Letter alleges Penny Hardaway personally involved in recruiting violations at Memphis

Penny Hardaway subject to massive recruiting violations according to anonymous letter turned over to NCAA by Memphis officials.

Memphis Tigers head coach Penny Hardaway fired a trio of assistant coaches, and one additional staff member, according to a team announcement on Wednesday morning.

Moving on from a coaching staff after a disappointing season is one thing, but doing so in September – when the practice period begins in less than three weeks – is a sign things are not going well for the Tigers.

That was confirmed by a report from Pat Forde at Sports Illustrated on Wednesday evening, detailing the existence of an anonymous letter which alleges widespread potential rules violations at Memphis – a letter which the university confirms has been passed along to the NCAA.

“The University of Memphis is aware of the anonymous letter and it has been turned over to the NCAA,” university spokeswoman Michele Ehrhart said in an email to Sports Illustrated on Wednesday. “That is all we can say on the matter.”

It’s unclear at this point if the four firings and this letter are related, but no reason was given for the firings, which came at a time in the offseason where hiring new coaches is far more difficult.

The letter alleges Hardaway, who is entering his seventh season at Memphis, is personally involved in the recruitment of a player who came to Memphis and a second prospect who ultimately did not enroll. The letter claims the violations occurred in 2020 and 2022, and also claims academic violations occurred in 2023-24 as well.

This is not the first time Hardaway and Memphis have come under fire. There was an 18-month investigation into Hardaway’s recruitment of James Wiseman, who was ultimately suspended 12 games and left the school before the suspension was up. While Hardaway was ultimately found not to have violated NCAA rules, the school was still put on probation.

Last year Hardaway served a three game suspension for recruiting violations, and one of his players, Malcolm Dandridge, missed the last five games of the season while the school investigated his eligibility.

All the off court drama is coupled with the simple fact that Hardaway has only made the NCAA Tournament twice in his six seasons with the Tigers, winning a game in 2022 against Boise State before falling to Gonzaga in the Round of 32.

With limited on court success, significant noise off the court, and massive roster and coaching turnover year over year, the Hardaway experiment in Memphis may be nearing an end.

Former Memphis basketball star denied waiver request by NCAA

Memphis guard Caleb Mills had his waiver denied by the NCAA and is out of college basketball eligibility after five seasons.

The Memphis Tigers will not get another season of eligibility for guard Caleb Mills, who had his appeal denied by the NCAA according to The Commercial Appeal on Tuesday.

Memphis coach Penny Hardaway indicated the school applied for a medical hardship waiver for Mills after he suffered a season-ending knee injury in early January, which limited him to just 14 games on the year.

However, according to NCAA rules a medical hardship waiver can only be applied if a player appeared in 30% or less of a team’s scheduled games – and Mills appeared in about 44% for the Tigers this past season.

The 6’3 guard averaged 7.9 points, 3.1 rebounds, and 1.4 assists last year for Memphis, who went 12-2 while he was on the floor and 10-8 after he went down with his injury, ultimately missing the NCAA Tournament.

Last season was Mills’ first with Memphis. Prior to that he spent two years at Florida State, averaging 12.8 points and 3.0 assists in 58 games, and before that he was at Houston for two seasons, appearing in 31 games as a freshman in 2019-20 and four games as a sophomore in 2020-21 before suffering an injury.

Memphis rebuilt their roster via the transfer portal, adding four guards: Tyrese Hunter from Texas, PJ Haggery from Tulsa, Colby Rogers from Wichita State and Baraka Okojie from George Mason.

Mills would have given this team a familiar face and a veteran scorer, but the team is equipped to move on without him as his college career comes to an end.

Amir Abdur-Rahim is this season’s best head coaching hire

Amir Abdur-Rahim is college basketball’s best head coach hire this season, leading the South Florida Bulls to a 12-1 record in the AAC.

