Just hours before Connecticut beat Kentucky for the NCAA basketball championship outside Dallas on April 7, Greg LaFleur finally got some restitution — and vindication — in a case that had tarnished his name since UConn won its last national championship in 2011.It came in the form of a check for $150,000, the long-awaited payout of a settlement with Southern University, which had fired LaFleur three years earlier, to the day, after LaFleur was arrested and charged with soliciting a prostitute at the 2011 Final Four in Houston.LaFleur was eventually acquitted of those charges in January 2012, but a clean slate in the eyes of the law hardly marked the end of LaFleur’s personal strife. In fact, the not-guilty verdict was only the beginning of a prolonged, ongoing struggle for the sullied former NFL tight end.In the two years since his acquittal, LaFleur has been unable to find another job in athletics, despite submitting a laundry list of applications to athletic director positions and other jobs at universities big and small. Virtually all of the 89 applications LaFleur has sent out to date have gone unanswered — long since shredded or lost in the ether of the World Wide Web…