The father of Madison, Ala., point guard Jordan Howell said
Monday the
Howells will continue to appeal for a full release from the signed
commitment to Georgia if Howell would not be able to transfer to another
Southeastern Conference school.
Howell and another Georgia signee, forward Mohamed Abukar of Escondido,
Calif., have asked to be released from their scholarships as the result of
the current NCAA investigation of the Georgia program.
The confirmation of academic fraud and unethical conduct led Georgia
officials to pull the team out of postseason play and ultimately led to the
resignation and retirement of Coach Jim Harrick.
Felton, the former Western Kentucky coach hired Thursday by Georgia, already
has flown to California to meet with Abukar and met with Howell in
Huntsville, Ala., on Saturday.
Felton told the two signees they would not be held to their scholarships,
but Georgia compliance director Amy Chisholm said Felton was not told until
Monday of the SEC rule - bylaw 15.01.5d - that may make it difficult or
impossible for Howell or Abukar to sign with another team in the conference.
"At this time we do not choose to release them to any Southeastern
Conference schools,'' Chisholm said Monday.
The SEC bylaw states that a student-athlete who has received a scholarship
award but does not enter an institution can not receive financial aide at
another SEC school for two years.
For Abukar, who originally chose Georgia over Kansas and Arizona, the SEC
rule may be irrelevant. According to Howell's father, Rex Howell, the family
will continue to press for a full release. Howell reportedly has interest
two SEC schools, Florida and Alabama.
"It was my understanding they were going to release him and Coach Felton
was
going to expedite it so Jordan could attend any school he wanted to
attend,'' Rex Howell said Monday. "(The SEC bylaw) is news to us. If the
ruling is he can't go to an SEC school, if that is the case, we'll go on
with our appeal.''
On March 31, Howell filed an appeal with the NCAA's National Letter of
Intent Steering Committee, which oversees scholarship issues.
Rex Howell said his son could be released from his scholarship, recruited
again by Felton, and decide to stick with his decision to attend Georgia.
But Rex Howell said he does not expect that to happen.
"Number one, Coach Felton has never seen Jordan play,'' Howell said.
"He
knows nothing about him. You want to play for somebody who knows something
about you, even though that was not why Jordan asked to be released.''
Howell said Felton has requested Jordan Howell's high school game film.
The spring signing period begins Thursday, and Felton likely will have to do
some catch-up recruiting if he has to find replacements for Howell and
Abukar.
Felton's starting point guard at Western Kentucky, sophomore Patrick Sparks,
has said he may transfer to another school. He left open the possibility of
following Felton to Georgia. Sparks would have to sit out a year and would
have two years of eligibility beginning in 2004-05.
Sparks led Western Kentucky with 13.3 points and 5.9 assists per game this
season.
Sparks told the Louisville Courier-Journal Felton "was a big part of why I
came here. Georgia got a great steal on a coach.''
Joining Abukar and Howell in Georgia's class of signees are three front-line
players: 6-foot-8 Corey Gibbs of Stone Mountain, 6-foot-8 Marcus Jackson
of
Peoria, Ill., and 6-foot-10 Cassiano Matheue of Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Meanwhile, it appears Felton will have his full staff of assistant coaches
follow him from Western Kentucky. Felton's top assistant, Pete Herrmann, has
been interviewed but may not be a finalist to be Western Kentucky's new head
coach.