Before the 2023-24 college basketball season began, a conversation about coaching hires would center around Rick Pitino at St. John’s. Or Chris Beard at Ole Miss. Or Damon Stoudamire at Georgia Tech. Or the Ed Cooley fiasco moving to Georgetown and Kim English replacing him at Providence.

And while those guys are all getting plenty of attention, good and bad, it looks like the best hire of the entire offseason is not in the Big East, or SEC, or ACC, but rather the American Athletic Conference.

Amir Abdur-Rahim took over a South Florida program that went 14-36 the last three years in conference play, who had not won 20 or more games since 2019, and who has not made the NCAA Tournament since 2012 when they were in the Big East. But in less than one full season, Abdur-Rahim has this team sitting at 19-5 overall and 12-1 with a two game lead in the AAC.

The season did not start off with this kind of promise. The Bulls began the year 2-4 with losses to Central Michigan, Maine, Hofstra, and UMass, but once Abdur-Rahim and his team got settled they immediately took off – winning 18 of their last 19 including wins over preseason conference favorites Florida Atlantic and Memphis.

Abdur-Rahim turned a Kennesaw State program that went 1-28 in 2019-20 into an NCAA Tournament team last year who not only won 26 games, but who nearly upset No. 3 seed Xavier in the first round.

So it shouldn’t be a surprise he’s already having this success at South Florida, especially in the transfer portal era which allowed the Bulls to add key pieces like Chris Youngblood, who followed Abdur-Rahim from Kennesaw State and is averaging 15 points on 43.2% shooting from deep.

They also added Kasean Pryor from Northwest Florida State College and Kobe Knox from Grand Canyon, providing Abdur-Rahim’s team with more floor spacing and rebounding.

There are a lot of coaches making a strong impression at their new jobs, including Danny Sprinkle at Utah State and Will Wade at McNeese, but it’s hard to understate how incredible this turnaround has been for South Florida under Abdur-Rahim.

After playing with fire in AAC play, Memphis Tigers get burned

South Florida was down 20 but managed to come all the way back and defeat the Memphis Tigers, ending their 10 game winning streak.

After two weeks of winning by the thinnest of margins, Memphis finally got burned on Wednesday evening – and it happened in spectacular fashion.

A 52-32 lead in the second half completely evaporated down the stretch and the Bulls of South Florida stunned the Tigers, winning 74-73, to end Memphis’ 10 game winning streak and hand them their first conference loss of the season.

Memphis climbed into the Top 10 of the AP Poll this week, but they hadn’t exactly been inspiring a lot of confidence with their recent performances.

Outside of a 112-86 win over Wichita State, Memphis needed late game heroics to win their other three AAC games against Tulsa (by 3) SMU (by 3) and UTSA (by six in overtime).

And while it looked like they were well on their way to a blowout against a South Florida team that was 2-1 in conference and 9-5 overall, the Bulls got hot from three and complacency from Hardaway’s team sent them packing.

“This one hurts because we worked so hard to get to this level,” Hardaway said after the game.

It was South Florida’s first win over a ranked team since 2012 and first over a top 10 team since beating Georgetown in February of 2010, and represented a signature win for first year coach Amir Abdur-Rahim, who led Kennesaw State to the NCAA Tournament last year.

“It’s not about us,” Abdur-Rahim said. “It’s about the University of South Florida. … This is a great win for the University of South Florida, and this group of kids who allow us to push them.”

Memphis becomes the latest ranked team to fall to an unranked opponent, but with far fewer opportunities to pick up Quad 1 wins thanks to their conference, every loss is magnified for the Tigers.

Memphis will try to get back on track on Sunday as they head on the road to take on Tulane, with tip-off slated for 1:00 PM ET.

American Athletic Football Basketball School Rankings: Hoops and Helmets 2019-2020

Which American Athletic schools had the best and worst years in the two major sports – football and men’s basketball?s

[jwplayer eniJo7Qb]


Which American Athletic schools had the best and worst years in the two major sports – football and men’s basketball? Which fan bases got the glory, and which ones didn’t have any fun?


