“The entire process, I was like dang, because I drive a car, a nice car, I really felt like they were discriminating. I have a degree why can’t I afford a car? I’m a grown man with a car that I let my brother drive sometimes. And it was my car,” Spencer Moncrief told SB Nation. Through a timeline pieced together by SB Nation, it seemed as if Sheridan was bluffing, trying to see if Spencer Moncrief would break. What the Moncriefs didn’t know was that Sheridan’s theory of Spencer being in two places in the same time had been debunked a month prior by the bank itself. “They hung up my brother’s career for that.” “To prove I owned my car, basically,” Spencer Moncrief says. The latest example: that time former Ole Miss WR Donte Moncrief was ruled ineligible during the season because the NCAA saw a photo of him driving his brother's Challenger. Combine that with the unimportant things it chooses to investigate, and you've got a fine recipe. The governing body has no subpoena power or any IRL power beyond what's vested in it by schools, so its investigations often look a little farcical. The NCAA's current most famous investigation is into Ole Miss, but the name of the school doesn't matter all that much in at least one sense.
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