Deepening problems in Colorado, effect CUSA?

I saw this today in the DMN, apparently there are a lot of problems up there in Colorado. There has been a lot of talk north of the Red River lately about Tulsa's Coach Kragthorpe leaving the program and taking over the Buffs. As someone who follows Tulsa sports (except when they play SMU), I'm against it because I'd like Coach K to hang around a while and I think having a coach of his caliber in CUSA is good for the conference as a whole.
That said, one of my chums thinks that Coach K would be crazy not to take the job because of the Big12 affiliation and the ability to "recruit west Texas and the west." That may be so, but I still think you'd be crazy to step into that mess these days.
Maybe Coach K can pull a move like Fran did at 'Bama, but I dunno. I think Tulsa is a pretty good bet to make a run in the polls next year. The Hurricane will have a returning All-American in Mills, a veteran QB and OU transfer rusher Courtney Tennial.
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent ... d2d07.html
Audit: Colorado football records sloppy
02:53 PM CST on Monday, December 12, 2005
Associated Press
DENVER -- A state audit released Monday stated the records of former Colorado football coach Gary Barnett's football camp were in such disarray that auditors couldn't be sure whether any laws were broken in more than $400,000 worth of transactions.
Auditors said they were unable to determine where $328,000 paid to Barnett's camps came from -- 44 percent of the total income between 2002 and 2004. Nearly $103,000 in expenses from that period lacked sufficient paperwork, the audit said.
"The absence of documentation and financial records prevented us from obtaining reasonable assurance that there were no violations of laws and regulations," the audit report said.
Barnett stepped down under pressure last week after his teams lost their final three games of the regular season. His attorney, John Rodman, did not immediately return a message seeking comment.
Separately, the audit questioned more than $300,000 in Colorado athletic department expenses since 2002 and said some administrators and members of the governing Board of Regents had not filed required conflict-of-interest reports.
In their review of athletic department finances, auditors said they found an "overall lack of controls over spending and cash advances that have led to poorly documented, questionable and unallowable expenses."
They questioned two cash advances, of $115,000 each, for team expenses at bowl games in 2002 and 2004. The report called them "excessive" and said about $16,000 lacked sufficient documentation.
The audit also questioned another $55,800 in football program expenses and $25,000 in bowl game expenses. It said the department did not have adequate controls over the use of "courtesy cars" loaned by car dealers.
Auditors also found fault with the regents and seven high-level university officials, saying they failed to file 38 required reports on conflicts of interest.
The audit was released four days after Barnett stepped down for a $3 million settlement of his contract. He had largely weathered a scandal in which at least nine women alleged they were sexually assaulted by athletes -- no criminal charges were ever filed -- but had watched his team struggle at the end of the season, including blowout losses to Nebraska and Texas.
That said, one of my chums thinks that Coach K would be crazy not to take the job because of the Big12 affiliation and the ability to "recruit west Texas and the west." That may be so, but I still think you'd be crazy to step into that mess these days.
Maybe Coach K can pull a move like Fran did at 'Bama, but I dunno. I think Tulsa is a pretty good bet to make a run in the polls next year. The Hurricane will have a returning All-American in Mills, a veteran QB and OU transfer rusher Courtney Tennial.
http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent ... d2d07.html
Audit: Colorado football records sloppy
02:53 PM CST on Monday, December 12, 2005
Associated Press
DENVER -- A state audit released Monday stated the records of former Colorado football coach Gary Barnett's football camp were in such disarray that auditors couldn't be sure whether any laws were broken in more than $400,000 worth of transactions.
Auditors said they were unable to determine where $328,000 paid to Barnett's camps came from -- 44 percent of the total income between 2002 and 2004. Nearly $103,000 in expenses from that period lacked sufficient paperwork, the audit said.
"The absence of documentation and financial records prevented us from obtaining reasonable assurance that there were no violations of laws and regulations," the audit report said.
Barnett stepped down under pressure last week after his teams lost their final three games of the regular season. His attorney, John Rodman, did not immediately return a message seeking comment.
Separately, the audit questioned more than $300,000 in Colorado athletic department expenses since 2002 and said some administrators and members of the governing Board of Regents had not filed required conflict-of-interest reports.
In their review of athletic department finances, auditors said they found an "overall lack of controls over spending and cash advances that have led to poorly documented, questionable and unallowable expenses."
They questioned two cash advances, of $115,000 each, for team expenses at bowl games in 2002 and 2004. The report called them "excessive" and said about $16,000 lacked sufficient documentation.
The audit also questioned another $55,800 in football program expenses and $25,000 in bowl game expenses. It said the department did not have adequate controls over the use of "courtesy cars" loaned by car dealers.
Auditors also found fault with the regents and seven high-level university officials, saying they failed to file 38 required reports on conflicts of interest.
The audit was released four days after Barnett stepped down for a $3 million settlement of his contract. He had largely weathered a scandal in which at least nine women alleged they were sexually assaulted by athletes -- no criminal charges were ever filed -- but had watched his team struggle at the end of the season, including blowout losses to Nebraska and Texas.