- Messages
- 37,544
- Reaction score
- 28,990
So you think all of the facts were out as of August 15th, or they just found enough to say its time to suspend them for the rest of the investigation?
Now you're asking the right question, and I don't have the answer. I think at that point they had concluded enough about the players to know that there was a serious eligibility concern and did not want them participating from that point forward until it was cleared up.
This would be similar to when Auburn declared Cam Newton to be ineligible per concerns, presented the findings to the NCAA, and then had him reinstated. Your standard operating procedure in compliance is that as soon as you become aware of an eligibility concern you are to IMMEDIATELY report it and declare the player ineligible until the status is cleared up one way or another.
Towards specifics... the competing theories are:
1. The players got held out on the 15th per SOP outlined above, they know or believe they will be reinstated, and it is just a matter of time. This could apply to any or all of them. The logical flaws to this theory mostly have to do with timing, but the supporting logic is if they knew they were toast they already would've transferred or started the transfer process. So somehow, somewhere there is something holding them put.
2. The players got held out on the 15th because that's when their cases were closed, and their fate is still yet to be determined by the honor code committee, etc. There are no logical flaws in this theory, but that doesn't mean it's correct.
3. They're all already toast and Notre Dame is simply slow playing the news because there are other parts of the investigation still ongoing and they want to release all of the final findings at once instead of piecemeal. They know that they're gone so they are obligated to hold them out at this point. The logical flaw with this theory has to do with allowing them to stay in school if they're already 100% toast... classes start soon and someone should be able to know really quick whether or not they're ACTIVELY enrolled. However, the Sykes debacle shows us ND doesn't give a shit about being retroactive.