprehend?
But, I thought there was no agreement? I thought it wasn't against the rules to solicit the money as long as the student-athlete isn't aware, no money changes hands, and no "agreement" is made? If there was no agreement, there was no violation. If there was only solicitation, there was no violation, right? Isn't that what you guys have been screaming the past month? But the NCAA says a rule was violated. What gives?
FWIW, the NCAA holds a student-athlete accountable for alot of things a parent might do. Such as talk to an NFL agent about a deal, etc. Even if the student has no idea. If we played Andre Smith in the '08 SECCG after his uncle talked to an agent, had we won, we would lose that victory somewhere down the road. Had Cecil actually been paid the money and Cam "knew nothing about it", game over. It's not like the NCAA never holds a student accountable for a parent's actions. In most cases, they consider the parent an extension of the student athlete; especially dealing with agents, etc. And that's whether the player knows about it or not.
AU didn't declare Cam ineligible and go through the re-instatement just for fun. There was a reason for that. The re-instatement clears you for the future. It doesn't automatically forgive the past. UA found this out the hard way with Textbookgate. Will we see something of this a year or two from now? Who knows. I'm not so sure we will. But I can't figure out why they would make him be re-instated if there was absolutely no wrong done. If a rule was violated, as the NCAA says, why isn't there a punishment? UA coaches and officials were unaware of the players doing the textbook scam. So, why did the school have to suffer? Other schools have been punished for things a player, or player's family has done. Sometimes when the player didn't know. Why did those institutions have to be punished? I think that's alot of where the outcry amongst the schools comes from.
Are you saying that a violation occured that there should be a punishment for, but the NCAA decided to ignore the guidelines and not punish anybody? And you can't figure out why other schools are pissed about it?