No one is getting the death penalty. You guys need to stop it. At worst they get something harsher than USC got
In 2003, the Hurricanes were put on probation and docked scholarships for baseball infractions. In the Committee on Infractions report, it defined Miami then as a repeat violator, which means that it committed major violations while already on probation for previous violations -- that would be the famed 1995 case that involved a widespread, multi-sport Pell Grant scam and other shenanigans. The Canes' football program got a one-year bowl ban in that case.
Some commentators across Florida are suspecting the Death penalty to come down due to this.
Also, as an aside, one e-mail response from an anti-Miami poster was blasted as obviously coming from Notre Dame "who never does anything wrong, right??" [even though that poster responded that the blaster wasn't even close and he should "guess again"].
They hate us , gentlemen. They hate us "because we're beautiful".
Im still waiting for when Kiffy boy can't keep himself clean and USC gets smacked again!
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USC got the ban hammer from the former AD of Miami. Who was on watch when this was going down. USC was 2 guys. Miami is atleast 73. If any of these violations go back to 2001,2 or 3 then the Death Penalty rule kicks in. Meaning 5 years after the last year of probation (remember they got whacked in the 90s) and you are a repeat offender.
It will be interesting to see how this plays out. This might give the edge to Commissioners and presidents everywhere to abandon the NCAA.
Imagine it plays out that way, then you throw in your 4 super conferences.... Very interesting indeed.
In 2003, the Hurricanes were put on probation and docked scholarships for baseball infractions. In the Committee on Infractions report, it defined Miami then as a repeat violator, which means that it committed major violations while already on probation for previous violations -- that would be the famed 1995 case that involved a widespread, multi-sport Pell Grant scam and other shenanigans. The Canes' football program got a one-year bowl ban in that case.
Nope Death penalty still in effect they got hit with stuff in their baseball program in 2003. Just got off in 2008.
Allegations of NCAA violations could have Miami Hurricanes football flirting with the Death Penalty - ESPN
I don't see any choice then.. Al Golden to OSU?
I wonder how Sentreal Henderson is feeling right about now. Bet he wishes he was at ND.
I wonder how Sentreal Henderson is feeling right about now. Bet he wishes he was at ND.
I wonder how Sentreal Henderson is feeling right about now. Bet he wishes he was at ND.
...
Filling out the season's first depth chart is going to be an arduously difficult process for Miami. The accusation that Harris is one of 12 current Hurricanes who allegedly broke NCAA rules by accepting gifts from rogue booster Nevin Shapiro is overshadowing just about everything that happened on the field during training camp.
If Miami uses any player later deemed ineligible by the NCAA -- which has been investigating for months -- then the Hurricanes run the risk of having to retroactively forfeit games. If the Hurricanes sit those 12 players, most of whom are presumptive starters and in many cases expected to be NFL draft picks next year, then their chances of winning in 2011 plummet quickly.
New coach Al Golden will tip his hand on where things stand this week, when he releases Miami's depth chart for the Sept. 5 opener at Maryland.
"We don't know yet," Golden said Saturday.
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Harris is hardly alone in eligibility limbo right now. Shapiro also said Vaughn Telemaque, Ray Ray Armstrong, Travis Benjamin, Aldarius Johnson, Marcus Forston, Olivier Vernon, Marcus Robinson, Adewale Ojomo, Dyron Dye, JoJo Nicholas and Sean Spence -- a list that includes many of the players who were, or are, expected to have huge roles for Miami this season - accepted benefits from him. If Miami officials have made eligibility determinations on any of those players, no one is saying.
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^^
Of interest, Robinson said in an interview of The Herd that there were well over 100 players accused by Shapiro, but he only named the 72 that he could get independent confirmation on.
There could be many more ineligible players that we don't know about.
As soon as I heard about Miami's issues I immediately checked their verbal commits and targets. I was pretty disappointed when I found that we don't have any mutual interest with any of their recruits (I was hoping we'd poach some studs). On a second thought, I guess there's a reason for that.
The probe into Miami athletics is growing, with the university looking into the eligibility of 15 athletes who may have accepted improper benefits from a rogue booster.
Miami President Donna Shalala did not reveal any names of the players under investigation as she released a video statement Monday. The booster, convicted Ponzi scheme architect Nevin Shapiro, told Yahoo Sports for an article published last week that 12 current football players and one men's basketball player got money, gifts and other items from him.
"We cannot let the actions of some define the many," Shalala said
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"The Miami athletic compliance staff, in a joint effort with the NCAA, is now beginning the process of reviewing the eligibility of 15 current student-athletes," Shalala said. "With the season fast approaching I know our players, coaches and fans are eager to know the results. The process, however, must be deliberate and thorough to ensure its integrity."
The university wants to decide the status of the football players by the end of this week. Football coach Al Golden is planning to release a depth chart in the coming days for the Sept. 5 opener at Maryland, a process that would become very difficult if players like Harris, Spence, Forston, Telemaque, Armstrong and Benjamin -- some of the team's on-field leaders -- are ineligible.
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An NCAA spokesman not-so-subtly hinted to Dodd Monday that former Miami recruits Orson Charles (right, currently at Georgia), Andre Debose (Florida), Jeff Godfrey (Central Florida), Robert Marve (Purdue), Matt Patchan (Florida) and brothers Arthur and Bryce Brown (above, Kansas State) were all granted "limited immunity" that absolved them of past violations if they agreed to cooperate in the NCAA's investigation of the dozens of current and former 'Canes also caught in Shapiro's web. "The enforcement staff has been given, by the membership, a pretty important investigative tool," the spokesman said, at the NCAA's disposal "When we think that's really our only shot of getting that information." She was also clear that immunity is an extraordinary measure in an extraordinary case: Under normal circumstances, "You can't transfer to escape a penalty."