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Karen Cypher Photos – Rick Pitino Wife

KAREN SYPHER PHOTOS – click here

First, about Rick:

Rick Pitino (born September 18, 1952(1952-09-18)) is an American basketball coach. Since 2001 he has been the head coach at the University of Louisville. He has also served as head coach at Boston University, Providence College and the University of Kentucky, leading that program to the NCAA championship in 1996. He has coached on the professional level for the NBA’s New York Knicks and Boston Celtics with mixed results.

Pitino holds the distinction of being the only men’s coach in NCAA history to lead three different schools (Providence, Kentucky, and Louisville) to the Final Four. In addition, Pitino has achieved a measure of success as an author and a motivational speaker.

KAREN SYPHER PHOTOS – click here

Now.. What’s going on?

University of Louisville men’s basketball coach Rick Pitino told police that he had consensual sex with Karen Cunagin Sypher at a Louisville restaurant where he’d been drinking on Aug. 1, 2003.

He also told police that he later gave Sypher $3,000 to have an abortion, according to Louisville Metro Police reports The Courier-Journal obtained under the Kentucky Open Records Act.

But Pitino denied Sypher’s allegations that he raped her at Porcini, after the restaurant closed, and again a few weeks later at a different location, police records show. And prosecutors who have reviewed Sypher’s claims say Pitino won’t be charged.

Sypher has been indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiring to extort money from Pitino in exchange for her silence about the alleged crimes, and with lying to the FBI. She has pleaded not guilty.

She reported the alleged rapes to Metro Police on July 9, about two months after she was indicted.

The Metro Police records show that the commander of the sex offense unit, who investigated Sypher’s claims and interviewed her twice in July, found problems in her accounts of both incidents — which he said raised questions about her credibility.

Sgt. Andy Abbott said in an investigative summary that Sypher failed, for example, to disclose that another person was at Porcini Restaurant when she said the first incident occurred.

That witness, Vinnie Tatum, an executive assistant to Pitino, told the FBI that he didn’t see what happened but heard “only the sounds of two people that seemed to be enjoying themselves during a sexual encounter,” according to Abbott’s report.

Abbott said records also indicate that Pitino was in California when Sypher claimed he sexually assaulted her a second time.

“The more information I gather, the worse it looks for you,” Abbott told Sypher during a July 13 phone interview, according to a transcript of the call.

Commonwealth’s Attorney David Stengel announced in July, after reviewing a videotape of the interviews, that he wouldn’t prosecute the case because Sypher’s claims were void of credibility and lacked any supporting evidence.

During one interview, Abbott asked Sypher why she didn’t report the alleged crimes when they allegedly occurred, and why she waited until after she was charged with extortion to finally report them.

Transcripts of the interviews show she offered varying responses to the first question, saying first that she wanted to forget about what happened, then that Pitino threatened her, and finally that “they kept throwing me crumbs to keep me happy.” But she couldn’t say what those were.

Abbott asked Sypher in the interview why she was coming forward now, only after she was charged.

“Because … where we are, it seems like retaliation,” Abbott said.

“I know it does,” Sypher responded.

Sypher’s new court-appointed counsel, James Earhart, said he hadn’t received the records and couldn’t comment.

Pitino’s lawyer, Steve Pence, said Tuesday that he wouldn’t allow his client to be interviewed by The Courier-Journal. In a written statement, Pence said Pitino will “continue to work though this matter privately with his family.” Pence also noted that Sypher is under indictment and that Stengel’s office has rejected her allegations.

“The commonwealth’s attorney has said she is void of any credibility on these 6-year-old allegations she has made,” Pence told the Associated Press.

U of L Athletic Director Tom Jurich said in a statement Tuesday that “Coach Pitino has been truthful with us about this matter all along and we stand by him and his family during this process.”

University President James Ramsey released a statement Tuesday night saying: “Several months ago Coach Pitino informed me about the alleged extortion attempt. I’ve now been informed that there may be other details which, if true, I find surprising. My thoughts are with Coach Pitino and his family.”

The Pitino interview

Abbott interviewed Pitino at U of L on July 12, with his attorney, Steve Pence, present.

Pitino told Abbott he was at Porcini Restaurant, 2730 Frankfort Ave., on Aug. 1, 2003, to celebrate the hiring of former NBA star Reggie Theus as an assistant coach, and that Tatum, the aide, attended as designated driver. The records don’t indicate that Theus was there.

