Friday 14 September 2012

The Morning Orange: Rob Moore, the Syracuse aide, says diva receivers are exception, not the rule.


His primary job is to school those athletes in his charge in the finer arts of route-running and pass-catching and, thus, chains-moving and touchdown-scoring. But Rob Moore, Syracuse University’s wide receivers coach, understands that his duties also include providing more than just football guidance.

Indeed, his task at SU is to make certain that his guys understand that good hands don’t necessarily make for good teammates . . . for good citizens . . . for good people.
Always a tough gig, mentoring becomes even more difficult when the mentees -- in Moore’s case, the Orange wideouts -- can look to the NFL and see . . . well, clowns.
Dez Bryant . . . Randy Moss . . . Chad Johnson . . . Terrell Owens. You get the drift.

“You know, when I came up in the league, the veterans really straightened the young players out,” said Moore, who played 10 seasons (1990-’99) for the New York Jets and Arizona Cardinals. “I was lucky. I had a great mentor in Freeman McNeil. He took me under his wing and taught me how to be a pro. The veterans took care of the young guys. I don’t think you have much of that today.

“The old veterans used to take pride in that. Now, with the way the collective bargaining agreement is set up, the NFL is a young man’s league. And I don’t think those guys are ready to help some of the (even) younger guys out. So, they let them shoot themselves in the foot, which means they’ll get to play a little bit longer.”
There may not be a direct connection to the misbehavior of certain NFL scalawags and impressionable college players, but it takes no great leap to imagine that the Bryants and Mosses and Johnsons and Owenses -- each somewhere between diva and cad -- do have their influence. And Moore thinks they’ve been aided and abetted by technology.
“The social media is really to blame for a lot of that,” he said. “You can act crazy and millions of people see it, and you become a celebrity. You get a TV show and all of those things. I think social media promotes that kind of behavior. There still are certain guys who carry themselves like pros and really do a great job of carrying the torch in the NFL and what the league really represents. But I think when you have the social media and you have guys who enjoy it a little too much, that’s what you get.”

Moore is in his third year on Doug Marrone’s staff and remains pretty much what he was as a star Syracuse receiver in 1987, ’88 and ’89 (during which he caught 106 passes for 2,122 yards and scored 22 touchdowns) and as a Pro Bowler with both the Jets (’94) and the Cardinals (’97). That is, a man with a certain dignity.
Oh, and with clear expectations, embedded in him by his parents, on how one should conduct one’s self.

“I do think the majority of these guys today get it,” said Moore, who'll be 44 at the end of the month. “But there are some who don’t. If I behaved like them, my mom would have shot me and my dad would probably have put his size-12 where nobody could see it. At the end of the day, at least when I played, I was always conscious about how my family would be represented. I think sometimes guys lose sight of that.”
His challenge is to see that the Orange wideouts don't.

Monday 10 September 2012

Accusations show players like Terrell Owens need more financial advocates in their corner.


