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Scott Campbell
04-24-2006, 08:37 AM
This story looks like it will have legs.


Yahoo! Sports report: Reggie Bush's family home
By Charles Robinson, Yahoo! Sports


SPRING VALLEY, Calif. – In this sprawling hilltop community with a breathtaking view of Sweetwater Lake, it was no secret who lived in the 3,000-square-foot house at the corner of Apple Street and Luther Avenue.

That home, residents would tell you, was where Reggie Bush's family lived.

That is, until this weekend, when the family abruptly packed up and vacated the residence – less than 24 hours after Yahoo! Sports approached Bush's mother about information linking the property to Michael Michaels, a man who is alleged to have tried to play a role in steering Bush toward an agent and who also has ties to a sports marketing company.

Days before Bush is expected to be the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft, unanswered questions about the residence and how his mother, stepfather and brother came to live in it within the last year have prompted the University of Southern California to refer the matter to the Pacific-10 Conference for an investigation.

NCAA statutes prohibit student-athletes or their families from receiving extra benefits from professional sports agents, marketing companies or their representatives. A breach of these statutes could result in an athlete being ruled ineligible, and games in which they played could be forfeited.

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USC finished 12-1 last season, its 35-game winning streak and national championship bid both ending with a loss in the Rose Bowl to Texas. Bush, a junior running back, won the Heisman Trophy and elected to skip his senior season and turn pro in January.

In response to reporters' questions about the matter late last week, USC athletic department officials said they would look into it.

"Rather than jumping to conclusions, we need to determine the facts before commenting on this report," Trojans athletic director Mike Garrett said in a statement released by the school on Friday. "We have asked the Pac-10 to look into this."

State records show the Apple Street home was built in late 2004 and early 2005, then purchased by Michaels on March 29, 2005 for $757,500. Around that time, neighbors say Bush's family moved in. Whether they had visited the house while it was being built is unknown, but there is an inscription in one of the cement slabs in the driveway reading "The Griffins '05."

Michaels is the only person who has been listed on the deed to the home.

Bush's mother, Denise Griffin, was approached in the driveway of the house on Thursday, but declined to comment.

"I have absolutely nothing to say," Griffin said when asked about ownership of the property, which is where Bush's mother, stepfather LaMar and brother Jovan lived during USC's 2005 season.

Before moving to the house on Apple Lane, Bush's family was listed as living in an apartment elsewhere in Spring Valley, a community located about 13 miles east of San Diego.

At some point after Bush's family moved into the residence, Michaels and an associate named Lloyd Lake are said to have contacted San Diego-based sports agent David Caravantes and offered to facilitate Bush's recruitment. A source with intimate knowledge of the meeting said it took place during the 2005 college football season and that Michaels was looking for a local agent to handle the contract negotiations for players he intended to sign to his marketing firm.

Michaels and Lake told Caravantes they were planning to start a sports marketing agency with Bush as their anchor client. It was also during this meeting that Michaels and Lake mentioned the potential name of the agency: New Era Sports & Entertainment.

The pitch to Caravantes was said to have been simple: He would be Bush's agent and Michaels' marketing creation would handle the promotion of the USC star. At some point after pitching this idea, Michaels informed Caravantes that Bush's family was living in a home Michaels owned. Caravantes isn't believed to have met with Bush and was never considered to be in the mix before the USC star hired Reebok adviser Mike Ornstein and agent Joel Segal of Worldwide Football Inc. as his representatives.

Repeated attempts to reach Segal and Bush were unsuccessful.

While it's unclear what official role Michaels played in New Era Sports, indications are that the company barely got off the ground – if at all. According to corporation filings in California, paperwork for New Era Sports & Entertainment was drawn up on Nov. 23, 2005, and records list the business address in Los Angeles under an attorney named Phillip M. Smith Jr.

Contacted late last week, Smith Jr. refused to talk about New Era Sports – even declining to give public details such as a phone number for the company, where the New Era offices were located or who was serving as the company's current president or manager.

Asked why he wouldn't provide such information, Smith ended the brief telephone conversation, saying, "That's really not an issue that I want to deal with." He has failed to return multiple follow-up messages left at his office.

Further attempts to identify New Era produced a single web page with a company logo (http://newerasports.tv/) that contains no active links to indicate where New Era is located, what services are provided or how the company could be contacted. Searches also produced the internet blogs of three self-proclaimed employees of New Era Sports. One such blog included the company logo of New Era and pictures of several NFL players. That blog was taken down shortly after Yahoo! Sports obtained a hard-copy of the page.