Contact @PeteFiutak

On the field and court – whose fans had the most fun?

Of course every school has sports outside of the big two that matter and generate revenue, but when it comes to what athletic departments need, it’s really all about college football and men’s basketball.

Which American Athletic Conference schools had the best and worst seasons?

Here’s how these rankings work.

1) The top-ranked schools with teams that went to a bowl game and would’ve played in the NCAA Tournament.

2) The next group had stronger football seasons and were okay in basketball. The superstar basketball schools get credit, but football is the bigger revenue generator.

3) One or the other. Usually there’s a disparity with one good season in one sport an a clunker in the other. It’s sort of a catch-all before …

4) The disasters. No bowl game, there wouldn’t have been a trip to the NCAA Tournament, no fun.

The worst-to-best American Athletic Conference schools in 2019-2020 in college football and college basketball …

American Athletic Conference Hoops and Helmets: Losers In Both Sports

These schools suffered the indignity of failing to come up with a winning season in either of the two major sports. The fans didn’t get to have any fun.

12. East Carolina Pirates

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 127
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 126
Football: 4-8 overall, 1-7 in conference, 5th in AAC East
Basketball: 11-20 overall, 5-13 in conference, 13th in AAC

11. USF Bulls

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 47
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 78
Football: 4-8 overall, 2-6 in conference, 4th in AAC East
Basketball: 14-17 overall, 7-11 in conference, 8th in AAC

10. UConn Huskies

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 123
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 121
Football: 2-10 overall, 0-8 in conference, 6th in AAC East
Basketball: 19-12 overall, 10-8 in conference, T5th in AAC


American Athletic Conference Hoops and Helmets: Good In One Sport, Not The Other

9. Tulane Green Wave

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 90
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 111
Football: 7-6 overall, 3-5 in conference, 4th in AAC West
Basketball: 12-18 overall, 4-14 in conference, 12th in AAC

8. Houston Cougars

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 26
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 21
Football: 4-8 overall, 2-6 in conference, 5th in AAC West
Basketball: 23-8 overall, 13-5 in conference, 1st in AAC

7. Temple Owls

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 30
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 60
Football: 8-5 overall, 5-3 in conference, 3rd in AAC East
Basketball: 14-17 overall, 6-12 in conference, 10th in AAC

6. Tulsa Golden Hurricane

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 107
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 104
Football: 4-8 overall, 2-6 in conference, T5th in AAC West
Basketball: 21-10 overall, 13-5 in conference, T1st in AAC

[lawrence-related id=508074]

5. Navy Midshipmen

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 125
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 59
Football: 11-2 overall, 7-1 in conference, T1st in AAC West
Basketball: 14-16 overall, 8-10 in conference, T6th in Patriot

4. UCF Knights

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 10
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 34
Football: 10-3 overall, 6-2 in conference, 2nd in AAC East
Basketball: 16-14 overall, 7-11 in conference, T8th in AAC

3. SMU Mustangs

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 115
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 57
Football: 10-3 overall, 6-2 in conference, 3rd in AAC West
Basketball: 19-11 overall, 9-9 in conference, 7th in AAC


American Athletic Conference Hoops and Helmets: Bowl and probably would’ve made the NCAA Tournament

2. Cincinnati Bearcats

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 17
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 68
Football: 11-3 overall, 7-1 in conference, 1st in AAC East
Basketball: 20-10 overall, 13-5 in conference, 1st in AAC

1. Memphis Tigers

2019 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 42
2018 Hoops & Helmets National Ranking: 41
Football: 12-2 overall, 7-1 in conference, T1st in AAC East
Basketball: 21-10 overall, 10-8 in conference, T5th in AAC

[protected-iframe id=”361699434b6d70baf15f631ed2408ac1-97672683-92922408″ info=”https://www.googletagservices.com/tag/js/gpt.js” ]