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 Wednesday, March 1
Porter's father 'shocked and disappointed'
 
Associated Press

 AUBURN, Ala. -- Billy Porter had been looking forward to Senior Night all season. That was when he was going to get all dressed up, head to Auburn and watch the final home game of his son's short but remarkable Tiger career.

Barring a major 11th-hour change, Chris Porter won't be suiting up for the Tigers' game Wednesday night against No. 12 LSU. Porter has been indefinitely suspended after admitting he took $2,500 from a sports agent. He will be honored on the court where Auburn (No. 12 ESPN/USA Today, No. 19 AP) has gone 30-0 in his two seasons.

If (Chris) had called me and said he needed money for himself, I would have helped him. If he called and asked me for money for his mother, I wouldn't have helped.
Billy Porter

"I was shocked and I was disappointed," Billy Porter, who lives in Clio, Ala., said. "If it had been any other time, I probably would have jumped up and started raising holy hell. I got to thinking Chris is 21 years old. If he's going to ever be a man or intend to be a man, now is the time for him to start."

Chris Porter, a preseason All-America selection, apparently needed the money to prevent his mother from being evicted from her rural south Alabama home. Billy and Emily Porter divorced several years ago.

Emily Porter of Abbeville has declined comment.

The infraction was reportedly uncovered in a league-wide investigation by the SEC, The Birmingham News said Tuesday. The News said the SEC informed Auburn of the infraction last Friday and that it was still looking at other league schools as part of a crackdown on sports agents.

Billy Porter spent Sunday afternoon with his son after learning of the situation. He said Chris did not tell him who gave him money. He said if Chris needed money, the player could have called any number of relatives.

"If he had called me and said he needed money for himself, I would have helped him," Porter said. "If he called and asked me for money for his mother, I wouldn't have helped."

Auburn officials are working with SEC commissioner Roy Kramer to complete the investigation and present a report to the NCAA as soon as possible.

Auburn will likely ask the NCAA for a quick reinstatement, which coach Cliff Ellis said was unlikely to happen before Wednesday night's game against LSU (No. 16 ESPN/USA Today, No. 12 AP). Auburn needs to beat LSU to move into a tie with the Tigers for the SEC West lead.

Ellis said Porter will still be honored.

"I'm angry because he was so close to making it, but he was still so far away," said Billy Porter, who still plans to attend. "I've been telling my wife all season long about Senior Night, how big Senior Night was going to be. I was going to wear a pair of nice dress pants, a white shirt and an orange and blue tie."

Porter's uncle and high school coach, Moses Knight, said he learned of the player's suspension as he sat down to watch Auburn play Florida Sunday.

"He's a good kid, a real good kid," Knight said. "It's very disappointing, but when you are young, you are easily influenced. This doesn't change my opinion about him."
 


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