Should schools count victories if players who played in those games were ineligible? People are blaming Jenkins for not behaving dishonestly like UNC’s administrators did. Is ND now supposed to behave like UNC? The fact that other schools get away with it is not an argument that it is okay or shouldn’t be punished. ND knows what it is dealing with: other schools that would never self-report, or admit wrongdoing, or declare players ineligible. Given this reality, ND should either leave the NCAA, try to clean up the NCAA, behave unethically like those other schools, or accept being at a disadvantage relative to other schools. The last option is probably the best one.
EDIT: I made a long rambling post full of typos so I'm going to try again.
ND adhering to the honor code and punishing cheaters is correct, responsible, and fair. I'm guessing most everyone agrees with that.
Where ND started following bad policy is when they decided to launch a massive forensic investigation into thousands of documents and years of assignments instead of just punishing people for what they were caught cheating on. ND could've punished the players for having cheated on an assignment and moved on and it would've been the end.
Now, at the point that they do this investigation, everything is still basically fine. Where they lose the "responsible" aspect is when they start looking at people who have already graduated and start punitively looking at how to lower GPAs. From an academic standpoint, they had a responsibility to adjudicate cheating before conferring degrees. From an athletic standpoint, they had a responsibility to everyone who
WASN'T cheating to make sure players were eligible at the time of competition. Any policy that allows for retroactive invalidation of eligibility is inherently bad and irresponsible. Such policies should flat out not exist in academia with exception of Ph.D. and Masters programs where someone may have plagiarized a thesis. There are statutes of limitations on laws for a reason.
Where it gets "unfair" is when they went back to classes... some for professors that aren't even here anymore and students were long gone... and tried to play time cop. The professors at the time had a responsibility to catch cheating at the time it happened, and in the spirit of fairness to any accused students the administration to adjudicate everything before conferring a degree and letting the graduate move on with their life. Once you miss the boat on the fair time frame for your procedures/policies, it gets very sticky.
From an NCAA standpoint, even given the fact that the process was no long "fair" or "responsible" it would've still been fine and arrived at the "correct" outcome had the administration simply dealt with the NCAA differently. Every other school on earth knows the process when you suspect an infraction is 1) suspend 2) do not present anything to the NCAA until you have your ducks in a row. If Jenkins had simply suspended the "Frozen Five" pending investigation and then presented the NCAA with findings that said
"in our opinion, no players were ineligible at the time of competition and no infractions were committed because all cheating was between students with no athletics or academics representatives involved" then we would still have likely have had no consequences whatsoever. Moreover, they simply could have not reported it to the NCAA at all given their internal conclusions and the NCAA would have never investigated. Where they handled it "incorrectly" was in voluntarily asserting that we would vacate wins
before having any findings AND retroactively changing grades in a kangaroo court process AND then giving the NCAA ammunition in a way that we didn't have to that would lead them to a conclusion we didn't want or agree with.
ND decided to approach this in a top-down manner where they started by trying to employ policies that didn't fit the situation (or make up new policies on the fly) to ensure compliance. They should have approached it in a bottom-up fashion focused on the outcome... the desired outcome should have been "ensure academic integrity while minimizing NCAA involvement." This was common fucking sense to anyone not in ND's ivory tower where apparently everyone is naive on how the NCAA functions.
Something like 90% of college students admit to cheating on assignments. Notre Dame is the only school that thinks it's appropriate to years after graduation go back and try to audit people's papers and cause massive issues for
innocent parties because of their own ineptitude in dealing with problems at the time they occurred.