Clemson Just Got A Major Test In Its Tampering Fight

ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips calls for stronger measures against tampering as allegations between Clemson and Ole Miss highlight ongoing challenges in college sports.

ACC commissioner Jim Phillips isn’t pretending college football’s tampering problem is anything but real - and he wants people to stop acting like it’s business as usual.

Speaking July 15 at ACC Kickoff in Charlotte, North Carolina, Phillips said the sport needs consequences when schools cross the line.

"There has to be consequences, and until there's consequences, then we'll get similar behavior," Phillips said July 15 at ACC Kickoff in Charlotte, North Carolina.

The issue at the center of the latest flare-up is Clemson’s claim against Ole Miss involving linebacker Luke Ferrelli. Tigers coach Dabo Swinney accused Ole Miss and coach Pete Golding on Jan. 23 of tampering with Ferrelli, who had transferred from Cal to Clemson before later re-entering the portal and ending up at Ole Miss.

Ferrelli’s path was quick and messy: he transferred to Clemson on Jan. 7, went back into the portal on Jan. 16 and committed to Ole Miss on Jan. 22. Clemson says that sequence wasn’t clean, and the school has turned over evidence to the NCAA while waiting on a ruling.

Swinney said Golding was reaching out to Ferrelli even after he had enrolled at Clemson, joined classes and taken part in team workouts. According to Swinney, Golding texted him while he was in class and wrote, "I know you're signed.

What's the buyout?" along with a photo of a $1 million contract.

After Ferrelli told Swinney he was headed to Ole Miss, Swinney said he contacted Clemson athletic director Graham Neff and Phillips. Phillips then reached out to SEC commissioner Greg Sankey, and the matter was sent to the NCAA.

Phillips made clear he believes public accountability matters, and he’d like to see more coaches and schools do what Swinney did by bringing these situations into the open.

"The best way to hold people accountable is for others to bring forward those types of situations, cases and specific information about what has happened with a particular student-athlete or a particular instance," Phillips said.

He also said the NCAA and the College Sports Commission need to step up.

"Tampering is serious, and whether it's in the league or nationally, those accusations, those are serious things that people are looking at and certainly have to be dealt with," Phillips said.

Golding, for his part, hasn’t sounded rattled by the NCAA’s review. Speaking May 27 at the SEC spring meetings, he downplayed the attention around the case.

"I think a lot of things make headlines," Golding said May 27 at the SEC spring meetings. "There's a lot more people involved that everybody might not know. I'm not gonna sit up here and say whatever we did or we didn't do, was it right or was it wrong?

"But, you know, when you go through what we went through (with tampering), and what you're seeing day-in and day-out, some things you feel like shouldn't matter that, you know, they're making a big deal about."

USA TODAY Sports also reported that Golding told the NCAA he would "expose rampant tampering in the sport" if he is sanctioned. When asked whether he threatened the NCAA, Golding declined to comment.

He also pushed back on the idea that tampering is unique to college football.

"It's a problem in every sport," Golding said. "They're talking about tampering, you don't think coaches get tampered with?

You don't think athletic directors meet with head coaches? I mean, we're talking about this new (Lane) Kiffin (tampering) rule."

Tampering, under NCAA rules, means contact with players who are already on another team. NCAA bylaw 13.1.1.4 says an athletics staff member or other representative of a school’s athletics interests cannot communicate or make contact with a student-athlete at another NCAA Division I school, or anyone associated with that athlete, without first going through the notification of transfer process.

For Division II, Division III and NAIA schools, the rule says schools must follow the applicable division or NAIA contact rules before reaching out.

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