O. J. Mayo: A First Report on the Money Trailing Behind the Collegiate Star

May 12, 2008

(This will be the first report of many dealing with O.J. Mayo and the allegations that he received gifts and money in violation of NCAA rules.)

The announcement of the results of a four month investigation were televised Sunday, May 11. The announcement of the results of a four month investigation televised Sunday, May 11 were presaged by a cryptic statement within in a May 2, 2006 MSNBC.com article:

I wanted to meet a college player who I really enjoyed watching this year. So I asked a friend of mine, who is a very powerful man in the game, to introduce me to him. And he said, “I’d like to help but I can’t.” And when I asked why. He said, “You are three years and $500,000 short.”

The quote in the article was posted Friday May 2, 2008 and 9:50 a.m. Only 26 minutes later, at 10:16, it was posted on ESPN.com.

Six days later the person who put forth the quote on ESPN.com wondered for all readers of that website to see that he felt William Wesley was the man the agent to whom the person was referring. The poster at ESPN.com, in his stated hope to be able to proclaim Wesley a suspect, made the following statement:

I suggested to _____ that, right or not, the phrase “powerful man in the game” nowadays seems to carry the implication that it’s one of a very small group, including William Wesley or Sonny Vaccaro.

For the person at ESPN.com to make such a pronouncement it can only be hoped that perhaps hubris momentarily overrode clarity. The basketball world is part of the major sports landscape in America. And there are many, many powerful men in the game whose names are rarely spoken. Some can be seen, most are not. The conjecture was flatly shot down:

William Wesley has been a friend of mine for 22 years, and I wish him nothing but the best. He has a great talent to make connections to people, and I consider him a friend.

In no way did I want to imply that William Wesley was the person who paid the player I was referring to. It doesn’t matter who the player involved was, and it doesn’t matter who the agent was. But I have had some phone calls from people saying they thought I was talking about William Wesley paying somebody, and I want to make clear that I wasn’t.

And the players, so far, are:

At MSNBC: Darren Rovell - Sports business writer, formerly a sports business writer for ESPN.com

The agent: David Falk - Michael Jordan’s agent (among other basketball stars such as Patrick Ewing)

At ESPN.com: Henry Abbott - Blogger-owner of True Hoop, a basketball blog within the pages of ESPN.com. Abbott’s pursuit of NBA “influenceer” William Wesley is known throughout the blogosphere. Sonny Vaccaro was once the man “next to” Mayo but was “muscled out of the scene.”

Just three days after Abbott waited six days to contact Falk, ESPN’s Kelly Naqi reported the results of a four month investigation televised Sunday, May 11 on the ESPN Sunday edition of Outside the Lines. The primary target of the investigation was O.J. Mayo. According to informant Louis Johnson, a former sportswriter for the Long Beach Press-Telegram (Ca.) in interviews with Naqi, a middleman named Rodney Guillory was given $250,000 which was to be used to steer Mayo, a freshman at the University of Southern California, to sign with agent Bill Duffy when he turned pro.

Johnson, according to Naqi, met Mayo in 2006 and became a middleman (”runner”) for Mayo with Guillory.

Among the charges alleged by Johnson are:

• Over the course of roughly three years prior to the start of Mayo’s freshman season at USC, BDA Sports provided Guillory with about $200,000, some of it through an account set up at Citibank. Johnson said Guillory told him details about how the account was set up through an intermediary and how it worked: Each month, Guillory told a BDA official what the anticipated “expenses” would be, and that amount would be put into the account to take care of Guillory and Mayo’s needs. Guillory, Johnson said, had a card to make withdrawals from the account. Johnson said he was sometimes with Guillory when he made those withdrawals, and Johnson provided “Outside the Lines” with a receipt from one $200 withdrawal that he said occurred in his presence.

• BDA helped Guillory purchase an Infiniti QX56 that Guillory drives. California registration records show Guillory’s vehicle came from a dealership co-owned by former USC and NFL player Ronnie Lott, a longtime friend of Duffy, BDA Sports’ chairman and CEO. According to Consumer Guide Automotive, the car was valued at around $50,000 when it was first purchased in 2005.

• Guillory has been giving money to Mayo for years, according to Johnson, who provided Western Union receipts that illustrate how Johnson and Guillory wired hundreds of dollars to friends of Mayo while he was in high school to avoid a paper trail leading to Mayo.

