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Could be worse for Calhoun, Huskies
UConn NCAA Basketball Heal
Connecticut basketball head coach Jim Calhoun listens at a news conference in Storrs, Conn. Friday. The university says the NCAA has found eight violations in the school's men's basketball program. - photo by Associated Press

On balance, it hasn't been a bad month for Jim Calhoun.
    Certainly better than the one that two of his former assistants are having. They were dumped from the University of Connecticut basketball program under the cloud of an NCAA investigation and will likely now never have meaningful careers in their chosen field.
    Better, perhaps, than many of his former players, who tend to leave UConn without degrees and with no appreciable job skills other than dribbling a basketball.
    Calhoun? Well, his reputation was damaged and he did have to spend part of Friday at a press conference he surely found painful. But he had a long Memorial Day weekend to get over it, and the apologists above him were busy protecting their coach at all costs.
    If he needed any more solace, he didn't have to look far. The extra $13 million UConn so generously gave him earlier this month should heal a lot of wounds, both real and imagined.
    Calhoun was already the highest paid state employee in Connecticut even before the new contract fell into his lap. But having to pass out basketballs and deal with the hassles of the NCAA investigation apparently prompted his bosses to give him a new pact that pays him $2.6 million a year.
    That something is seriously amiss in college basketball should come as no big surprise. The number of millionaire coaches rises every year, while the graduation rates of the athletes who toil for nothing but books and meal money barely budge.
    This time it's about a coach in Connecticut whose talents helped win two NCAA championships. Next time it may be about a coach in Kentucky with a knack of getting out of town at just the right time.
    The sport, at its upper reaches, is a cesspool, filled with coaches so desperate for talent that they begin recruiting kids barely out of grade school. The coach who proves most successful in the art of teenage persuasion is usually rewarded with the biggest contract, so they're continually on the prowl.
    There's so little oversight that someone has to practically hand deliver evidence to the NCAA to get them to look into violations. Even then, NCAA investigators are fixated on the minutiae of phone calls and texts and meals while paying no attention to a bigger picture that grows uglier by the day.
    They came down on UConn on Friday, if only because a Yahoo! Sports report last year about the recruiting of Nate Miles was too detailed to ignore. The NCAA alleged eight violations, including a slap on the wrist to Calhoun for failing to promote an atmosphere of compliance.
    That was enough to send two assistants packing, and it may be enough to cost the Huskies a scholarship or two. It wasn't, however, enough to cost the man at the helm of the program anything more than a few awkward moments at a press conference.
    If anything, it seems like Calhoun is being rewarded. Why else, with the school fully aware of the coming NCAA charges, would it tear up the coach's existing contract just a few weeks ago and give him an extension that will pay him $13 million?
    "The NCAA review never played into these conversations," UConn athletic director Jeff Hathaway said when announcing the new contract.
    If Calhoun is responsible for two national titles on his watch, though, he's responsible for everything else. While the two assistants are convenient scapegoats, it's hard to imagine that the control freak of a coach had no idea what was going on when he ordered his people to go after one of the nation's top recruits.
    But there's a bigger issue here. While the NCAA is pursuing sanctions at UConn, it has done nothing while a coaching oligarchy intent on extracting as many millions as possible for its members has basically taken over the sport.
    They move around from school to school, hiring themselves out to the highest bidder. Often, as in the case of Kentucky's John Calipari, they leave behind a mess that their former employer has to clean up.
    Only in rare instances are any of them held accountable, whether for recruiting violations or the shameful graduation rate of many of their unpaid workers.
    Calhoun has gotten rich while staying put, but he's yet another example of a broken system propped up by billions of dollars in television money. He's celebrated in the state for his program's success on the court, but the graduation rate of his players is so abysmal that UConn was forced to insert a clause in his new contract for a $100,000 penalty if the school loses a scholarship because of poor academics.
    Chump change for this millionaire. Hardly enough to stay up nights worrying about it.
    Same goes for the NCAA allegations.
    It's just his program, not his problem.

    Tim Dahlberg is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press.