Jamal Fenton (getty images)Had
New Mexico guard Jamal Fenton known an Albuquerque hotel was giving him
a $250 discount on the ballroom he was renting for his 21st birthday,
he insists he wouldn't have accepted it.
Instead, Fenton accepted the ballroom at the reduced rate of $500 rather than $750 last April, landing him in hot water with the NCAA.New Mexico suspended Fenton last week for three games for a minor violation of NCAA rules, but the school did not disclose the reason for the penalty. The Albuquerque Journal looked into the story further and discovered the birthday party was the culprit.
"If I would have known the real price, I still would have got it because money wasn't the issue," Fenton told the Journal. "I had no idea I was getting a good price on the ballroom because this was my first time ever throwing a party in a ballroom and the price she gave me already sounded like a lot."
A sales representative at the hotel corroborated Fenton's claim that he did not ask for a discount but confirmed the hotel lowered the price for the ballroom because it was a New Mexico student-athlete seeking to rent it. That's an automatic penalty in the eyes of the NCAA because it's an extra benefit a typical student would not receive.
By NCAA rules, any extra benefit from $100 to $300 requires a three-game suspension, a harsh penalty considering the offense, yet at least one the organization has been consistent about enforcing. Fenton will also have to pay back the $250 to a charity of his choice.
Fenton, a 5-foot-9 senior who averaged 6.5 points and 2.4 assists last season, will sit out New Mexico's opener against Davidson and two games during the Paradise Jam. That's costly for New Mexico because those are difficult nonconference games, but the Lobos do have a wealth of depth at guard to make up for Fenton's absence.
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