• Hotel receipts and airline itineraries show multiple trips made by Johnson and Guillory. The destinations correspond with where Mayo played in high school and at tournaments around the country.

• Guillory paid for Mayo’s cell phone service, which T-Mobile billed to a nonprofit foundation run by Guillory that, according to California state records, is designed to serve “the educational, health, recreational and social needs of youths and elderly citizens residing in inner-city communities.” Johnson provided “Outside the Lines” with the service agreement for four separate lines on the account, set up on March 13, 2007. Johnson said the phone lines were for Guillory, Mayo, a Mayo relative and Johnson. T-Mobile sent a bill to Guillory’s foundation for $558.56 for the September charges for the four lines. Of that amount, $171.17 was for Mayo’s phone service and another $192.33 was for the phone service of Mayo’s relative, according to the invoice and Johnson.

• In addition to several shopping sprees at the two Men’s Land stores in the Los Angeles area, Johnson said Guillory provided Mayo with a flat-screen television, a hotel room and meals — items all paid for with a credit card that belongs to another nonprofit organization, The National Organization of Sickle Cell Prevention and Awareness Foundation. The organization has never registered as a charitable trust with the California Attorney General’s Office and is unknown in the Los Angeles sickle-cell charitable community.

• Guillory purchased airline tickets for a member of Mayo’s family and another Mayo friend to visit Mayo at USC, said Johnson, who provided “Outside the Lines” with a plane itinerary and a receipt for those trips.

Further, Johnson provided Naqi with receipts for:

• A hotel room in Hermosa Beach, which Johnson said Mayo and a girlfriend used.

• A 42-inch flat-screen TV, which Johnson said was for Mayo’s dorm room.

• Meals and thousands of dollars worth of clothing.

Duffy, whose company, Bill Duffy Associates (BDA Sports Management) represents 94 professional basketball players around the world. Among his company’s 35 NBA clients are: Boston Celtics point guard, Rajon Rondo, the Denver Nuggets’ Carmelo Anthony, New Orleans’ Bonzi Wells, Sasha Vujacic of the Los Angeles Lakers, Portland Trail Blazers prized rookie Greg Oden, the Phoenix Suns’ Steve Nash, Detroit’s Tayshaun Prince, and Houston Rockets center, Yao Ming. He represents WNBA stars Diana Taurasi of the Phoenix Mercury and Simone Augustus of the Minnesota Lynx.

A USA Today report by Jack Carey notes that BDA’s Bill Duffy and Calvin Andrews issued the following statement to ESPN on Friday, which, in part, read:

“Developing a rapport with Rodney Guillory was a prerequisite for the multiple agencies attempting to recruit O.J. Mayo. There were absolutely no illegalities in our recruitment of O.J. Mayo, nor were there any agreements or understandings towards his selection of BDA.”

According to an ESPN.com article in which writer Andy Katz was a contributor, BDA, on Sunday night, provided the following statement:

“Bill Duffy met O.J. for the first time shortly before O.J. selected BDA as his agency. Neither Calvin Andrews, Bill Duffy, nor any other BDA employee engaged in any conduct that could have remotely jeopardized O.J. Mayo’s eligibility,” the statement said. “Everything in the recent report that suggests otherwise is false. O.J. selected BDA based on our achievements and our commitment to work closely with O.J. to maximize his considerable potential on and off the court.”

USC is also denying any wrong-doing on their part:

“The NCAA and the Pac-10 reviewed O.J. Mayo’s amateur status before and during his enrollment at USC, and did not identify any amateurism violations. Mayo and USC fully cooperated in these investigations. The University investigated and reported a violation involving Mayo’s receipt of tickets to a Denver Nuggets game from his friend Carmelo Anthony. Mayo’s eligibility was reinstated after he made a charitable contribution in the amount of the value of the tickets.”

And Mayo (pictured from left to right: Carlos Dew, Todd Mayo, O. J. Mayo, Rodney Guillory, and Louis Johnson) is following suit. On Sunday night Mayo said:

“I don’t know anything about it. It caught me by surprise. I’ve got to get to L.A. to see what’s going on. I’m just focusing on the draft.”

