SEC Championship
SEC Championship
Updated: Friday, 30 Oct 2009, 4:34 PM CDT
Published : Friday, 30 Oct 2009, 4:34 PM CDT
NEW YORK (AP) - Publicly griping about officials in the Southeastern Conference
just got a lot more costly for Lane Kiffin and the rest of the
league's coaches.
After three SEC coaches in two weeks, including Tennessee's
Kiffin, received reprimands for ripping officials, the conference
has decided that future punishment for similar antics will be fines
and suspensions.
A memorandum was sent by the league office on Friday to every
school making them aware of the change, which is effective
immediately.
Commissioner Mike Slive, in his eighth season with the
conference, was given full discretion by the league's athletic
directors and presidents to hand out the punishment. He will
determine the amount of fines and lengths of suspensions on a
case-by-case basis.
"On rare occasions over the last seven years there were
several private reprimands and that took care of the matter," Slive
told the AP in a telephone interview. "On occasion there were
public reprimands and that took care of it. It became clear to me
after last week that I was no longer interested in reprimands."We
will go right to suspensions and fines."
The Big 12, Big Ten, ACC, Pac-10 and Mountain West
conferences also use public reprimands, fines and suspensions as
penalties for coaches who are publicly critical of officiating.
The SEC's officiating, and public complaints by a few coaches
about it, has drawn plenty of unwanted attention to Slive's
conference.
Last week, an officiating crew was suspended after it called
penalties the league said were not supported by video evidence in
the LSU-Georgia game Oct. 3 and the Arkansas-Florida game Oct. 17.
The SEC publicly announced the suspensions, an unprecedented move
by the conference.
Slive said that while he believes the SEC officiating has
been good this season, the unusual circumstances with that one crew
convinced him to go public with the punishment.
"It had to do with a very unusual confluence of events that
we have not seen before and I doubt we will see again, in that we
had two calls by a crew over a relatively short period of time that
the video evidence did not support," Slive said. "And one of the
rules in play was the excessive celebration rule that has long been
a subject of public debate.
"Given all that, we felt it was important to say publicly the
discipline we had imposed. That is not something we expect to have
to do again."
The day after the crew was suspended, Arkansas coach Bobby
Petrino was reprimanded by Slive for making critical statements
about officiating in the Razorbacks' 23-20 loss at Florida.
Then on Sunday, Kiffin and Mississippi State's Dan Mullen each
went off on the officiating in their Saturday games. Kiffin's
Volunteers lost 12-10 at Alabama and Mullen's Bulldogs lost 29-19
to Florida in Starkville, Miss.
The SEC responded Monday by reprimanding both coaches for
violating league ethics rules. The league made no public
admonishment of the calls that Kiffin and Mullen complained about.
Kiffin made it clear Sunday that he was not worried about
getting a reprimand for his comments: "I'm sure we'll get one of
those letters that really means nothing as Bobby got last week, but
Florida and Alabama live on."
Tennessee spokeswoman Tiffany Carpenter said Friday that
Kiffin and athletic director Mike Hamilton would not comment on the
SEC's stiffer penalties.
"We fully expect and anticipate that we will have the full
cooperation of our coaches from this day forward," Slive said.
Kiffin received his first reprimand in February for accusing
Florida coach Urban Meyer of violating recruiting rules.
Kiffin and Meyer tossed a few verbal jabs at each other in
the following months and South Carolina coach Steve Spurrier even
weighed in about Kiffin at one point. Slive twice this year has
talked to Meyer and Kiffin about all the chatter.
Slive said he is always available to speak to coaches about
concerns about officiating, but he does not feel the need to speak
to any coaches individually on the subject.
"I think the memo is crystal clear," Slive said. "It needs no
embellishment."