Don't know what the outcome will be. His house of cards may come crumbling down. He may have done what he was supposed to do. The issue just isn't the coach. It's university police, local police, local prosecutors, university officials and on up and down the line. The days of cover up are probably over.
If I hadn't seen some sort of similar things involving criminal charges and cronyism as well as just plain out cronyism, I would have likely not believed a lot of it. It's just pervasive everywhere. Donors have a lot of pull. Politicians have a lot of pull. Money and relationships have a lot of value with universities which is sort of the opposite of what we like to believe about them. It's even more pervasive that people think. At most universities, they may announce a 3 percent pay increase. But the pay increases may to buddies (say 5 percent) while others get 1 percent. This really come into play on pensions. At the end of careers, mediocre employees can skyrocket to higher positions to pad the retirement while those pulling the load get peanuts. Sort of having each others backs if you have the right crony in position.
I know some of you get upset about wondering why in the hell the AD is giving these types of contracts, I've seen it all. A local prof who made about 90K most of his career on average blew threw becoming a Dean, Chancellor and system Pres. Oh by the way as Dean he gave a 60K job to the inept brother on a board of regents member who wanted the ineptness out of the family business. It's just the way it works.
Sorry Thompson, I have my reasons for looking funny at the Doyle of the Year Award.