putter said:grizman71 said:AZGrizFan said::lol: :lol:kemajic said:Ask Miami how well that works.
Yeah and ask USC, Reggie Bush, etc. etc. etc. Some of you just don't get it. You can't give him or his parents any help. Anything could/would be construed as a "gift." And if either the U of M or the NCAA caught wind of it would be death to the footbal program.
NCAA: "Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, how were you able to payoff all those legal fees?"
Johnson's: "We just used this large suitcase of cash that we found."
NCAA: " :shock: "
As unfortunate as this situation is, Jordan and his family are going to be under the "watchful" eye of U of M compliance and the NCAA.
IF they did the T-shirt thing, how is it a gift? You paid money and received value in return. Heck the IRS even says you can't write off a donation if you received something of value....it's not a donation. How can the NCAA legislate against entrepreneurship?
Well a few years back MSU had to self report a violation, a few players were involved in selling t-shirts that said "In McGhee we Trust" they were blue but had no logos on them. the money from the t-shirts went to a local religious charity, it was still considered a violation and had to be reported and they sellers were instructed to stop, and were even suspended for a game or two I believe.
Do you really think selling a #10 jersey in maroon would be any different especially when the money is going to one of the players families.
Oh yeah, look int the Ohio State memorabilia for tattoos NCAA violations for another example.