An investigation is underway into the recruitment practices preceding one of the best years ever for Santa Barbara City College’s men’s football team, which captured the co-championship of the new American Pacific Conference with a six-game winning streak at the end of the 2008 football season.
On October 30, 2008, a month and a half before the Vaqueros’ final victorious game, the college notified its athletic faculty and staff that it had reported alleged violations of recruitment rules to the California Community College Athletic Association’s Commission on Athletics (COA). The letter to staff, signed by SBCC President Andreea Serban, did not specify what the allegations were. It did direct staff not to respond to inquiries, noting that “speculation and gossip can interfere with the ability of the college to fully and fairly deal with these allegations and would be disruptive to our programs.” Serban herself declined to comment for this story, referring questions to the public information office, which made a brief statement saying that SBCC “takes this kind of thing very seriously.”
An anonymous source said the allegations involve the efforts of new head football coach Craig Moropoulos, his staff, and school supporters to grease the skids for high school football standouts recruited from the greater Los Angeles area, by finding them apartments and delivering the rental applications they faxed to the school. This could violate COA rules that bar schools from offering inducements to student athletes, including “the obtaining, securing, or soliciting of housing for a prospect/student athlete that is not available to all students at the community college.”
Among other firsts, this was the first year that SBCC, under Moropoulos’s leadership, aggressively recruited in the Los Angeles area. As a result, the college started its summer practice sessions with 150 men - an unprecedented number of potential players. SBCC is allowed to recruit in Los Angeles because its pool of candidates is otherwise small compared to other schools, which can only recruit in contiguous districts.
One of the biggest obstacles to recruiting athletes from distant areas, however, is their difficulty in finding housing in Santa Barbara, coupled with the COA’s ban. SBCC’s football coaches tried to secure it for them, according to the anonymous source, but the huge turnout of hopeful players resulted in scores of disappointed athletes-who never got onto the field or even onto the 99-man roster due to the heavy competition-as well as overcrowding and bounced rent checks. Athletes were reportedly put up by the dozen in coaches’ apartments. Estimates of how many ultimately returned to Los Angeles range from 20 percent to more than half. (This does not necessarily bode ill for the Vaqueros’ 2009 season, however: A player who leaves before completing a full year at a school is ineligible to play at another community college the following year, according to COA.)
In one alleged instance, in order to provide housing for some of the football team’s hand-picked recruits, a property manager with ties to the school evicted the existing tenants from a complex consisting of a recently refurbished house with three new apartments in the back, at 130 S. Alisos St. SBCC Boosters President Vic Batastini denied that the college or boosters did anything improper, though he said that the property manager for the complex did approach him with an interest in providing housing for student athletes. Batastini said he referred him to the college’s housing office, which provides lists of apartments renting to students. Rob Kooyman, owner of Meridian Group, which manages the property on behalf of Saint George and Associates, did not return calls for comment. “He just wanted to help the athletes out,” said Batastini. “He had a lot of trouble [at the complex] and he wanted to do something else with it.” Batastini said it is not uncommon for people to come tell him they want to rent a room to a student athlete; he said he simply turns their information over to the housing office.
This reporter stopped by at the Alisos Street address in February and encountered several football players in residence who declined to comment, except for one who said that Coach Moropoulos had merely advised him to “contact Meridian.” The two apartments not filled by football players were occupied by families who had moved in around the first of the year.
(The original tenants could not be found. Sources said they resisted the evictions. The Housing Mediation Task Force, which plays a role in resolving many landlord-tenant disputes, has confidentiality rules forbidding identification of people coming for mediation or consultation.)
Trayone Harris, star running back for the Vaqueros in 2008, recruited out of University High School in Los Angeles, said he returned home after the season was over because of the housing situation in Santa Barbara. He complained that his rent at the Cliff House Apartments was suddenly raised by $200 in October. Del Monte Property Management, which manages those apartments, declined to comment.
Most coaches reached for comment at other colleges in the American Pacific Conference seemed to have no gripe against Moropoulos’s recruitment of players from, as one put it, their own back yard. “Coach Moropoulos did a great job with those players,” said Jimmy Sims, who retired last year as head football coach at Los Angeles Valley Community College. “They beat us 55-52. If there’s an investigation going on that’s one thing, but I’d prefer not to be part of maligning a coach, especially if it’s [coming from] players. They know Santa Barbara’s expensive, I tell them that myself. As far as I’m concerned this is a recruiting war and may the best man win when we play each other.”
