A continuing trial into corruption in NCAA basketball took a turn into college football Tuesday, when a former Pittsburgh financial adviser said he paid players from several major football programs, including Pitt and Penn State.
Marty Blazer, an informant for federal investigators into their probe of payments made to college basketball players, testified that between 2010 and 2014 he paid anywhere between several hundred to several thousand dollars to football players from Pitt, Penn State, Alabama, Michigan, North Carolina and Northwestern, according to reports from the trial from the New York Times’ Adam Zagoria and Yahoo Sports’ Dan Wetzel.
Today from the college basketball bribery trial government witness Marty Blazer said between 2010-14 he paid from several hundred to several thousand dollars to FOOTBALL players from:PittPenn StMichigan Notre DameNorthwesternUNCAlabama
— Adam Zagoria (@AdamZagoria) April 23, 2019
Blazer’s testimony for the government implicated former Penn State football star Aaron Maybin. Per reports from Wetzel, Blazer said a Penn State football assistant asked him to pay a player’s father $10,000 so his son wouldn’t enter the 2009 NFL Draft. The son entered the draft anyway and was selected 11th overall by the Buffalo Bills, with his father later repaying the $10,000.
Maybin, selected 11th by the Bills in 2009, played two seasons for Buffalo and two for the New York Jets.
College basketball fraud trial took unexpected turn to college football, including Joe Paterno’s Penn State program. Former financial adviser Marty Blazer, testifying for government, said in 2009 he had a NFL player as a client whose father ...— Dan Wetzel (@DanWetzel) April 23, 2019
was a Penn State assistant. Said that assistant asked him to pay a Penn State player’s father $10,000 so player would stay at PSU and not enter NFL Draft. Blazer said he did it ...— Dan Wetzel (@DanWetzel) April 23, 2019
Blazer said the player wound up entering 2009 NFL draft anyway and was No. 11 pick overall. Father repaid the $10,000. Old news but an assistant arranging such a deal would be major violation at a program that took pride in complete NCAA compliance ...— Dan Wetzel (@DanWetzel) April 23, 2019
Blazer also testified that between 2000-2013 he paid football players at Penn State, Pitt, Notre Dame, Michigan, Alabama and North Carolina in hopes he would become their financial advisor ...— Dan Wetzel (@DanWetzel) April 23, 2019
Larry Johnson Sr. to Yahoo Sports on Marty Blazer's allegation of paying a player at Penn State: "That is not accurate at all. That is absolutely false. I would never, ever ask anybody to do that. That is not me ..." @YahooForde— Dan Wetzel (@DanWetzel) April 23, 2019
No players were referenced by name and former Penn State assistant Larry Johnson Sr. denied the accusations, Wetzel reported.
Blazer is testifying for the government in the trial of Merl Code, a former shoe company consultant, and Christian Dawkins, an aspiring agent. The trial is looking into alleged bribes paid to NCAA basketball assistant coaches for steering top players to Dawkins’ company.
Code and Dawkins previously were convicted and sentenced to six months in prison for their roles in funneling money to top recruits and their families to play for Adidas-sponsored basketball schools. Adidas executive James Gatto also was convicted in the case.
Assistant basketball coaches at several schools, including Arizona, Auburn, Creighton, Louisville, Oklahoma State, TCU and USC were fired in the wake of the ongoing investigation, as was former Louisville coach Rick Pitino.
Arizona coach Sean Miller, a Blackhawk native and former Pitt basketball star, was accused of paying players and was expected to testify in the trial, but judge Edgardo Ramos ruled last week he wouldn’t have to take the witness stand.
Blazer faces 67 years in prison after pleading guilty to two counts of wire fraud and one each of aggravated identity theft, securities fraud and lying to the Securities and Exchange Commission in relation to a Ponzi scheme in which he was accused of taking millions of dollars from clients to invest in two movies.
Former Pitt offensive lineman Jason Pinkston, a Baldwin graduate who played for the Panthers from 2007-10, called Blazer a “clown” on Twitter.
Marty Blazer is a clown lol— Jason Pinkston (@JasonPinkstonOL) April 23, 2019
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