Pitino told Abbott that Sypher (then Karen Cunagin) walked up to him early in the evening and asked if he would call one of her sons and encourage him regarding sports and school, which Pitino said he did, on a cellphone.

Pitino said Sypher left the restaurant and returned at about closing time. He said that after the restaurant closed and the last employees and owner Tim Coury had left, Sypher “started coming on to him and that they had sex,” according to Abbott’s report. Pitino said he learned later that Tatum was still there.

Tatum told the FBI that he had lain down and couldn’t see what happened but that he heard what sounded like consensual sex, Abbott wrote in a report.

Pitino told Abbott that he had had too much alcohol to drive and eventually got a ride home from Sypher, whom he said was “driving him crazy” on the way there, asking for basketball tickets. He said he gave her his business card and told her to call about them.

He said that about two weeks later, Sypher called, telling him she was pregnant and he had to be the father because she hadn’t had sex with anybody else for months.

Pitino said he told her they should meet somewhere discreetly to discuss the matter. He said he suggested the condo of the team’s strength coach, Tim Sypher, whom she’d not yet met, but later married. She met Tim Sypher and followed him to the condo.

According to Abbott’s report, Pitino said he told her that he had five children and that she had four, and that he didn’t know what he wanted to do about the situation.

He said that if she chose to have the child, he would require a blood test to determine whether or not the child was his.

He said she told him she was going to have an abortion but didn’t have health insurance. He said he asked how much it would cost and she said $3,000, which he gave her, according to Abbott’s report.

He denied Sypher’s allegation that he sexually assaulted her at the condo — he said they had no sex there or anywhere else other than on Aug. 1 at Porcini.

And he said that after she married Tim Sypher about six months later, she began attending team and social events where Pitino was present, and never displayed “any strange behavior,” according to Abbott’s report.

The Sypher interviews

Abbott interviewed Sypher the first time the day after she reported the alleged crimes.

Sypher told him that she went to Porcini to interview with Mike Przybylek, who was The Courier-Journal’s vice president for production at the time. Przybylek told a reporter earlier this year that he met Sypher inadvertently that night at Porcini’s bar, and that no interview had been scheduled.

Sypher told Abbott that she was introduced to Pitino at Porcini, and that he spoke by phone with two of her sons, at her request.

She said that at the end of the night, Coury gave Pitino the keys to the restaurant and asked him to lock up when he was ready to leave. At that point, she alleged, Pitino forced himself on her while she was sitting on a leather bench.

“I was pushing him off and screaming,” she told Abbott. “No one was around.”

(Coury, who previously didn’t respond to phone messages, was out of town Tuesday and couldn’t be reached for comment, a restaurant employee said.)

Asked by Abbott why she didn’t disclose that Tatum was present, she said in a second interview that she didn’t find that out until more than a year later, and still isn’t sure he was there.

Sypher said she gave Pitino a ride home because he hopped in her Escalade after she unlocked the door, and because she wanted him out of her life, she told police.

Sypher also alleged that toward the end of August 2003, when she realized she was pregnant and met with Pitino at Tim Sypher’s condo, Pitino pushed her to the floor and raped her again, while Tim Sypher was upstairs.

But Karen Sypher insisted that the incident occurred between the time she had an ultrasound test confirming the pregnancy on Aug. 26, 2003, and Aug. 29, 2003, when she had an abortion in Cincinnati, according to police records.

And Pitino was able to prove through his calendar that he was in Pebble Beach, Calif,. at the time, the records show.

“I confronted her concerning her timetable,” Abbott said in a report, “and she could offer no valid explanation.”

Abbott wrote that “was one of many concerns that I have with the case.”

He noted that Sypher was unable to explain why, “if this man raped you, why would you put yourself in a position where you’re going to be around him all the time?”

She acknowledged in the interview that it also didn’t make sense that Tim Sypher would continue to work for Pitino knowing the coach had sexually assaulted the woman who later became his wife. The Syphers were married in 2004 but she filed for divorce in March.

In an interview with the newspaper earlier this year, she also was unable to explain why she had married Sypher, given that by her account, he didn’t come to her aid when Pitino allegedly assaulted her and she says she was screaming for help.

Tim Sypher and his lawyers couldn’t be reached Tuesday for comment. In a statement in April, however, he said “I am devastated by the bizarre allegations that my estranged wife is making against both Coach Pitino and myself.”

