ACC commissioner Jim Phillips on Clemson-Ole Miss tampering at ACC Kickoff

By admin — In News — July 15, 2026

   ​ACC commissioner Jim Phillips made it clear Wednesday that college football’s tampering problem isn’t going away unless schools and coaches begin facing meaningful punishment.Speaking during the ACC Kickoff, Phillips addressed the growing number of tampering accusations around the country, including Clemson’s high-profile situation involving linebacker Luke Ferrelli. While he did not single out Ole Miss in his latest comments, Phillips said the current system will continue to encourage rule-breaking if there are no real consequences for those responsible.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement“The tampering is serious. Those are serious things that people are looking at and certainly have to be dealt with,” Phillips said. “Between the College Sports Commission and the NCAA, we have to have support for them to do the work that they are capable of doing in order to hold schools, institutions and coaches accountable.”Phillips also referenced other recent allegations around college football, saying the issue extends well beyond one program or conference. He believes enforcement agencies need both the authority and the backing to investigate complaints and punish violations when they occur.He added that coaches, administrators and others with firsthand knowledge of tampering have an important role to play by reporting what they know instead of remaining silent.“The best way to hold people accountable is for others to bring forward those types of situations and cases and specific information about what has happened with a particular student or a particular instance,” Phillips said. “It is allowing for people to play in the margins. As we modernize college sports, we have to make sure that we are supporting and imploring the CSC and the NCAA enforcement group to do their job.”AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementThe Ferrelli case has remained one of the most talked-about transfer situations of the offseason. After transferring from Cal, Ferrelli signed with Clemson, participated in team activities and began classes before ultimately ending up at Ole Miss. Dabo Swinney has publicly alleged that Ole Miss defensive coordinator Pete Golding contacted Ferrelli after he had already enrolled at Clemson, which would violate NCAA tampering rules if proven.Phillips believes college athletics has reached a point where some coaches are no longer worried about crossing the line because they don’t expect to face repercussions.“What’s sad about what I see with some of the tampering that’s going on is there’s a failure to have restraint in college sports like I’ve never seen before,” Phillips said. “Tampering, expenditures, how we don’t maybe work together collaboratively as much as we should. That has to change. It just has to.”AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementHe closed by reiterating that accountability is the only way to slow the trend.“Again, I can’t emphasize enough, individuals that have information about tamp  

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