Moropoulos could not be reached for comment. SBCC Athletic Director Mike Warren expressed confidence that the investigation being conducted by Walter Johnson - who also conducted the investigation that recently resulted in Ventura Community College coaches being charged with misrepresenting out-of-state athletes as California residents - would exonerate SBCC of wrongdoing.



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Any unethical behavior by Moropoulus would not surprise me in the least.
m2457 (anonymous profile)
March 19, 2009 at 9:07 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Harris went back to LA after football season. Why the hell is SBCC recruiting in LA for football players who have no interest in an education. Us taxpayers are paying for CITY college so let them use local talent. Who cares if SBCC has a winning season? Who cares that it has a football team?
SezMe (anonymous profile)
March 20, 2009 at 12:57 a.m. (Suggest removal)
My friend was one of the families that were displaced by the SBCC football team players who ended up occupying the 130 S Alisos street residence. Before the evictions that complex was occupied by families, who had lived there for years. At least two of the displaced families had a really hard time finding alternate living arrengements. I know that SBCC was contacted by tenents to ask why they would displace families to house football players. However, no one seemed to have a response. My friend, a single mother asked for aditional time to find other housing and St George denied the request, leaving her and the other families homeless for over a month. Not only did they throw her out on the street to accomidate SBCC players they also tried to charge her for repairs that were not done in order to keep her security deposit.(yes, we have pictures) All the while, SBCC coaches were bring prospective players and their families over to the complex to show them where they would be living. Not only did this violate recruitment rules, it also violated the families involved
Thank You Santa Barbara Independent for exposing this injustice.
ldt5662 (anonymous profile)
March 20, 2009 at 10:17 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Dear Idt5662,
There is a group formed to support all the people involved. Families were hurt , children were hurt and student/athletes were hurt. We have had a difficult time reaching the former tenants who were evicted. We already know coaches brought players by the 130 S. Alisos months before the season started. This contradicts comments made by A.D. who is refusing to meet with our group. We want to confirm the eviction dates were set to ensure football players could move into apartments when the season started. Our group would like to confirm with tenants when they were evicted and who they were. We plan to set up a fund to help all individuals. If President Serban is going to support the treatment of Santa Barbara citizens in this manner then we will continue our mission. Could you please ask the evicted tenants to email us! fatherfootball77@yahoo.com. Please know we will prove all the allegations and force the football program to admit to the wrongdoings. We also will attempt to raise funds for all the individuals affected.
Concern Citizens
allan (anonymous profile)
March 20, 2009 at 1:08 p.m. (Suggest removal)
S.B.C.C in the WRONG!
sandi (anonymous profile)
March 20, 2009 at 2:18 p.m. (Suggest removal)
President SERBAN shame on YOU!
sandi (anonymous profile)
March 20, 2009 at 2:48 p.m. (Suggest removal)
"Coach Moropoulos did a great job with those players," ..."They beat us 55-52."
Sounds to me like they both did a crappy job of teaching defense. Just another "Old Boys Club" covering each other's butt.
The coach and the president should be fired.
Neither are working in the interest of the community. They are both just interested in padding their wallets just like the developers and the public employee unions. They could give a damm how they screw up the city as long as they get paid big.
sa1 (anonymous profile)
March 22, 2009 at 12:12 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Just check around, when Moropoulos was at Santa Barbara High School, he was a member of the "Old Boys Club." Why SB can't get rid of him as a coach is amazing. Obviously someone likes him, but it is not my family who has been in SB for many generations.
m2457 (anonymous profile)
March 22, 2009 at 3:14 p.m. (Suggest removal)
It is really sad for me to see people bad mouthing Coach Moropoulos. He is an amazing coach and a really great person, speaking as someone who has actually been an athlete around him and seen his coaching technique.
p.s. Coach's get paid pennies for high school sports, so obviously all that time he was coaching at Santa Barbara High obviously wasn't to pad his wallet. He actually cares about his players which is more than I can say for alot of coach's
jreo (anonymous profile)
March 22, 2009 at 4:27 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Actually I'm not family, just a past athlete at SBHS.
jreo (anonymous profile)
March 24, 2009 at 9:34 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I wouldn't doubt if this was all one big lie. Coach Moropolous is a Great Coach, he has a passion for what he does!
beingReal (anonymous profile)
April 8, 2009 at 7:02 p.m. (Suggest removal)