An elaborate FBI sting operation uncovered a stunning new corruption scandal in college athletics by using an undercover “cooperating witness” who was in the room for certain meetings and deals.
Now, the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York is bringing charges of bribery, wire fraud, and money laundering against assistant basketball coaches at four Division I universities—and a basketball executive at Adidas.
The schools are the University of Arizona, Auburn University, Oklahoma State University, and the University of Southern California. But the true center of the scandal is Louisville, though the school is not specifically named in the complaint.
The Adidas executive is James Gatto, head of global basketball marketing, though Adidas is referred to as “Company 1” in the complaint.
The assistant coaches named as defendants in the complaint are Emanuel Richardson of Arizona, Chuck Person of Auburn, Lamont Evans of Oklahoma State, and Tony Bland of USC.
Adidas is red hot, has its eyes on more college sponsorships
Certainly this news will rock NCAA college basketball to its core. Many are identifying it as a validation of what people have suspected for years: that behind closed doors, high profile high school athletes are given money or other gifts to lure them to commit to a certain school.
But this scandal is also particularly debilitating for Adidas.
It comes at a time when the brand is flying, and actively focusing on signing more big universities to long-term sponsorship deals.
The German sportswear giant is on an incredible hot streak in America right now, at last, after seeing its footwear and apparel market share decline in the States for five years straight, up until 2015.
Just this month, Adidas achieved a new milestone in sneakers: it regained the No. 2 spot in the US athletic footwear market, by share of dollars spent, over Nike-owned Jordan Brand. It marked a stunning comeback.
At the same time, Adidas has aggressively ramped up its signing of long-term sponsorship contracts with big universities. It has long-term, full-school apparel deals with Kansas and Indiana — both basketball powerhouses — and Nebraska, Mississippi State and Texas A&M — all big football schools.
This past summer, Adidas announced an unprecedented, long-term partnership with Arizona State University that will involve studying athlete health and science in a permanent, on-campus location. The school and the brand are calling it the “Global Sport Alliance,” and Adidas even lured a Wharton sports business professor, Ken Shropshire, away from Wharton to work at ASU as part of the “Global Sport Institute.” ASU switched from Nike to Adidas in 2014.