About the Author

karen sypher photos

Nba Pebble

Nba Pebble

Karen Cypher Photos – Rick Pitino Wife

KAREN SYPHER PHOTOS – click here

First, about Rick:

Rick Pitino (born September 18, 1952(1952-09-18)) is an American basketball coach. Since 2001 he has been the head coach at the University of Louisville. He has also served as head coach at Boston University, Providence College and the University of Kentucky, leading that program to the NCAA championship in 1996. He has coached on the professional level for the NBA’s New York Knicks and Boston Celtics with mixed results.

Pitino holds the distinction of being the only men’s coach in NCAA history to lead three different schools (Providence, Kentucky, and Louisville) to the Final Four. In addition, Pitino has achieved a measure of success as an author and a motivational speaker.

KAREN SYPHER PHOTOS – click here

Now.. What’s going on?

University of Louisville men’s basketball coach Rick Pitino told police that he had consensual sex with Karen Cunagin Sypher at a Louisville restaurant where he’d been drinking on Aug. 1, 2003.

He also told police that he later gave Sypher $3,000 to have an abortion, according to Louisville Metro Police reports The Courier-Journal obtained under the Kentucky Open Records Act.

But Pitino denied Sypher’s allegations that he raped her at Porcini, after the restaurant closed, and again a few weeks later at a different location, police records show. And prosecutors who have reviewed Sypher’s claims say Pitino won’t be charged.

Sypher has been indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of conspiring to extort money from Pitino in exchange for her silence about the alleged crimes, and with lying to the FBI. She has pleaded not guilty.

She reported the alleged rapes to Metro Police on July 9, about two months after she was indicted.

The Metro Police records show that the commander of the sex offense unit, who investigated Sypher’s claims and interviewed her twice in July, found problems in her accounts of both incidents — which he said raised questions about her credibility.

Sgt. Andy Abbott said in an investigative summary that Sypher failed, for example, to disclose that another person was at Porcini Restaurant when she said the first incident occurred.

That witness, Vinnie Tatum, an executive assistant to Pitino, told the FBI that he didn’t see what happened but heard “only the sounds of two people that seemed to be enjoying themselves during a sexual encounter,” according to Abbott’s report.

Abbott said records also indicate that Pitino was in California when Sypher claimed he sexually assaulted her a second time.

“The more information I gather, the worse it looks for you,” Abbott told Sypher during a July 13 phone interview, according to a transcript of the call.

Commonwealth’s Attorney David Stengel announced in July, after reviewing a videotape of the interviews, that he wouldn’t prosecute the case because Sypher’s claims were void of credibility and lacked any supporting evidence.

During one interview, Abbott asked Sypher why she didn’t report the alleged crimes when they allegedly occurred, and why she waited until after she was charged with extortion to finally report them.

Transcripts of the interviews show she offered varying responses to the first question, saying first that she wanted to forget about what happened, then that Pitino threatened her, and finally that “they kept throwing me crumbs to keep me happy.” But she couldn’t say what those were.

Abbott asked Sypher in the interview why she was coming forward now, only after she was charged.

“Because … where we are, it seems like retaliation,” Abbott said.

“I know it does,” Sypher responded.

Sypher’s new court-appointed counsel, James Earhart, said he hadn’t received the records and couldn’t comment.

Pitino’s lawyer, Steve Pence, said Tuesday that he wouldn’t allow his client to be interviewed by The Courier-Journal. In a written statement, Pence said Pitino will “continue to work though this matter privately with his family.” Pence also noted that Sypher is under indictment and that Stengel’s office has rejected her allegations.

“The commonwealth’s attorney has said she is void of any credibility on these 6-year-old allegations she has made,” Pence told the Associated Press.

U of L Athletic Director Tom Jurich said in a statement Tuesday that “Coach Pitino has been truthful with us about this matter all along and we stand by him and his family during this process.”

University President James Ramsey released a statement Tuesday night saying: “Several months ago Coach Pitino informed me about the alleged extortion attempt. I’ve now been informed that there may be other details which, if true, I find surprising. My thoughts are with Coach Pitino and his family.”

The Pitino interview

Abbott interviewed Pitino at U of L on July 12, with his attorney, Steve Pence, present.

Pitino told Abbott he was at Porcini Restaurant, 2730 Frankfort Ave., on Aug. 1, 2003, to celebrate the hiring of former NBA star Reggie Theus as an assistant coach, and that Tatum, the aide, attended as designated driver. The records don’t indicate that Theus was there.

