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BigJerm7
3/19/2011, 01:54 PM
http://sports.espn.go.com/ncf/news/story?id=6236194

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. -- Fiesta Bowl officials are bracing for what could be a scathing report from an internal investigation of the event's financial and political dealings, some of which may have skirted, or even broken, state and federal law.

The report, which could come out as soon as next week, is the culmination of a probe by a three-member panel that includes two Fiesta Bowl board members and a retired Arizona Supreme Court justice.

Fiesta Bowl president and CEO John Junker, who in two decades directed the once-upstart bowl to the land of the BCS giants, was placed on paid administrative last month as the internal examination proceeded.

The investigation is separate from a state attorney general's probe into possible criminal violations involving political contributions by Fiesta Bowl employees.

Bowl officials have indicated the internal report would be made public, except for any portions that the attorney general's staff wants to remain private because of the ongoing criminal matter.

The affable, ever-present face of the bowl for two decades, Junker faces dismissal, depending on the board's interpretation of the report's conclusions.

Junker, who makes about $600,000 a year, took a noticeably lower profile this year, even though the Fiesta Bowl was responsible for one of the most highly anticipated games in bowl history, the BCS championship matchup of unbeatens Auburn and Oregon.

His administrative leave came amid a series of announcements that hinted at the seriousness with which the board of directors -- a group that long had served as a figurehead body, ceding major decisions to Junker -- is taking its situation.

A week before the move on Junker, the Fiesta Bowl hired prominent Southern California attorney Nathan Hotchman, whose specialty is representing people and organizations involved in criminal negotiations.

The bowl also announced it no longer would give free game tickets to members of the Arizona Legislature. It has severed ties with a lobbying firm and a security consultant, each of whom had been paid hundreds of thousands of dollars by the bowl.

Persistent reporting by The Arizona Republic pushed the bowl into its exercise of self-criticism. The newspaper first reported in December 2009 that 14 current and former bowl employees said they had been encouraged to make contributions to certain politicians and were reimbursed the funds. If true, that would be a violation of state and federal campaign finance laws.

The bowl hired former state attorney general Grant Woods to look into the allegations. Woods' review found "no credible evidence that the bowl's management engaged in any type of illegal or unethical conduct."

Now however, Woods -- a Republican who is considering a run for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by the retiring Jon Kyl -- has said he believes some of those who spoke to him might not have told the truth.

"Key people may have lied to me," Woods told The Republic last month. "It's one thing not to catch it, but it's another thing if they were purposely trying for me not to find out."

The Associated Press obtained the Fiesta Bowl tax forms for 2009, which included the eyebrow-raising figures that helped prompt the bowl's board to get serious about its self-examination.

Chief among them were $508,776 in payments to Blue Steel Consulting, a security consulting firm operated as a side job by a Maricopa County sheriff's lieutenant. The bowl also paid $286,206 to Husk Brothers, a lobbying firm, even though there was nothing before the Legislature that would have any significant impact on the bowl's activities.

For now, the bowl's status as one of the four BCS events is secure because three years remain on its contract. After that, the Fiesta could face a challenge from the Cotton Bowl, which has long sought a return to major bowl status and has a new stadium -- Cowboys Stadium, in Arlington -- to support its cause.

jumperstop
3/19/2011, 02:05 PM
Please let them fail, I would rather the Big 12 be tied in to a BCS Cotton Bowl. Maybe then we could play a bowl or especially a NCG in our backyard instead of the other teams. Not that I'm a huge fan of Jerry world.

BigJerm7
3/19/2011, 02:10 PM
Agreed. Maybe the Super Bowl fiasco was a way to expose the flaws. A close BCS game for OU would be pretty sweet.

StoopTroup
3/19/2011, 02:24 PM
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StoopTroup
3/19/2011, 02:25 PM
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StoopTroup
3/19/2011, 02:27 PM
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MamaMia
3/19/2011, 02:37 PM
Interesting

HBick
3/19/2011, 02:43 PM
Please, god, let the Fiesta Bowl fail. They're only relevant because they made an agreement in the 80s with two schools who luckily ended up undefeated. They went around the system then, and now they system will hopefully get them. Then the Big 12 can renegotiate and end up in Dallas.

As someone else said, and I agree, not a huge fan of Jerry's World, but having a BCS game in your backyard would be a huge boost

StoopTroup
3/19/2011, 03:07 PM
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StoopTroup
3/19/2011, 03:09 PM
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Flagstaffsooner
3/19/2011, 03:19 PM
Ah yes, scenic Dallas. What a place to spend the holidays.:rolleyes:

BigJerm7
3/19/2011, 03:33 PM
Ah yes, scenic Dallas. What a place to spend the holidays.:rolleyes:

Yeah because we all have the time and money to blow to go to Phoenix. Dallas is a hell of a lot cheaper to make a game.

Tailwind
3/19/2011, 03:40 PM
Not for everyone.

Leroy Lizard
3/19/2011, 03:46 PM
Somewhere in there they forgot two things: (1) they worked for a non-profit and (2) the mission of the non-profit is not to help elect officials.

Sheeez!

I live relatively close to the Fiesta Bowl, but I would rather see the Cotton Bowl get the BCS nod if this is how the bowl committee sees their roles.

cccasooner2
3/19/2011, 03:47 PM
Yeah because we all have the time and money to blow to go to Phoenix. Dallas is a hell of a lot cheaper to make a game.

I vote for Norman. Let's have a fiesta and bring the bucks home.

yermom
3/19/2011, 05:03 PM
Ah yes, scenic Dallas. What a place to spend the holidays.:rolleyes:

while i agree, most of the Big 12 is WAY closer to Dallas

and it was pretty darn cold there this year :D

i hate Jerry World, but being like 800 miles closer makes me forget about that a little bit

kelloggOUballa
3/19/2011, 05:42 PM
The Cotton Bowl will be a BCS Bowl in due time, even if it means the elimination of the two games at one site system.

pphilfran
3/19/2011, 05:51 PM
The Cotton Bowl will be a BCS Bowl in due time, even if it means the elimination of the two games at one site system.

Yep, next contract...

Soonerfan88
3/19/2011, 05:56 PM
My first preference is getting the Orange Bowl back. Since that seems unlikely at this point, I would rather go to Phoenix than Dallas. I already make one trip to Dallas per year and am soooo not a fan of Jerry World.

However, my biggest complaint applies to every bowl -- the entire ticket policy. So many tickets are provided free to corporations they have to raise the price on the rest to outrageous levels. Participating schools should have their entire allotment between the 20's unless the band needs to be in the endzone for logistic reasons. If pricing/seat selection were better, I wouldn't be against some ticket minimum for the schools but it is completely unreasonable right now.

AlbqSooner
3/19/2011, 06:53 PM
The Tohono O'odham Nation will be chuckling at this news. They are a tribe attempting to locate a casino on a part of their reservation adjacent to Glendale. Glendale is fighting them every step. The residents of Glendale (read certain fiscally and politically interested parties) have argued, among other things, that a casino is not consistent with the Fiesta Bowl and other existing entertainment activities in Glendale.

goingoneight
3/19/2011, 09:55 PM
IOW, they don't want fans going to watch the games at a nearby casino's big *** watch party when they have seats to fill in the stadium.

Jacie
3/20/2011, 12:19 PM
Burn, baby, burn!