Mayo also said he had spoken with no one from USC or BDA about money steered to him from the sports management agency:

“I had no knowledge of anything like that. I’ll find our more when I meet with Mr. Duffy and Mr. [Calvin] Andrews [of BDA].”

The soon-to-be pro then denied he had taken any money:

“No sir, I did not receive any money from Calvin or Rodney or anything. It all caught me by surprise.I would just like to know if I did [get money] where did the money go. I was a struggling college student like everyone else. I bicycled to class. The truth will come out, even though the perception is reality.”

This is obviously just the tip of the proverbial iceberg for this story. As it stands we have “super agent” David Falk, 10 days ago telling Darren Rovell a story about a player he wanted to meet but was told he was “$500,000 short and three years late.” We have Henry Abbott posting Falk’s quote only in a blog post minutes after MSNBC.com published the article. Abbott then finally decides to get in touch with Falk six days later after allowing the quote to circulate - or not - around basketball circles and the sports blogosphere.

Three days later Outside the Lines airs Kelly Naqi’s report which features an interview with alleged runner for BDA, Louis Johnson. Johnson appears to provide inside information into the insipid world of “amateur athletics” especially as it pertains to O. J. Mayo and Bill Duffy Associates. Of the $250,000 alleged to have been given to Rodney Guillory to persuade Mayo to sign with Duffy after his college career, Johnson alleges that Mayo only received about $30,00 in gifts and money; the rest went to Guillory’s pockets.

However, Mayo, Duffy, Guillory, and USC all deny any wrong-doing or knowledge of Johnson’s allegations.

We have far to go before this is resolved.

(Much, much more tom come.)

Comments

20 Responses to “O. J. Mayo: A First Report on the Money Trailing Behind the Collegiate Star”

  1. Charles Follymacher on May 12th, 2008 7:46 am

    Good stuff, DWil. You might be surprised to hear me say it but it’s true that the days of half-way responsible journalism are almost a dot in the rear view mirror.

  2. dwil on May 12th, 2008 8:09 am

    Charles-
    That’s good to hear, especially from a cynic like you ;=)

  3. Charles Follymacher on May 12th, 2008 9:10 am

    Cynic, not paranoiac — there’s often a difference :P lol anyway, here’s more wood for future fires…

    “[The NBA Pre-draft camp] will be conducted this year from May 27th-May 30th at Disney’s Wide World of Sports Complex outside of Orlando, Florida, for the third (and possibly final) straight year, after traditionally being held at Moody Bible Institute in Chicago.

    Superior facilities, costs and the NBA’s relationship with Disney and its subsidiary ESPN (who televises many of the games on ESPNU) were some of the reasons it moved, to the chagrin of quite a few grumpy NBA executives.”

    from DraftExpress.

  4. dwil on May 12th, 2008 11:12 am

    Wow. Guess we won’t be seeing Mayo there, huh?

  5. open directory on May 12th, 2008 11:49 am

    USC is also denying any wrong-doing on their part:

  6. Signal to Noise on May 12th, 2008 12:28 pm

    I just shrug at these things now, because Mayo should never have been forced to go to college for a year in the first place.

  7. des on May 12th, 2008 12:56 pm

    dwil,

    I’m looking forward to your additional information on this story. Two things I found interesting about the ESPN piece yesterday:

    1. Per Louis Johnson, of the $200,000 Rodney Guillory procured from BDA, O.J.Mayo ” only ” saw approximately $30,000.

    2. Kelly Naqi and ESPN went to Mayo’s press conference with the express purpose of pulling a ” Tejada ” (formerly known as a ” gotcha ” moment).

  8. MODI on May 12th, 2008 12:58 pm

    nice piece dwil…

    funny thing, Chad Ford came out with an article last week about Mayo’s draft stock rising to the #3 pick… and cited more factors off-the-court than on it as the reason…. http://insider.espn.go.com/nba/draft2008/insider/columns/story?columnist=ford_chad&page=DraftWatch-080508

    from a selfish perspective, this may help him drop to #5 or #6 where the Knicks will likely be if they don’t land in the lottery…

  9. des on May 12th, 2008 1:21 pm

    MODI,

    As a Knick fan, who would you choose, Mayo or Rose?

  10. dwil on May 12th, 2008 2:13 pm

    open directory-
    I do mention that USC denies any wrong-doing….

