Student alleges Rebel violations
A former UNLV basketball manager says a coach gave him hundreds of dollars to pay toward a player's car.
By Kevin Iole
Review-Journal
A 20-year-old UNLV sophomore has made allegations against the men's basketball program that would be serious violations of NCAA rules.
Mike Viellion, an international business major who once served as a student manager for the basketball team, said University of Nevada, Las Vegas associate head coach Glynn Cyprien gave him money to make car payments on behalf of former Rebel Tyrone Nesby. In addition, Viellion said Cyprien loaned Viellion's 1995 Ford Thunderbird without his permission in the summer to Rebel Kaspars Kambala and that Kambala subsequently was involved in an accident that totaled the car.
Viellion made his allegations as NCAA investigators were in Las Vegas to conduct an informal review of information that alleged recruiting violations.
He said that four times during the 1997-98 basketball season, Cyprien gave him money that Cyprien took out of his own pocket. Viellion said he was under instructions to take the money to a car-leasing agency, which he declined to name, and make payments for Nesby, who is now an NBA rookie playing for the Los Angeles Clippers. Viellion said he could not recall the exact amount, but said it was between $300 and $400.
Viellion also said he served as a go-between for UNLV coach Bill Bayno and Nesby in picking up loaner cars Bayno had arranged for Nesby when the player's car was out of commission.
Bayno would not comment on Viellion's allegations regarding the payments on Nesby's car, other than to deny it in a news release put out by the university's sports information department. However, Bayno said he was aware of the dispute regarding Kambala's accident and questioned Viellion's truthfulness.
"None of this is true," Bayno said of Viellion's allegation that Cyprien lent Viellion's car to Kambala. "Mike is lying. Cyp had no control of (Viellion's) car. Kas borrowed the car from Mike's friend."
A university is forbidden under NCAA rules from providing a benefit for a student-athlete that it would not provide for every other student.
Viellion said NCAA investigators questioned him about the Kambala incident, but he denied at that time anything had occurred. Later, however, after he said he had difficulty obtaining money from Kambala to purchase another car and to pay his increased insurance premiums, he contacted the NCAA and told them of the incidents regarding Nesby's car, which he said was a black Honda Accord. He said he isn't sure what year the car was, but said he thought it was a 1995 model.
"Coach Cyprien just totally took the money right out of his pocket," Viellion said. "I paid Tyrone Nesby's car payment on several occasions. I would take the money, drive to the place, get the receipt and give it back to Coach Cyp. I did that on several occasions."
Nesby had a game with the Clippers on Tuesday against the New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden in New York and could not be reached for comment. Cyprien said he never gave Viellion money on Nesby's behalf.
"That's totally bogus," Cyprien said. "I'm not very intelligent, but why would I give him money to pay Tyrone's car note? That doesn't make any sense. It's totally out of line."
Viellion worked for the basketball team during the 1997-98 season and described himself as Cyprien's "right-hand man."
He said the two began to grow apart after Kambala wrecked his car on July 28. Viellion said he was at his home in New Orleans and had given his car to Cyprien to keep an eye on. However, Viellion alleged that Cyprien then gave the car to Kambala. Kambala wrecked the car at 12:30 p.m. on July 28 at Eastern and Washington avenues. According to the police report, Kambala was traveling 50 mph in a 35 mph zone, jumped the median and hit a pole.
Viellion said Cyprien called him in New Orleans to inform him of the accident.
"He told my dad, `We'll take care of everything. Don't worry about anything. It was an accident. I'll take responsibility for it. I shouldn't have given him the car,' " Viellion said.
Viellion said his insurance premiums went from $1,100 a year to more than $5,200. He said he had to quit working for the basketball program in September to get a job so he could make his insurance payments, which he said were now around $500 a month.
Bayno said Kambala, who could not be reached for comment, offered to pay Viellion $50 a month toward the car, but Viellion turned it down.
The coach accused Viellion of trying to destroy his program.
"This has been an issue for three months," Bayno said. "The truth will come out. He's trying to blow up the program and I don't know why."
Cyprien and Viellion attended Jesuit High School in New Orleans and Cyprien said he arranged for Viellion to be UNLV's basketball manager at the request of his former high school basketball coach. Cyprien said Viellion became upset when he learned he would not receive a scholarship for being the manager.
Cyprien denied Viellion's charge that he loaned Viellion's car to Kambala. Cyprien said Viellion had given the car to a former UNLV employee for safekeeping when Viellion returned to New Orleans. Cyprien said that person loaned it to Kambala. Cyprien wouldn't identify that person but said he was a friend of Viellion's.
However, Viellion said Cyprien took responsibility when he phoned regarding the accident.
"(He said) `Mike, this is Cyp. We have a problem,' " Viellion said. " `Today, Kas had to run an errand. He had a friend in town. I couldn't let him use my car, so I let him use yours and he wrecked it.' I said, `OK.' He said, `I don't know how bad it is.' So I'm thinking, broken headlight or something. Little did I know when I got back and looked at the car, there was no front end.
"He told my dad `We'll take care of it.' Bayno got on him and said, `Let's get together and take care of this.' Cyp basically just blew everybody off, started lying to us."
Viellion received a Dec. 15 memo from Jerry Koloskie, UNLV's associate athletics director, in which Koloskie wrote, "On July 28, 1998, Coach Cyprien lent Mike Viellion's car to Kaspar (sic) Kambala."
Koloskie said he was just trying to put together a list for Viellion's father, George, of what he knew and that the memo was not a finding of fact. Koloskie said his investigation has led him to believe that a friend of Viellion's lent the car to Kambala, but Koloskie would not name that individual.
"This is a nonuniversity matter and it's not my place to implicate somebody else," Koloskie said. "I'm very comfortable that Coach Cyprien did not intentionally violate NCAA rules in this matter."