|
"Fulmer
says he won’t be distracted
by subpoena"
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP)—Tennessee
coach Phillip Fulmer says a
subpoena for his testimony in
a lawsuit stemming from a decade-old
Alabama recruiting scandal is
aimed at distracting him from
the upcoming season.
Fulmer was at the Southeastern
Conference’s football
media days in Birmingham, Ala.,
on Thursday when he got the
subpoena to provide testimony
for former Crimson Tide booster
Wendell Smith’s lawsuit
against the NCAA. |
“The last time this happened
we won the division with two freshman
quarterbacks,” he said in a
statement, referencing the 2004 season
when the Vols went 10-3 and won the
SEC East. “We won’t be
distracted.”
Fulmer chose not to attend the SEC’s
media days in 2004 after attorneys
for another booster who had filed
a similar lawsuit against the NCAA
threatened to serve him with a subpoena.
His attorney, Jeff Hagood, wouldn’t
specify how he would handle the subpoena,
other than to say on Friday “you
can rest assured we’ll deal
with it appropriately.”
Neither Smith’s Birmingham,
Ala., attorney, Brandon Blankenship,
nor the NCAA returned messages from
The Associated Press seeking comment.
Smith sued the NCAA in 2003, alleging
defamation and invasion of privacy
that hurt his reputation and his career.
The NCAA placed Alabama on probation
in February 2001 for recruiting violations,
including allegations that Smith,
a Chattanooga businessman, provided
$20,000, lodging and entertainment
as an inducement to prospect Kenny
Smith. The Smiths are not related.
Fulmer and some of his staff spoke
with an NCAA investigator in 2000
about various Alabama recruits and
the belief that some boosters were
buying top recruits.
His interviews were supposed to remain
secret but became exposed when the
NCAA handed over documents in a court
case against Crimson Tide another
booster, Logan Young.
“It’s sad that a few publicity
hunting lawyers in one of our sister
states want to keep open a chapter
of history that has long since been
closed and as far as I’m concerned
will stay closed,” Fulmer said.
Fulmer was ordered to appear to give
a deposition on Sept. 25 in Birmingham.
The date is two days before Tennessee
plays at Auburn; Blankenship said
Thursday they picked it because they
knew Fulmer would be in Alabama.
Blankenship said a colleague staked
out the media days hotel to serve
the subpoena.
“Because they can’t win
legally they are trying to play the
game in the press,” Fulmer said.
“I am more than a little P.O.’d
about any part of that.”
|