CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) — It’s been six months since Clemson head coach Dabo Swinney publicly called out Ole Miss for engaging in what he called “blatant” tampering to lure away transfer linebacker Luke Ferrelli.He has heard nothing back despite providing an alleged timeline, evidence and receipts to the NCAA.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementSwinney said Thursday he doesn’t regret pointing the finger at Ole Miss head coach Pete Golding and general manager Austin Thomas. And he again pushed for change and accountability on Thursday for what he called “rampant” tampering in college football.“We’re probably gonna need some congressional help for that,” Swinney said during the Atlantic Coast Conference’s preseason football media days. “There has to be some type of order put in place. The tampering is a problem. So there needs to be consequences or you just say to heck with it, don’t worry about it, and let’s just call it like it is — the wild, wild West.”Swinney suggested fines, suspensions and even firings should be considered to discourage tampering, which has been a frequent topic of concern in multiple sports.“There is lots of things that can be put in place,” Swinney said. ”(Tampering) is rampant because there hasn’t been consequences and I don’t know there has been much fear of consequences. So you’ve got to get some order.”AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementGolding defended Ole Miss in April, explaining there are “two sides to every story” referring to Ferrelli, who abruptly transferred to Ole Miss 20 days after beginning classes and team meetings at Clemson in January.Ferrelli played last season at Cal before originally transferring to Clemson.In March, Southeastern Conference commissioner Greg Sankey called NCAA language covering tampering rules “archaic,” but stopped short of urging the oversight body to halt tampering investigations.Sankey said the new landscape in college sports calls for the rules language to be changed.ACC Commissioner Jim Phillips on Wednesday urged coaches and administrators to go public with information if they see potential tampering.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementOther ACC coaches have expressed support for Swinney for speaking out.“I agree with Dabo,” Louisville coach Jeff Brohm said. “He should have been upset. To me that type of tampering shouldn’t happen. It goes back to there needs to be more guardrails. There needs to be a system in place where there’s consequences for doing things you’re not supposed to do, and that’s not in college football right now.”Brohm said it’s one of the reasons he wants to see the Protect College Sports Act passed in Congress.The bill that top lawmakers and athletic leaders have described as the best hope to stabilize college sports cleared a key vote in the Senate in June following weeks of input from schools, conferences and athletes.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementIt is now currently in
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