Contacted about his alleged meeting with Michaels, Caravantes declined to comment.

Michaels – who is a member of the Sycuan Indian Tribe and works as a business development officer for the tribe's development corporation – failed to return multiple phone calls and was unavailable when Yahoo! Sports visited his home on three occasions this weekend.

The Sycuan tribe, which owns a casino and resort and is engaged in a number of business enterprises in the San Diego area, denied any knowledge of Michaels' relationship with the Bush family.

"The tribe is not aware of his involvement," said spokesman Adam Day, who had been approved to speak for the Sycuan's tribal government. "Any involvement that he has in this situation is his personal involvement. It has no connection or correlation to the tribe, its businesses or Mike's employment by the tribal development corporation.

"What tribal members do on their own time is their own business. It's not the business of the tribe."

Back at the house on Apple Street on Saturday afternoon, the moving trucks had come and gone. A flier offering cleaning services for movers was hung on the front door, and all the shades had been drawn shut. Through a garage window, only a few empty cardboard boxes and straggling trinkets were visible.

Across the street, neighbor Grant Sitton could only shrug.

"I don't know, I guess it didn't work out," Sitton said. "Oh well. They have a big payday coming next week anyway."

MJZiggy
04-24-2006, 08:48 AM
So would THIS make the supplemental draft more interesting?? It would completely screw up the regular one, though. Or do they mean ineligible for last season and not for the NFL draft?

MadtownPacker
04-24-2006, 08:49 AM
At this point it was already decided he was the best college player. All they can do is take his trophy/stats and watch him get him million$. Im sure I could live with that and Bush probably feels the same.

The NCAA is the biggest hypocrite of all.

MJZiggy
04-24-2006, 08:50 AM
So they won't take his draft eligibility away?

Deputy Nutz
04-24-2006, 08:56 AM
The NCAA has nothing to do with the draft. That is why it is called the NFL Draft. NCAA has no governing body over the draft

MadtownPacker
04-24-2006, 08:57 AM
So they won't take his draft eligibility away?

The opposite, he would have to go pro if he had planned on going to USC this season and this came up.

Scott Campbell
04-24-2006, 09:00 AM
USC could possibly have to forfeit games, though that seems a reach at this point.

MJZiggy
04-24-2006, 09:02 AM
So they won't take his draft eligibility away?

The opposite, he would have to go pro if he had planned on going to USC this season and this came up.

Thanks. I was worried this would screw up the entire top of the first round.

FavreChild
04-24-2006, 09:28 AM
The NCAA is the biggest hypocrite of all.

No doubt. Yeah, it's against the rules and all, but considering that Reggie was exploited to generate millions of dollars for USC - and was prohibited from getting any of that money or even having a job to earn himself some spending money - I don't have a problem with his family getting a nice house to live in.

Don't even GET me started.

Fortunately, USC will get in trouble and not Reggie. Unfortunately, current/future students who had nothing to do with the situation will suffer. Real smart policy.

mraynrand
04-24-2006, 09:52 AM
All these problems would be solved if the #oddamned alumni would stop pretending to care about 'academic eccelence.' Aren't they ashamed when during the National Championship game the best Florida player sits there with his major in 'Leisure Studies' displayed as he shoots free throws?

The solution is obvious: Give the players four years of academic elgibility, to be redeemed at their discretion and pay them like pros. The guys who choose not to attend classes during their 4 years of athletic elgibility can then return to get an education after their careers or failed attempts at careers in the 'pros.' Then you don't have all this fraudulent behaviour or completely reasonable prohibited stuff like giving players discounts on shoes or paying some guy to fly his parents to see him. What a fu**ing joke the whole thing is and it's all because some idot fool alumni want to pretend that all these athletes are also students. Some are, but many are not. Why continue the charade?

Guiness
04-24-2006, 11:15 AM
Heh. Athlete Students. Not the other way around. I don't know what, but they do need to do something about that 5% or whatever that screw up the system.

The rest of the crew have it right Zig - this won't affect the NFL draft at all. IF he had been planning to return for his senior year, and this had come up, say in July, then they'd have a sup draft for him.

By the article, sounds like there were some shenanigans, eh? Him not even having a relationship with these guys now. I bet they're pissed.

edit: just saw that Caravantes used to practice with Seagal. So maybe Bush didn't turn his back on them. Another interesting note: as the article pointed out, his USC may have to forfeit their '05 victories - erasing Bush's performances. Does he have to give back the Heisman???

Little Whiskey
04-24-2006, 08:13 PM
DAMN, i thought this thread was about NASCAR CUP drivers driving in the Busch Series. :sad: