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Monday, April 16, 2012
FIU hires Pitino's son to replace Isiah Thomas - Warren Sapp filed for bankruptcy to avoid going to jail -Pens face a 3-0 mark
My Pens are down 3-0
Warren Sapp filed for bankruptcy to avoid going to jail
Warren Sapp says a bad construction deal at the worst possible time sent him spiraling into debt that led him to file for bankruptcy last week.
Sapp made his first comments on the situation to Tampa Bay Times columnist Gary Shelton and said he was motivated to file for bankruptcy with $6.7 million worth of debt because he didn’t want to go to jail.
“Do you think I wanted to declare bankruptcy?'' Sapp told Shelton. "Do you think if there was any other way possible I would have done it? It was either this or go to jail. Those were my choices.''
Sapp estimates he grossed about $60 million during his playing days, primarily with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and now he’s reduced to not much. It’s a little hard to believe one failed investment project, building homes in Fort Pierce, Fla., broke him. But that’s what Sapp explains.
Since, he’s become the butt of plenty of jokes. Sapp claims he’s lost not only his Super Bowl XXXVII ring but also his ring he earned as a member of a national championship team at the University of Miami. Losing one ring? OK. Losing two rings? Come on. They’re really been misplaced?
“"We were at the Super Bowl, and I thought I handed it to someone, and he said I didn't. I checked my luggage to see if it was in a side pocket. I checked my suit to see if I put it somewhere. What was I going to do? Yell and scream because I lost a ring?” Sapp said. “That ring didn't make me a champion. Derrick Brooks, Simeon Rice, Ronde Barber, Brian Kelly, Dwight Smith. That crew made me a champion.
“In my life, has anyone called me a liar? Why would I start now? Someone told me something that John Adams supposedly said. Facts are stubborn. I like facts.”
Prior to the bankruptcy news, Sapp never publicly asked for anyone to assist him in a search for his missing jewelry.
Sapp says he may be down financially but he’s not letting it keep him down.
“When you live like I do,'you know where you are and what you have to do,” he said. “I'm not at war with me. I promise you this. I will never go to jail.''
In legal documents, he did claim 240 pairs of Nike shoes and a painting of a naked woman as assets.
“I'm not an interior decorator,'' Sapp said. "Some designer put that on the wall, and I liked it. It's in my bedroom. By the time a woman gets there, she might be naked, too.”
OK. Unfortunately, Sapp looks a little bare right now as a man with public and real financial issues.
FIU hires Pitino's son to replace Isiah Thomas
Louisville assistant Richard Pitino, the son of Cardinals coach Rick Pitino, will replace Isiah Thomas as head coach at Florida International, CBS Sports Network reported, confirming the original report early today by AllKyHoops.com.
Thomas compiled a 26-65 record in three seasons at FIU, including 8-21 this season, yet his firing April 6 not only caught him by surprise, he said, but also led to the Golden Panthers team's making headlines last week when it walked out of an awards banquet in protest of the firing.
Richard Pitino was an assistant coach at Florida from 2009 to 2011. (AP Photo)CBS Sports Network’s John Rothstein tweeted his confirmation of Pitino’s hiring today, writing: “Sources confirm that Louisville Associate Head Coach Richard Pitino will be the next head coach at Florida International.” AllKyHoops.com's original report cited an unidentified "reliable source" as saying Pitino, 29, would be the new FIU coach.
Since beginning his coaching career in 2004, Pitino has been an assistant at Florida, Duquesne, Northeastern and College of Charleston, as well as working under his for a total of three seasons in two stints with the Cardinals. He has never been a head coach.
Pitino is a graduate of Providence College, where he was the men’s basketball team’s manager under then-head coach Tim Welsh.
Louisville reached the Final Four this March in New Orleans, where it lost to eventual national champion Kentucky.
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