Pitino told Abbott that Sypher (then Karen Cunagin) walked up to him early in the evening and asked if he would call one of her sons and encourage him regarding sports and school, which Pitino said he did, on a cellphone.

Pitino said Sypher left the restaurant and returned at about closing time. He said that after the restaurant closed and the last employees and owner Tim Coury had left, Sypher “started coming on to him and that they had sex,” according to Abbott’s report. Pitino said he learned later that Tatum was still there.

Tatum told the FBI that he had lain down and couldn’t see what happened but that he heard what sounded like consensual sex, Abbott wrote in a report.

Pitino told Abbott that he had had too much alcohol to drive and eventually got a ride home from Sypher, whom he said was “driving him crazy” on the way there, asking for basketball tickets. He said he gave her his business card and told her to call about them.

He said that about two weeks later, Sypher called, telling him she was pregnant and he had to be the father because she hadn’t had sex with anybody else for months.

Pitino said he told her they should meet somewhere discreetly to discuss the matter. He said he suggested the condo of the team’s strength coach, Tim Sypher, whom she’d not yet met, but later married. She met Tim Sypher and followed him to the condo.

According to Abbott’s report, Pitino said he told her that he had five children and that she had four, and that he didn’t know what he wanted to do about the situation.

He said that if she chose to have the child, he would require a blood test to determine whether or not the child was his.

He said she told him she was going to have an abortion but didn’t have health insurance. He said he asked how much it would cost and she said $3,000, which he gave her, according to Abbott’s report.

He denied Sypher’s allegation that he sexually assaulted her at the condo — he said they had no sex there or anywhere else other than on Aug. 1 at Porcini.

And he said that after she married Tim Sypher about six months later, she began attending team and social events where Pitino was present, and never displayed “any strange behavior,” according to Abbott’s report.

The Sypher interviews

Abbott interviewed Sypher the first time the day after she reported the alleged crimes.

Sypher told him that she went to Porcini to interview with Mike Przybylek, who was The Courier-Journal’s vice president for production at the time. Przybylek told a reporter earlier this year that he met Sypher inadvertently that night at Porcini’s bar, and that no interview had been scheduled.

Sypher told Abbott that she was introduced to Pitino at Porcini, and that he spoke by phone with two of her sons, at her request.

She said that at the end of the night, Coury gave Pitino the keys to the restaurant and asked him to lock up when he was ready to leave. At that point, she alleged, Pitino forced himself on her while she was sitting on a leather bench.

“I was pushing him off and screaming,” she told Abbott. “No one was around.”

(Coury, who previously didn’t respond to phone messages, was out of town Tuesday and couldn’t be reached for comment, a restaurant employee said.)

Asked by Abbott why she didn’t disclose that Tatum was present, she said in a second interview that she didn’t find that out until more than a year later, and still isn’t sure he was there.

Sypher said she gave Pitino a ride home because he hopped in her Escalade after she unlocked the door, and because she wanted him out of her life, she told police.

Sypher also alleged that toward the end of August 2003, when she realized she was pregnant and met with Pitino at Tim Sypher’s condo, Pitino pushed her to the floor and raped her again, while Tim Sypher was upstairs.

But Karen Sypher insisted that the incident occurred between the time she had an ultrasound test confirming the pregnancy on Aug. 26, 2003, and Aug. 29, 2003, when she had an abortion in Cincinnati, according to police records.

And Pitino was able to prove through his calendar that he was in Pebble Beach, Calif,. at the time, the records show.

“I confronted her concerning her timetable,” Abbott said in a report, “and she could offer no valid explanation.”

Abbott wrote that “was one of many concerns that I have with the case.”

He noted that Sypher was unable to explain why, “if this man raped you, why would you put yourself in a position where you’re going to be around him all the time?”

She acknowledged in the interview that it also didn’t make sense that Tim Sypher would continue to work for Pitino knowing the coach had sexually assaulted the woman who later became his wife. The Syphers were married in 2004 but she filed for divorce in March.

In an interview with the newspaper earlier this year, she also was unable to explain why she had married Sypher, given that by her account, he didn’t come to her aid when Pitino allegedly assaulted her and she says she was screaming for help.

Tim Sypher and his lawyers couldn’t be reached Tuesday for comment. In a statement in April, however, he said “I am devastated by the bizarre allegations that my estranged wife is making against both Coach Pitino and myself.”

