NEW YORK -- Rick Pitino would like you to know one thing: His tawdry sex affair with a woman who faces federal charges of extortion and lying to the FBI is not going to have the slightest impact on his Louisville basketball team. There are still plenty of legal hurdles to overcome and motions to be made before the case goes to trial and Pitino is summoned to the witness stand, where presumably his testimony against Karen Sypher will reveal even more salacious details about their romp in a Louisville restaurant, and the subsequent fallout that has engulfed the university's athletic department.
Beyond Pitino, the scandal has scarred Tim Sypher, who is now the operations director of the Cardinals' new gym and who was the team's equipment manager. Tim married Karen (they are now divorced) after she either had consensual sex with Pitino or was assaulted by him against her will -- it's a complicated connection that perhaps the trial will help unravel. The scandal has also greatly impacted Pitino's wife of 33 years, his five children, his extended New York family, Louisville's Catholic community where Pitino worships and pretty much anyone who has a rooting interest in the Cardinals.
More Coverage: Pitino Preaches 'Blinders' at Media Day
But his current crop of players? "All they're interested in is their future, making their lives better for their families someday, becoming the best players they can possibly be," Pitino said several times during Wednesday's Big East media day at Madison Square Garden. "Winning games, that's really what they're tuned into."
Well, this isn't exactly correct. Walk a few feet and there is Edgar Sosa, the senior guard out of Harlem's Rice High, telling reporters how, once the news broke of Pitino's affair and Sypher's alleged attempt to extort the coach for upwards of $10 million, he could barely go about his business doing normal things -- shopping in the mall, answering the phone -- without having to talk about it.
"I didn't have answers for their questions, but yes, everyone wanted to know if I knew anything," Sosa said. "I didn't. None of the players knew anything more than what we'd see on TV or read in the papers. It got to be a pain telling people I had no idea about what's going on with Coach P. My whole summer was like that. People still want to know and I tell them the same thing I'm telling you. I don't know what's going on."
The point here is scandals have a nasty way of trickling down to innocent observers. Pitino can pontificate and preach all he wants about how "there will be no disruptions" when the season starts in a few weeks. It doesn't make it true. He clearly was trying to make nice with the media Wednesday, remarking several times about how he understood "you have a job to do," but signs of agitation and stress stretched like chalk marks across his forehead.
Still, at least Pitino didn't try to chastise reporters for asking such harsh questions on the day Steve Phillips took a leave of absence. That was Pitino's tactic in August, during his last come-to-Jesus meeting before a crowd brandishing cameras and tape recorders. "Everything that's been printed, everything that's been reported, everything that's been breaking in the news on the day Ted Kennedy died is 100 percent a lie, a lie," Pitino said then, at a press conference he called. "All of this has been a lie, a total fabrication of the truth."Around the time Pitino was wiping the sheen off his sideburns in the cool underbelly of the Garden, Phillips and ESPN, his employer, were crafting a statement to announce the baseball analyst would be taking an indefinite leave of absence. He had been suspended for a week earlier this month for reasons still not clear, and then the New York Post broke the story about how Phillips, a married man and father of four, had an affair with a 22-year-old ESPN production assistant that resulted in a police report in which only a boiled bunny was missing.
If the allegations prove true, Brooke Hundley, the woman in question, stalked and harassed Phillips' family, and while Phillips long ago proved he wasn't the most faithful husband during his messy tenure as general manager of the Mets, being a cad is not an illegal offense. And if women want to ever move beyond the "woe is me, I've been shunned by a man" Victorian victimhood, ESPN should at least subject Hundley to the same punishment Phillips received.
I'm not sure of Pitino's relationship with Kennedy, but Pitino and Phillips sure seem to have a few things in common. Some day they ought to get together and compare notes on how life falls apart when you go a round or two with handfuls of craziness. (To be fair, we don't know whether Sypher and Hundley are officially loony or just playing the part.)
Pitino refuses to even utter Sypher's name. He calls her "this person." "I'm just a witness in the U.S. district attorney versus this person," he said. "This person has nothing to do with our basketball team or this season."
But she does, because from the moment Pitino chose to reveal his own brand of romance during what he admits was "an indiscretion" with Sypher on the leather bench at Porcini, a Louisville restaurant, in 2003, his carefully-crafted image merged with how he does his job. He told police he gave Sypher $3000 to help allay medical insurance costs when she said she was pregnant; she says the money was for an abortion. While none of this has anything to do with the cost of tea in Louisville, Pitino's indiscretion(s) bring into question whether he should be making moral decisions for anyone else.
Here's the trickle down consequence again, in full glory. Earlier this week, two of Pitino's players accepted plea bargains relating to a disturbance outside a party at a southern Indiana restaurant. Charged with resisting arrest, Terrence Jennings and Jerry Smith received probation and community service for their roles in tussling with off-duty police officers at a homecoming party two weekends ago. Pitino chose not to suspend the players for any games, insisting his punishment is much worse. He would not provide details of his punishment, so we can only assume it is something really disgusting, like cleaning the leather benches at Porcini, the restaurant where Pitino's legend lives on.
"If you knew exactly what happened, I had 50 worse things happen at Providence, 100 things worse happen at Kentucky," Pitino said, citing his other college stops. "I know what happened was an unfortunate situation. The young men learned from it. Thankfully no one got hurt. The young men knew where they made their mistake.
