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MajorMike
09-28-2007, 01:22 PM
Big 12 Football: Franchione stops selling A&M info

Web Posted: 09/27/2007 11:26 PM CDT

Brent Zwerneman
San Antonio Express-News

COLLEGE STATION — Texas A&M football coach Dennis Franchione said Thursday he has discontinued a secret e-mail newsletter sent to select boosters willing to pay $1,200 per year for team information that Franchione routinely has withheld from the public.

"I knew it was probably going to be controversial," Franchione said. "I certainly didn't mean for it to be that. When I knew you guys were starting to ask around a bit, I thought, 'Maybe we shouldn't do this.'"

The Express-News recently began inquiring about the newsletter operation after obtaining a copy through a third-party source. After being told of the newsletter, A&M athletic director Bill Byrne met with Franchione to express his concerns.

Byrne did not ask Franchione to stop the newsletter, A&M sources said, but strongly suggested that it would be the prudent thing to do. An A&M spokesman said Byrne was unavailable for comment.

In the newsletter, called "VIP Connection," Franchione discussed player injuries in detail and offered sometimes-critical assessments of his players.

The newsletter, it was learned, has been distributed the past three years to about a dozen subscribers, each of whom had to sign a letter of confidentiality to receive the newsletter.

Subscription proceeds, Franchione said, were used to underwrite his personal Web site, coachfran.com.

Since taking the A&M job after the 2002 season, Franchione has routinely sidestepped media questions about injuries — except those of a season-ending nature — often with the comment that it is not "our policy" to discuss them.

Yet, Franchione — through his personal assistant, Mike McKenzie, who wrote each newsletter — freely offered up personnel information to elite boosters willing to pay for it.

Two days before A&M's opener against Montana State earlier this month, six players were listed in the newsletter as "unavailable for action." The newsletter included each player's name and his injury.

"A seventh player, Roger Holland, is iffy," the newsletter said. "He recovered drastically from a mile (sic) concussion carried over from Sunday, but not fully."

The newsletter also provided a candid assessment of the Aggies' receiving corps.

"Privately, Coach told me last night that Earvin (Taylor) and Pierre (Brown) are very steady but with average speed," McKenzie wrote. "Kerry (Franks) has great speed, but (is) inconsistent in receiving."

McKenzie, who arrived with Franchione in late 2002, is a part-time athletic department employee. His other duties include ghostwriting Byrne's "Wednesday Weekly" column on A&M's athletic department site.

Franchione and McKenzie denied benefiting financially from the newsletter. Because of the confidentiality agreement, Franchione said, he doesn't believe any of the subscribers used the information for gambling.

"We asked them to sign something," Franchione said. "And for them not to do that."

He added: "Most of these people are tremendously loyal Aggies."

Many other major-college coaches, including Texas's Mack Brown, have their own Web site. Virginia Tech coach Frank Beamer, through his Web site, offers a "Coach's Club" membership for $39.95 per year. To members, Beamer's Web site promises "the best, up-to-date, daily practice and injury reports straight from Coach Beamer, right off the practice fields."

Unlike Beamer, Franchione kept his subscriber list small and the newsletter a secret.

"We just had people with an interest and that are close to the program," Franchione said.

McKenzie called the newsletter a "goodwill" gesture.

"The whole point of it was for them to be informed about the program, straight from the head coach," McKenzie said.

A consulting firm in Bryan hosts and operates the Web site, McKenzie said, and also handled subscriptions. Refunds have been offered, McKenzie said. He said he wasn't sure how many subscribers, if any, have asked for their money back.

McKenzie said that because the newsletter no longer was a secret it had to be discontinued.

"The private correspondence between a head coach and the individuals involved had been violated," McKenzie said. "It was compromised."

Franchione has been on the receiving end of heavy fan and media criticism since his team's poor performance in a 34-17 loss to Miami last week. The Aggies host Baylor on Saturday in both teams' Big 12 opener.

Extra Stout
09-28-2007, 02:12 PM
I'm guessing the prime reason Franchione hasn't been fired, despite his poor performance as coach, would be his aptitude in fellating wealthy Aggie boosters.

samikeyp
09-28-2007, 02:36 PM
"I knew it was probably going to be controversial," Franchione said. "I certainly didn't mean for it to be that. When I knew you guys were starting to ask around a bit, I thought, 'Maybe we shouldn't do this.'"

Maybe?

FromWayDowntown
09-28-2007, 03:14 PM
I thought part of the reason that schools don't release injury information concerning players grows out of federal privacy laws applicable to information about college students. If Fran and other coaches are selling information that wouldn't otherwise be available -- because its protected from dissemination by law -- isn't he violating the law?

degenerate_gambler
09-28-2007, 03:23 PM
I thought part of the reason that schools don't release injury information concerning players grows out of federal privacy laws applicable to information about college students. If Fran and other coaches are selling information that wouldn't otherwise be available -- because its protected from dissemination by law -- isn't he violating the law?


absolutely correct..


and the part about that select group not using the info for gambling purposes....riiiiiiiiiight.

Doug Collins
09-28-2007, 03:28 PM
It's Frantastic!!!! I'm sure this isn't an uncommon thing at other universities, but publicly acting like you're protecting your players by not releasing injury information and then secretly selling it for $1200 is ridiculous. If I was a player I'd be pretty pissed.

This won't help him keep his job. What an embarrassment.

inconvertible
09-28-2007, 03:34 PM
Its called gambling......look in to it.

BradLohaus
09-28-2007, 03:36 PM
Wow Franchione is such an idiot. And he always manages to take it to another level somehow.

Extra Stout
09-28-2007, 03:52 PM
Hey, parents, send your kids, the pride and joy of your family, first to go to college because of football, to Texas A&M, so Dennis Franchione can exploit them, and help his alumni buddies make some gambling money!

This is devaluing my diploma.

RonMexico
09-29-2007, 09:20 AM
Of course CaptMike would break this story

K-State Spur
09-29-2007, 10:43 AM
at best it's sleazy, at worst its illegal.