http://archive.columbiatribune.com/1996/nov/19961120spor08.htm
Memories might be all the Missouri men's basketball team will have of the 1994 NCAA Tournament.
The NCAA Executive Committee ruled Missouri will have to forfeit its tournament games, have its record deleted and repay nearly $97,000 of the revenue earned in the
tournament because former Tiger Jevon Crudup received benefits from sports agents that season.
``The NCAA acknowledged that we committed no violations,'' MU athletic director Joe Castiglione said. ``They even commended the way we handled things. Then the Executive Committee decides this. It's hard to understand.''
Nate Cebrun, a so-called middleman for sports agents, recruited Crudup and former Missouri-Kansas City player Tony Dumas to meet agents Michael Harrison and Raul Bey during the summer and fall of 1993.
Between Aug. 1993 and Jan. 1994, Crudup and his family received money from both agents.
Harrison, who Crudup later signed with, paid Crudup's overdue rent in August and wired him money to pay attorney's fees in Crudup's drunk driving case in September.