"They were disciplined, like I discipline all my players. I can assure some people, the first question is: are they going to be suspended? These players -- compared to what I put them through -- much rather would be suspended. Much rather [than] the hell that they pay."
The folks at Providence and Kentucky must love Pitino even more when he says such kind things about their schools. Forget about the fallout and gossip still to come when Pitino takes the witness stand in the fed's trial against Sypher -- a "distraction," the coach calls it, as if he'll be going to court to pay a parking ticket. The Cardinals will need to wear body armor under their jerseys when they play at Rupp Arena Jan. 2.
Because of their coach's choices and the ripples they created, Pitino's team is about to face a full-court press of madness, all season long.











Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-22-2009 @ 7:47AM
billco122 said...
Pitino has always been a scumbag. The school should have fired him, but I assume the hoops program brings in lots of money. Greenbakcs talk and scumbags walk.
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10-22-2009 @ 11:20AM
geldonski said...
Thank you. This guy like so many of the big name college coaches are liars and cheaters. They have to be to survive. The money is way to big. I don't care what program or coach you look into, there is cheating in recruiting going on to get the best players. None and I mean none of these guys are the saints that the media portrays them to be.
10-22-2009 @ 2:17PM
mike said...
Pitino has always been a "scumbag"? Oh, a personal acquaintance, eh? How long have you and Pitino known each other? What is the background of your relationship? At what point in your relationship did you determine that he was a "scumbag"? Or is this just a judgemental comment with no basis in reality at all? That's what I thought!
10-22-2009 @ 10:18AM
George said...
ESPN is not going to do anything to Brooke Hundley. Yes, what she did was straight out of "Fatal Attraction" (save for the boiling bunny and trying to kill Anne Archer / Marni Phillips), but right now all ESPN has looming over themm is the specter of a sexual harassment lawsuit. If they decide to discipline her as well, the minute they do her lawyers are going to run down to the federal courthouse and file a lawsuit so quickly that it will make their collective heads spin.
It's basically a high-stakes game of who-blinks-first: ESPN will probably leave her alone hoping that she has suffered enough embarrassment and that the matter (and eventually she) goes away. She probably won't file a SH lawsuit in the hopes that ESPN puts the blame solely at Phillips' feet -- i.e. an older man who took advantage of a young inexperienced subordinate-- and takes it out on him and not her. Because as soon as she files a lawsuit, she is GONE and most likely blackballed from the industry.
Considering that Phillips had a history of sleeping with young staffers, and the fact that it was public at the time they hired him, though, ESPN will have issues defending itself in a potential lawsuit.
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10-22-2009 @ 11:04AM
ostellgriggs said...
just like vick he should be suspended until this case is over. how can he preach to his players about doing the right thing when he sleeps with his friends wife ?
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10-22-2009 @ 12:05PM
kushner6 said...
Articles like this are what fuels other people's opinions and keeps the situation fresh in their minds. At some point Rick Pitino will have to appear in court to answer the charges of Karen Sypher - that is the time that he will and should be judged. This article provides nothing that hasn't been said before - it is nothing but the writer's opinion. The ones hurt by continuing to voice such opinions are Pitino's family, not him. Wait and see where the chips fall before we condemn the man. AND NO, I AM NOT A LOUISVILLE BASKETBALL FAN WHO IS DEFENDING MY COACH - I am a person, though, who sees how the power of the pen can affect people's opinions.
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10-22-2009 @ 2:13PM
mike said...
Gee, it takes two to tango. Karen Sypher knew who she was with, and what she was doing, and what she might eventually gain. Pitino, for his part, should have known that he had a lot more to lose than Sypher ever would If there was any crime committed by Pitino when he engaged in this affair-and that is a big IF-it would not excuse the attempt to extort money. Nor does an illicit affair automatically call for one to be fired from a job. Pitino might have kept quiet and paid up what was demanded of him and none of this would have ever been known. But he chose to fight, and to come clean-at least he admitted to the affair-and he should not now become the victim of a hack writer who has an unexplained vendetta, or perhaps that vendetta is to get a Pulitzer for his "thoughtful, insightful analysis' of this story.
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10-22-2009 @ 3:04PM
mthbwu said...
Rick and no one else fupped here. He is totally too blame and must take the blame. Resignation is in order he cannot control a team of high tetesterone players when his is running out of control. Get out of the business Rick and write that book. "hard ons in high places"
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10-22-2009 @ 5:53PM
wildcat0911 said...
Gee thanks, Rick, for your comment about seeing things 100 times worse at Kentucky. We WILDCAT fans really appreciate being thrown under the bus in your press conference!!! GO BIG BLUE!!!!!
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10-24-2009 @ 1:02PM
erendale said...
So do we now go after everyone in a school( administrators, Teachers etc) who has had an affair or just the ones we know about? I'm sorry but this is a Pitino family matter and a criminal case against Ms Sypher.
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11-05-2009 @ 3:15AM
les808 said...
," Pitino said then, at a press conference he called. "All of this has been a lie, a total fabrication of the truth."
remember when he was at kentucky and said he will never abandon kentucky. then, as soon as he signed the last recruit, he bolted to the celtics. funny thing about liars, they like to call others liars
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