As deals go, it’s neither new nor complex.
A sports agent lands a client and then recommends a financial adviser. Or vice versa. The relationship between the agent/adviser extends through the years, through the rosters. Maybe they recruit together. Maybe they just vouch for “their guy.” Maybe there are kickbacks. Maybe there is the expectation of future swaps.
However it goes down in the end a player, often poorly prepared by a college sports system focused on eligibility and not education, often from a family background short on savings accounts let alone mortgages and stock portfolios, thinks he has two sets of independent, trustworthy eyes on his money. Instead he has one.
Even if nobody aims to rip him off, to risk his money, the fiduciary responsibility is corrupted, the honesty lost, the motives open to question.
Whether this is what was pulled on Terrell Owens by his former agent, Drew Rosenhaus, and the financial adviser he recommended T.O. sign with, Jeff Rubin, is a matter for investigators and civil courts.
Yahoo! Sports reported Tuesday that the NFLPA is looking into the Rosenhaus-Rubin relationship after widespread player losses. Rosenhaus denied wrongdoing. Rubin declined comment.
Owens just knows he’s 38, perhaps headed toward bankruptcy and one of the reasons his approximately $80 million in NFL earnings has all but vanished is because bad deals and poor oversight from an agent-financial adviser team.
[Exclusive: Drew Rosenhaus scrutinized for relationship with financial adviser]
Or put it this way: how could Owens, late in his career, wind up throwing a couple of his last million dollars at a risky, rural Alabama bingo parlor project?
Then again, how could 34 other athletes, 18 of them Rosenhaus’ clients, get roped in for what bankruptcy filings indicate could be a combined $43.6 million?
“As a player without much understanding of the financial realm, we’re easy prey,” Owens told Yahoo! Sports. “How do you decipher who’s good and who’s bad? For someone to work as hard for their money as we do, to have it taken away by people we trust, who we find out later had other motives, it’s a sick feeling.”
As sympathetic victims go, T.O. isn’t much. He has four kids (and four monthly paternity payments) from four women, houses all over the place and a well-earned reputation as a high-maintenance star.
It’d be a bigger surprise if T.O. turned out to be a fiscally conservative saver, financially set for life rather than a guy nearly busted out less than two years from his last NFL reception. That much he gets.
“Some of this is my fault,” Owens says, “because I had ultimate responsibility for my finances.”
[Also: Donovan McNabb accepts reality, moves toward a broadcasting career]
Many fans will laugh at Owens’ situation. Or they’ll shake their head in disgust. Or perhaps use his failure to prop up their own self worth – they may never have been able to blow past a cornerback like T.O., but if they could they sure wouldn’t have blown through money like him.
That’s the fans’ right. They owe Owens nothing.
It’s so many others that owe if not him, then the next him. At least he’s standing up and explaining his own embarrassment, even speaking both formally and privately to young players about his experience.
And again, this isn’t a new deal, or one where suspicions center solely on Rosenhaus and Rubin. This is how the game is played, an industry with the same old agents and the same old financial advisers but an endless crop of brand new millionaires. It’s a world where access to the young, rich and naïve is coveted whether you’re a real estate agent or a jeweler or a luxury car dealer.
(Hint for a player: if your agent drives an outrageously expensive sports car, and recommends you buy from the same dealer, his “guy,” consider the possibility the agent is getting a deal on his ride in exchange for bringing in your full-price self. Really, just consider the possibility of it.)
“We recommend you use Jeff,” Owens said Rosenhaus had told him. “ 'He handles our clients. We trust him.’ I never knew who Jeff Rubin was before Drew introduced me to him. Drew was supposed to be the best agent.”
At one point, as Yahoo! Sports’ Jason Cole and Rand Getlin reported, Rosenhaus and Rubin shared at least 26 clients.
A 2009 Sports Illustrated study found that two years after retirement, “78 percent of former NFL players have gone bankrupt or are under financial stress because of joblessness or divorce.” It was just the latest in a long line of similar findings through the decades.
The NCAA focuses on “agents,” so they get the boldest of headlines and blackest of eyes. In truth, it’s just a catchall phrase. The traditional sports agent isn’t the only one recruiting unpaid college stars, it’s the financial guys too, or the workout gurus, or an old coach, or a guy from around the way back home.
And whomever wins the trust, whomever gets the first signature, can dictate what is often an overwhelmed young man’s next three or four hires. And you’d be a trusting soul to believe something that valuable comes for free.
Yahoo! Sports Radio: Jason Cole on Drew Rosenhaus not receiving money from bingo venture]
This is the challenge for the union, who fights for the players to make the money and ought to fight just as hard for them to keep it. This is the challenge for the NFL, always image conscious, for whom there can be no positive to generations of ex-players that are broke.
The Rosenhaus-Rubin relation is being investigated by the NFLPA and it needs to be a thorough and serious one. So too does the approach to educating players about the system. Not just when they show up in the league, but when they’re promising high school and college prospects who need to hear some kind of message of caution before they sign.
Every player needs not just an agent and a financial adviser but an attorney, a third party who makes teaming up less likely (although not impossible). They need a union that investigates conflicts of interest more rigorously.
They also need the NFLPA to work to bring in more reputable faces, proven financial advisers from major firms who manage money well but aren’t interested or comfortable in the current shark-infested cesspool of client recruitment. They need to create an environment where players can meet advisers outside of some champagne room.
Look, these cases are complicated. The reporting delves into bankruptcy courts and depositions and agent-on-agent crime, lots of shouting and finger-pointing. Owens, again, isn’t an easy poster child for sympathy. There is only so much attention a deal like this is going to get, here at the start of the season.
And, of course a scandal involving the media-connected Rosenhaus is going to be ignored by some outlets that rely on him for scoops. That’s also part of the game.
It’s the union and the league that needs to simplify things, slow it down and explain it to young players who aren’t well versed in finances.
It’s that tandem that has to care about what the fans won’t, because it just goes on and on and on, a silent drain on too many athletes.
It’s the NFLPA and the NFL together that need to police the problem and then pound on the heads of the current and future Terrell Owens’ until at least some of naïveté is worn away, until some of that easy prey becomes a bit more difficult to snag.