    S2N-
    If the accusations are true, even in part, this is definitely an offshoot of the one-and-done college player. ID them as early as possible, get in their ear (and their back pocket), and watch their stock rise because of their one glorious run through the NCAA schedule, and sign ‘em up as soon as they announce they’re turning pro.

    des-
    Yeah, that Mayo did get “Tejadad.” by Naqi did not escape my eye. ESPN opening their “investigative arm” means we’ll be seeing that more and more.The “ambush” = “good television.”

  11. motown on May 12th, 2008 2:46 pm

    You’d think that between the Reggie Bush thing and now Mayo, that USC’s athletic dept would be under some heavy scrutiny. But that does not seem to be the case. I can’t remember how or even if the Bush scandal got resolved but it seemed like it was just swept under the rug. Of course these kind of dealings have been going on for years in big-time college sports, so its not like USC is the lone perpetrator. Maybe there’s too much money involved in USC broadcasts and such for the media to even care.

  12. Big Man on May 12th, 2008 5:47 pm

    Good point by motown. Where is the outcry that USC is a program run amok? Instead, the media places the blame on the players and the agents while the school skates. No questions about their oversight or lack thereof.

  13. stopmikelupica on May 12th, 2008 6:02 pm

    It seems, from the evidence, that USC might not be involved in this at all. Just saying, the shady connection is from agent (BDA) and player. Unless, of course, BDA pushed Mayo to go to USC because USC was paying BDA… then all bets are off.

    But the sad thing is Mayo may have only seen $30K out of the $250/500K sum. That’s yet another example of how amateur athletes are exploited; anytime you have to go into a black market and get involved with shady people, you are going to get heavily exploited. It’s not unlike boxing, huh?

    I’m not even sure if I feel bad or mad at OJ Mayo.

    Anyway, if people really believe in free markets and economic freedom and stuff, then they should be pushing for high school players to be able leverage their future fortunes by selling shares in future earnings or something. I think someone is going to have to change the game…

  14. MODI on May 12th, 2008 7:16 pm

    des, if it is Rose then hold the Mayo… but after Rose it’s OJ all day…

  15. HarveyDent on May 13th, 2008 2:16 am

    I like what Kornheiser had to say on PTI about USC cupability today because he put forth that if USC didn’t do it’s due diligence on this kid then Floyd and maybe the AD needs to be fired as a lesson to Pete Carroll as to what can happen to him too.

    Get yours, OJ, get yours but cut these shady guys loose if they’re pimping you harder than the NCAA. I posted on TSF that I’ve made a 180 over kids turning pro early but the more I learn about how these so-called institutions of higher learning screw these youngsters then I have no problem with them getting theirs.

  16. HarveyDent on May 13th, 2008 2:20 am

    Another PTI observation: Why is Wilbon the only one on there who always tries to blunt his criticism of people with always putting forth the disclaimer that he knows these guys? I’m certain Kornheiser, Lebatard, Ryan, Reali, etc know the same sports movers and shakers but they don’t come like that. If the guys are doing wrong then call them on it and move on. Kornheiser keeps me laughing because he’ll come right out and call BS on these people. While Aunt Jemima Wilbon will try to find the good in them….except when it comes to the players especially the ones of color….hmmm

  17. NCAA - Myles Brand - Adds Race to Mayo Mix | Sports On My Mind on May 14th, 2008 4:07 am

    […] OJ Mayo: A First Report on the Money Trailing Behind the Collegiate Star […]

  18. O.J. Mayo #4: Ain’t Nothin’ But a Modern-Day Slavery Thang | Sports On My Mind on May 29th, 2008 9:51 am

    […] […]

  19. OJ Mayo #4: Recruiting Wars Ain’t Nothin’ But a Modern-Day Slavery Thang | NationalSportsReview.com on May 29th, 2008 11:45 am

    […] O. J. Mayo: A First Report on the Money Trailing Behind the Collegiate Star […]

  20. O.J. Mayo #4: Recruiting Wars Ain’t Nothin’ But a Modern-Day Slavery Thang | Sports On My Mind on May 29th, 2008 2:34 pm

    […] O. J. Mayo: A First Report on the Money Trailing Behind the Collegiate Star […]

Got something to say?