June 14, 2001
AUDIO: Tom Jurich, Rick Pitino and Muhammed Lasege react to the Kentucky Supreme Court ruling
Lasege Will Stay In School After Ruling Ends Basketball Career
By CHARLES WOLFE
Associated Press Writer
FRANKFORT, Ky. (AP) - An injunction that held the NCAA at bay and gave
eligibility to a Louisville basketball player was set aside Thursday by the
Kentucky Supreme Court.
In a 4-3 ruling, the justices said a lower court judge "clearly erred" in
issuing an injunction that allowed Muhammed Lasege, a recruit from Nigeria, to
play for the Cardinals.
The 6-foot-11 Lasege was declared ineligible by an NCAA committee because he
played briefly with a professional team in Russia. Lasege claimed the "pro"
experience was 13 games for a junior club team and that he played for room and
board, not money.
In its review, the university also concluded that Lasege was ineligible but
petitioned the NCAA for his reinstatement. The NCAA refused, and Lasege sued,
charging arbitrary treatment.
In December, Jefferson Circuit Judge Geoffrey Morris in Louisville granted
an injunction, and Lasege joined the Cardinals.
Morris said he doubted Lasege's Russian contracts were legal. He also barred
the NCAA from enforcing a bylaw under which a school could be penalized if an
athlete plays under a court order that later is overturned.
The state Court of Appeals upheld Morris' injunction. But in the majority
opinion Thursday, Justice James Keller said Lasege's chances of winning his
suit "are too remote to justify injunctive relief." The NCAA's action, far
from being arbitrary, was strongly supported by evidence, Keller wrote.
"The trial court wrongfully substituted its judgment for that of the NCAA
after it analyzed the evidence and reached a different conclusion as to
Lasege's intent to professionalize," Keller wrote. "Lasege unquestionably
signed contracts to play professional basketball and unquestionably accepted
benefits."
Lasege played in 21 games for the Cardinals, starting 16. He averaged 3.6
points and 3.3 rebounds per game, both of which were lower than his grade-point
average as an economics major - 3.9. Lasege was chosen this week to the
Conference-USA Commissioner's Honor Roll, reserved for athletes with GPAs of
3.75 or higher.