About the Author

karen sypher photos




Nba Pebble

Five Ways to Not Choke or Panic When it Comes to Relationship Building

Watching 26-year-old Dustin Johnson recently blow his three-round lead at the 110th U.S. Open at Pebble Beach, California reminded me of others we’ve seen squander away amazing opportunities.

Specific to relationships, when facing pressure to execute do you choke or panic?  You see there are two types, whether we’re talking about the 7th game of the NBA Finals or the final found of a major golf championship, or business relationships focused on accelerating your growth.  You choke when you tend to over think the situation – golfers who think about every aspect of their swing, often overanalyze the conditions, walk away from a practice golf swing, etc.  They start analyzing that which comes to them naturally or have developed a natural tendency to execute.  You’ve nurtured great relationships over the years, but when you’re behind on your numbers or struggling in a particular client situation, you begin to overanalyze all that is around you!  Welcome to the relationship quicksand where even the best intentions backfire.  Remember, relationships go bad when there is a misalignment of expectations!

Panic on the other hand is completely forgetting all that you’ve learned.  You see panic in amateur speakers or inexperienced executives who get on a stage or in front of an important / challenging audience.  They freeze, completely forgetting their preparation and that which again, they knew naturally how to do!  Relationship panics including rude behaviors (regardless of how minute or unintentional), indifferent or abrasive, or worst yet, letting the circumstance dictate your behavior.

So, how do you overcome either scenario?  Here are five best practices:

  1.        Normalcy – in a difficult or challenging situation, create as much of a normalcy as possible.  There is a reason basketball players bounce the ball three times, look at the rim, and shoot free throws with seconds left in the game and sink both under enormous pressure.  The routine creates a normalcy, which reminds them that they’ve done the same free throws hundreds if not thousands of times in the past!  What are your relationship development habits, which have worked for you in the past – we are all creatures of habits so identify and repeat yours consistently.
  2.        Repetition – practice your relationship development skills every day!  Reach out to stagnate relationships with value add, make strategic introductions, reconnect, re-engage, create new connections.
  3.        Follow-Through – The U.S. Open wasn’t three rounds, it is four rounds!  You have to follow through to the end!  Johnson played nearly flawless golf for three days, shooting scores of 71-70-66. He finished the fourth day with a score of 82, 5-over par for the championship and tied for eighth. It was the highest final-round score by a third-round leader in the U.S. Open since Fred McLeod, in 1911.  Follow-through is a process (vs. follow up which is a transactions).  Getting in the business of following through in your relationship touches.
  4.        Avoid Distractions – Did you see some of Tiger’s putts?  He’s clearly not the same golfer because he has let all of his life’s distractions get to him!  Relationship success is about focus – not every relationship is worthy of your time, effort and resources.  To enhance your return on strategic relationships, you have to stay focused and avoid distractions.
  5.        Raise The Bar – Learning is a life-long process and you have to constantly look for opportunities to raise the bar on your personal and professional growth.  In relationships, like Golf, there are no sure things. Many a player has come face-to-face with his first major championship, only to have it dissolve before his eyes.  On the fourth day, Johnson’s luck took a turn for the worse, if that’s possible.  He fought on and learned some expensive lessons, which undoubtedly will serve him well in the future.  As a mentor often reminds me:
    • It’s about progress and not perfections;
    • You don’t have to go at it alone – regardless of your professional stature, go get a mentor (or two) and engage him/her/them to help raise the bar on your individual and team-based performance!

Using the five best practices above will help ensure you don’t choke or panic when it comes to cultivating your relationships!

About the Author

David Nour is a social networking strategist and one of the foremost thought leaders on the  quantifiable value of business relationships. In a global economy that is becoming increasingly disconnected, David and his team are solving global client challenges with Strategic Relationship Planning™ and Enterprise Social Networking best practices.

David is the author of Relationship Economics (Wiley, 2008), The Entrepreneur’s Guide to Raising Capital (Praeger, 2009), ConnectAbility (McGraw-Hill, 2010), and the Social Networking Technology Best Practices Series. He is a contributor to The Social Media Bible (Wiley, 2009) and is currently researching and writing his next commercial book on Listen Louder .

David’s unique perspective and independent insights have been featured in a variety of prominent blogs and print publications including The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, Association Now, Entrepreneur and Success magazine.