OT: Kiffin pulls early enrollee's scholarship 3 days before he's scheduled to arrive on campus

Submitted by Ali G Bomaye on

Per Dr. Saturday, Lane Kiffin pulled the scholarship of Kylie Fitts, a four-star DE in the recruiting class of 2013 who was scheduled to enroll early last week.  Evidently he gave the kid three days' notice.  Classy move.

I know there has been lots of stink made about coaches withdrawing scholarships that were promised, but has anyone heard of one revoked so close to the enrollment date?

Link: http://sports.yahoo.com/blogs/ncaaf-dr-saturday/recruit-decommits-usc-lane-kiffin-pulls-scholarship-three-165651928--ncaaf.html

Nick

January 14th, 2013 at 5:40 PM ^

that has the ability to influence change should be making a big deal of incidents like this.

Essentially, im pointing to college football writers at major media outlets.  Start hammering these instances of coaches making unethical decisions.  Make a big stink about it until people start noticing.

And I would really enjoy a recruit coming out and saying that he didn't commit to a school because of some situation that happened in the past and that he couldn't trust a coach.  Give them some bad PR.

It confounds me how the transgressions of Saban, Miles and Kiffin (and others im sure) continue to get swept under the rug and forgotten.

ypsituckyboy

January 14th, 2013 at 12:53 PM ^

But let's not act like this should take the kid by surprise. It's Lane Kiffin, fergodsakes. Do a Google search, kid, and see what you're getting yourself into. Can't say I feel sorry for kids who commit to schools with shady coaches. Everyone knows it and they choose to accept that.

LB

January 14th, 2013 at 1:09 PM ^

On the other hand, if the athletes are qualified to attend that university, they (and the adults around them) should be able to understand who they are dealing with in this day and age.

I'm not trying to defend Kiffen at all, but how do people make these decisions?

I'm betting that 10 seconds of searching would present enough material for me to really look at the man who will hold my future in his hands.

FrankMurphy

January 14th, 2013 at 2:08 PM ^

The fact that it's Kiffin doesn't diminish my sympathy for the kid. He could have committed to USC for reasons that have nothing to do with Kiffin (academics, location, etc). Kiffin also probably sweet-talked and manipulated the kid, and it's hard to blame the victim for that when he's 16 or 17 years old. 

highestman

January 14th, 2013 at 2:16 PM ^

You also need to understand that a 17/18 year old kid is a pretty easy manipulation target.  There's a reason Kiffin is still a coach at a major program, he obviously knows how to deflect attention from his more shady activities ("Hey kid.  You read what online?  Well, let me tell you first hand what happened and how the media is distrorting it to make a story").  Not to mention most kids are more recruited by assistant coaches, who may actually be clean guys at USC.

This kid also seemed to committ more to USC than Lane Kiffin.  He grew up dreaming of playing for USC, being part of the tradition.  Probably figured it didn't matter who the coach was, he just wanted to be there.  So if there's anyone that I can feel sorry for it would be a kid who's faith in a school he grew up loving was ruined because he decided to trust what the coaching staff told him rather than what came up after googling his name.

RunTheFootball

January 14th, 2013 at 12:54 PM ^

"The Trojans didn't pull his scholarship entirely, but deferred him to the fall. However, since Fitts had already graduated high school, he had nowhere to go and didn't want to wait."  

Not defending Kiffin, but your title doesn't quite nail it on the head. Now he has to sit around and do nothing for 6 months. I can think of worse things :P

ZooWolverine

January 14th, 2013 at 1:58 PM ^

Exactly, why would you defer the scholarship if you were sure you were giving it to the player in the fall? The only thing this move is saying is that Kiffin isn't sure he wants the kid after all.

That happens from time to time in recruiting--Michigan has cooled on a few comitted players and encouraged them to explore other options, but to pull the scholarship three days before he's coming to campus is ridiculous, and very Kiffin-like.

Maize_Nation

January 14th, 2013 at 4:48 PM ^

Aren't they only allowed 3 EE scolarships each year?

Probably has something to do with that then.

If that's the case, and they are full on the backdated scholarships, there would be no reason at all to think pulling his scolarship as an EE would mean they are going to pull his scholarship come fall.

UMICH1606

January 14th, 2013 at 1:02 PM ^

Lane could have told LM3 if USC was where he really wanted to be, that he could have waited until June as well though, right? LM3 pledging to USC is why this happened. So although the kid didn't techinally have his scholarship pulled, it was still has slimeball tendencies. Who is to say he wouldn't completely pull it on signing day if they get in on someone else and need room? He already has jerked with the kid once. I wouldn't trust the situation either.

imafreak1

January 14th, 2013 at 1:11 PM ^

Semantically you are correct.

However, you assume it is a given that after "deferring" the recruit once Kiffin would most certainly honor his word in the fall.

Why would you assume that? Making that assumption would be very unwise, I would say.

Come February, the kid is really screwed if Kiffin screws him over a second time.

phork

January 14th, 2013 at 1:41 PM ^

He was deferred to the fall because USCs APR is pathetically low.  They were hoping that a player was going to graduate early and when that player didn't they gambled on postponing Fitts because he was a lifelong USC fan.  They were wrong and he decommitted.

There is always lots more to the story.

MIMark

January 14th, 2013 at 2:32 PM ^

Call it a blessing in disguise. When the kid gets to USC he will be held to all practice and conditioning regulations, plus will be required to study and complete his academic requirements. He gets six months of no restrictions on how much he works out, plus minimal other responsibilities. If I were him I would lift, run, repeat. When he gets to campus for summer camp he could be the most physically fit of the incoming freshmen. Still a douche move though.

MIMark

January 14th, 2013 at 4:55 PM ^

You're correct. He can work out the NCAA limit and if he wants to work out a ton more on his own time, there's no way the NCAA can restrict that. But when you've got a practice schedule and an academic schedule, along with eating and sleeping, there won't be a ton of time for more workouts.

LB

January 14th, 2013 at 5:29 PM ^

Hoke should start doing this. Imagine how fit all of our athletes could be. Hell, we might even be able to save money on the S&C staff since they won't have as many athletes to worry about.

In fact, since working out on their own is so beneficial, do we really need a S&C staff. I am sending this suggestion off to DB tout suite!

 

Blazefire

January 14th, 2013 at 4:28 PM ^

Part of the reason any kid enrolls early is so they can get involved with spring ball and have a head start on the competition come fall. It's the halmark of a kid who wants to play so badly they could burst.

USC had agreed to give this kid that opportunity.

mGrowOld

January 14th, 2013 at 12:59 PM ^

What's the big deal?  It's only 70 miles from Redlands to USC so barely over an hour drive depending on traffic on the 5.  Not like the kid had already left home yet or anything - probably only still packing up his stuff at this point.  And he still has three whole days to figure out what to do with college - plenty of time!

You people are SO critical of everything Kiffin does.

detrocks

January 14th, 2013 at 1:00 PM ^

Did this happen because Leon McQuay selected USC?   I know that he's an early enrollee too.   Did they hit their cap and need to move someone from EE to fall?

93Grad

January 14th, 2013 at 1:29 PM ^

which makes it even more annoying as we were his #2 choice.  It is amazing how little attention kids and their parents pay to the ethics of the coaching staff when choosing a school.  I guess I shouldn't be surprised though as kids fall for slimy coaches all the time.